- 17 hours ago
Category
📺
TVTranscript
00:30It's the 22nd of March, which for Andrew Lloyd Webber means quite a lot, because it's his 70th birthday today.
00:37And a very happy birthday to you. Andrew Lloyd Webber, probably the most successful composer living in Britain today. Extraordinary
00:46man. Started when he was six, composing his first great triumph, of course.
00:51I think the first one's called The Likes of Us, when he was a teenager. And then he teamed up
00:56with a great favourite of ours, of course, Tim Rice. And off he went. It's fantastic. Extraordinary man.
01:03Let's remind ourselves. Evita, which I think was my favourite, the one I went to see. I think I've seen
01:07it twice. It was great. Cats, of course. Phantom of the Opera.
01:11And then there was the roller skating one. I don't know whether you ever saw that. Starlight Express. I saw
01:15Starlight Express, yeah, back in the day.
01:17Do you have a favourite there? Not seeing Evita, actually, but I did see Cats on Broadway when I was
01:22probably about 10. And I thought it was brilliant.
01:24Yeah, he's extraordinary. Very moving still, those songs.
01:26Yeah. No, he's a wonderful, a wonderful talent. There we are. Now, we've got somebody else who's a wonderfully talented
01:34young man.
01:34It's Mohsin Shabir from Riyadh, who had a very, very good win. In fact, he's had two good wins. 89
01:41points each time.
01:43How are you feeling? You good?
01:45Yeah, relaxed.
01:45You've settled in?
01:47Yeah.
01:47Home now.
01:48Brilliant. Well, it's great to have you here and well done for your two wins. Let's see whether you're going
01:53to make it a third.
01:54You're up against Ed Morrison, a psychology lecturer from Portsmouth University from South Sea, and you perform psychological mind-reading
02:02shows.
02:03Yes.
02:03Give us a little sample of what you're able to do, or tell us about something that we can do
02:08at home.
02:08Well, we can do a little demonstration now. So, in the audience, people at home, you can all try this.
02:13Put your hands together like this, and you're going to imagine a ball of energy just floating above your fists,
02:18like that.
02:19So, stare at that, and then you're going to extend your index fingers up, like you're grasping that ball.
02:24And keep staring at that gap in between your fingers, and like a magnet, you will find your fingers are
02:28drawn together.
02:30You can't resist it.
02:32Yeah, I can see some people in the audience getting it.
02:35It's true.
02:36You got it?
02:36Yeah.
02:37It's true.
02:38Well done.
02:39We might talk to you quite a lot more about this sort of thing.
02:42Brilliant.
02:43Let's have a big round of applause for Ed and Mohsen.
02:51And over in the corner, Susie. Were you taken by that, Susie?
02:54I don't think I was doing it right, as is usually.
02:57No, what were you doing?
02:58I was doing it, and I, yeah.
03:00It pressed your fingers together.
03:02Yes, it did. Very clever.
03:04Give her a nudge, tell her to behave and get a grip.
03:07And that is, thus spake, song and dance man Len Goodman.
03:12It's great to have you back.
03:13Lovely to be here.
03:14All right, Mohsen, off we go.
03:17Hi, Rachel.
03:17Hi, Mohsen.
03:18Can we start with a vowel, please?
03:20Start today with A.
03:22And another.
03:25O.
03:26And a third.
03:28E.
03:29And a consonant.
03:32R.
03:33And another.
03:35B.
03:35And a third.
03:39T.
03:40A fourth.
03:43L.
03:44And a fifth.
03:47X.
03:48And a final vowel, please.
03:50And a final U.
03:53And here's the countdown clock.
04:27Yes. Motion.
04:29Seven.
04:30A seven. Ed?
04:32Also seven.
04:33Motion.
04:34Trouble.
04:34And Ed?
04:36Bloater.
04:37Very good.
04:38A bloater.
04:39Yes.
04:39And in the corner?
04:41Rootable for eight.
04:42Well done.
04:43That'll do.
04:48Any else, Izzy?
04:48No, that's a good one.
04:50Yes, Ed.
04:51Your letters game.
04:52I'll start with a consonant, please.
04:54Thank you, Ed.
04:55Start with T.
04:57And a vowel?
04:59I.
05:00And another?
05:03O.
05:04And another, please?
05:07A.
05:08And a consonant?
05:11N.
05:13And another?
05:15R.
05:16And another?
05:19S.
05:24Y.
05:26And a final consonant, please.
05:29And a final R.
05:31Stand by.
05:34And a consonant, please.
05:36And a consonant, please.
05:38And a consonant, please.
05:47And a consonant, please.
05:48And a consonant, please.
05:48And a consonant, please.
05:49And a consonant, please.
05:50And a consonant, please.
05:50And a consonant, please.
05:51And a consonant, please.
05:51And a consonant, please.
05:51And a consonant, please.
05:51And a consonant, please.
05:51And a consonant, please.
05:52And a consonant, please.
05:53And a consonant, please.
05:54And a consonant, please.
05:55And a consonant, please.
05:59And a consonant, please.
06:02Yes, Ed?
06:03Six.
06:04A six.
06:05Mustn't?
06:05Seven.
06:07And a seven.
06:08Ed?
06:08Starry.
06:10Yes, sir?
06:11Russians.
06:12Yeah.
06:13Very good.
06:14Yeah.
06:15And the corner, Susie?
06:16Len?
06:17Yeah, Russians, but I got a seven, which is...
06:20Seven!
06:21Which I'm so proud of, because it was station.
06:24That fitted, didn't it?
06:25There's only one T in there.
06:27Oh, Len.
06:28Anything else, Susie?
06:29No, it was a tough one.
06:30Len, I promise you.
06:32You're going to have a mazes.
06:33Fourteen plays seven.
06:34Mosin on fourteen, and it's Mosin's numbers game.
06:37Yes, sir?
06:38Hi, let's come to the bottom row, please.
06:40Bottom row.
06:41Your favourite.
06:42Pick six little ones to start the day.
06:44Thank you, Mosin.
06:44And this selection is...
06:47Two.
06:48Seven.
06:49Ten.
06:50One.
06:52Oh, another one.
06:53And five.
06:55And the target, 977.
06:58977.
06:59One.
07:12Eleven.
07:14Joe.
07:14I'm schoo.
07:15One.
07:21One.
07:22One.
07:23I'm sli.
07:23Two.
07:23One.
07:23One.
07:23One.
07:24One.
07:24One.
07:24Two.
07:28One.
07:29Five.
07:29well motion 980 980 Ed nothing no over to you motion 980 2 times 7 14 5 plus 1
07:42plus 1 is 7 multiply them together 98 and then the 10 multiplied by the other
07:4810 yep three away 980 well done it's a winner but it's not 977
07:53Rachel it's a winner and that's perfect for this round that's it you could get
07:57yep so well done motion excellent stuff 21 plays 7 as we turn to our first tea time
08:03teaser which is laid a plum and the clue if you're into metal there's a chance
08:09you might see it here if you're into metal there's a chance you might see it
08:13here
08:29welcome back I left with a clue if you're into metal there's a chance you might see it here
08:34where why it's palladium palladium
08:39so 21 to 7 Ed your letters game
08:43a vowel please
08:45thank you Ed
08:46E
08:47and another vowel
08:49A
08:50and another one please
08:52E
08:53and a consonant
08:55L
08:57and another
08:59F
09:01and another
09:03D
09:04and another please
09:07K
09:08and a consonant
09:11M
09:13and a vowel please
09:17and lastly A
09:19standby
09:22T
09:23and
09:23and
09:52Thank you, Ed.
09:53Six.
09:54A six. Motion.
09:56I'm going to stick with the six.
09:58Okay. Ed?
10:00Uh, flaked.
10:02And flamed. Thank you.
10:05Now, Len and Susie.
10:07We didn't do any better. Six as it is.
10:10Leaked.
10:11Leaked.
10:12And a more modern one, a quite recent addition to the dictionary,
10:16is fleek for five, F-L-E-E-K.
10:19Extremely good or attractive or stylish.
10:21Ah.
10:22Fleek.
10:23Moaning.
10:24All right.
10:2527 plays 13.
10:27Mohsin, your letters game.
10:29Uh, kind of consonant, please.
10:30Thank you, Mohsin.
10:31R.
10:32And another.
10:35S.
10:36And a third.
10:38D.
10:39D.
10:40And a fourth, please.
10:42L.
10:44A vowel, please.
10:46I.
10:47And another.
10:48A.
10:50And a third.
10:52U.
10:53And a fourth.
10:56E.
10:58And a fifth.
10:59Final vowel.
11:01And lastly, O.
11:03Countdown.
11:04E.
11:06C.
11:06C.
11:08C.
11:08C.
11:09C.
11:11C.
11:12C.
11:13C.
11:16C.
11:35Motion.
11:36Seven.
11:38Eight.
11:38Eight.
11:40Motion.
11:41Lauders.
11:42Now then.
11:43Residual.
11:44Residual.
11:47Residual's excellent.
11:48Very good.
11:51Well done, Ed.
11:52Well done.
11:53And in the corner, yes, Susie had residual, but I think it was as good as it gets.
11:59Thanks, Len.
12:00So it's 27 to 21, and now, Ed, it's your numbers game.
12:05Could I have one big and five small, please?
12:07You can indeed, thank you, Ed.
12:08One large and five little for you.
12:11And this second numbers game is two, ten, one, another ten, another one, and one hundred.
12:20And the target, three hundred and fifty-four.
12:23Three, five, four.
12:24Ladies in the middle, we'll get a bit of aνη 유�real, we'll get a bit of a nibble, then we'll
12:26be awarded as a
12:26We'll get a bit of a ад, if you'll get another panel, and we'll get another sequel.
12:37All right.
12:37Then, please, ten, two, three.
12:45But first, let's go to the table, and we'll get the opportunity.
12:45team, two, three, two, Grayfhoo, four.
12:48Well done.
12:53Good before.
12:54Let's go toying Сегодня, and we'll get a bit of a look at Half a bit of a time here.
12:54Now, come on in the atmosphere.
12:57Yes, Ed.
12:593, 5, 8.
13:01Listen.
13:023, 5, 7.
13:03And 3, 5, 7.
13:05Let's try it.
13:0710 plus 10.
13:0920.
13:10Take away the 1.
13:1119.
13:12Add the 100.
13:13119.
13:142 plus the other 1.
13:17Yep, you haven't used that.
13:18And then multiply them together.
13:19Yep, 3, 5, 7, 3 away.
13:21Well done, well done.
13:22But 3, 5, 4, Rachel?
13:24Well, I can creep 1 closer with 3, 5, 6.
13:27But this one's impossible again.
13:29OK, thank you.
13:3034 plays, 21.
13:32As we turn to Len.
13:35And Len, today I think you want to talk about your mum, Louisa Adelaide,
13:39and your father, Leonard.
13:41Yeah, well, let me tell you.
13:42If we went back to the 24th of April, 1944,
13:48that's the day before I was born,
13:50we were in Wales when my mum was carrying me and my dad.
13:55But I was upside down or back to front or something queer.
14:02So, a nurse with my mother went up to London,
14:07to the London Hospital for me to be born.
14:10So, I nearly got born on the train.
14:12But, anyway, we got to the London Hospital.
14:15In we went.
14:17A bomb went off right outside the hospital,
14:20and it was evacuated.
14:23And I was actually born in Farnborough, in Kent.
14:28And that's where my birthplace was.
14:30Now, my dad, he wasn't in the army.
14:33He had one of these jobs that was crucial to the well-being of the country.
14:38And he was an electrician.
14:40And he used to go to airfields and air force bases.
14:43And he was in Norwich, somewhere that way.
14:46Now, my dad got friendly with the quartermaster.
14:50He used to dish out the goods.
14:53And he used to give my mum great big tins of corned beef.
14:59Wonderful.
15:00Beautiful.
15:01And my mum used to hide them in my pram.
15:05And they'd be stuck up me, whatever.
15:07And I'd be surrounded by corned beef.
15:10And I think, and out she'd go,
15:12hey, nice to see you.
15:14And out she'd go.
15:15But I think that had a lot to do,
15:17I've had the twinges in my back,
15:19all my life.
15:20And I'm putting it down to my mum
15:23and the corned beef of 1945.
15:27That's brilliant.
15:28Oh, lovely.
15:29Corned beef.
15:30Corned beef.
15:33Remember it was called Frey Bentos.
15:35Remember?
15:36Oh, yeah.
15:36Didn't it come from Argentina?
15:38It did, yeah.
15:39A lovely story.
15:40Good for you, Len.
15:41Yeah, great.
15:42All right.
15:43Very good.
15:46And mum was a smuggler, basically.
15:48She was positively a smuggler.
15:50Yeah.
15:51Good for her.
15:5234 to 21.
15:54Motion on 34.
15:55And you're back, Motion.
15:56Letters game.
15:58Count the continent, please.
15:59Thank you, Motion.
16:00M.
16:01And another?
16:04P.
16:06And a third?
16:07T.
16:09Vowel, please.
16:11A.
16:12And another?
16:14U.
16:15And a third?
16:17O.
16:18And a consonant, please.
16:21R.
16:22And another?
16:25S.
16:26And a third?
16:27And lastly, V.
16:30Done by.
16:31Vowel, please.
17:02Yes, Merson?
17:04Six.
17:05A six.
17:05Ed?
17:07Um, I'll try an eight.
17:10Good man.
17:11Merson?
17:12Tramps.
17:14Now they're dead.
17:15Out ramps.
17:16I was looking for an out word.
17:18Oh, it's not there, I'm afraid.
17:19Out camp, but not out ramp.
17:21Sorry.
17:21Bad luck.
17:22Certainly worth a shot.
17:24What about the corner?
17:26Well, is it what ladies used to get?
17:28The vapours?
17:29Yes.
17:30Oh, I've got the vapours.
17:32Touch of the vapours.
17:33Touch of the vapour.
17:34What was it?
17:35Was it like you came over all peculiar?
17:37A little bit historical and just swoony, I think.
17:39I think you've got to give them smelling salts when they do that.
17:42No way.
17:43Got the vapours.
17:43Under the nose.
17:44Always have the smelling salts ready.
17:47I've got them here in case Susie goes a bit peculiar.
17:49Susie's never going to have the vapours.
17:51She's the coolest thing on earth.
17:53What else have we got, Susie?
17:54Uh, that's it, actually.
17:55Vapours for seven.
17:57Well done, Len.
17:57Now, 40 plays 21.
17:59And Ed's letters game.
18:01Yes, Ed?
18:02I'll start with the consonant, please.
18:04Thank you, Ed.
18:05S.
18:06And another?
18:07N.
18:09And a vowel?
18:11A.
18:13And another?
18:15I.
18:16And another?
18:19U.
18:20And a consonant?
18:22R.
18:24And a consonant?
18:25D.
18:28And a consonant?
18:30F.
18:32And a vowel, please.
18:33And lastly, O.
18:37Stand by.
19:09Ed?
19:10Six.
19:11A six, and Mohsin?
19:13A six were not written down.
19:15What would that be, Mohsin?
19:16Unfair.
19:17Unfair, and Ed?
19:19Unsaid.
19:20And unsaid.
19:22Yep, that's good.
19:23Now, in the corner.
19:25Dinosaur.
19:27Welsh.
19:28For eight.
19:29That's brilliant.
19:31Well, I didn't, I've got to be, I can't lie.
19:33I know you, I know you're involved.
19:35I went, I was doing that thing like this, and it just came to me.
19:41Dinosaur.
19:42Dinosaur.
19:43And what's this word?
19:45Frians.
19:47They are little cakes made with almonds, little dainty cakes.
19:51F-R-I-A-N-D-S.
19:52That will give you a seven.
19:53Very interesting.
19:54But dinosaur, what a whiz.
19:56That's a good one.
19:56Fantastic.
19:5746 to 27.
19:59Mohsin, it's your numbers game now.
20:01Can I have one large and five small, please?
20:04You can indeed.
20:05One large five.
20:05Thank you, Mohsin.
20:07Let's see what we have.
20:07I'll try for a possible one this time.
20:09They are five, two, three, another five, seven, and 25.
20:17And this target, 526.
20:20Five, two, six.
20:35Five, two, three, two, three, two, three, two, three, two, three, two, three, two, three, two, three, two, three, two,
20:39three, two, three, two, three, two, three, two, three, one, two, three, one, two, three, one, two, three, one, two,
20:39three, one, two, one, two, three, one, two, one, two, one, two, one, two, one, two, one, two, one, two,
20:39one, two, one, two, one, two, one, two, one, two, one, two, one, two, one, two, one, two, one, two,
20:39one, two, one, two, one, two, one, two, one, two, one, two, one, two, one, two, one, two, one, two,
20:39one, two, one, two, one, two, one, two, one, two, one
20:53Merson.
20:55526.
20:56Ed.
20:57526.
20:58Thank you, Merson.
20:597 times 3.
21:0121.
21:02Multiplied by 25.
21:03525.
21:045 divided by 5 is the 1.
21:06It is indeed.
21:07Lovely.
21:08Ed.
21:09Exactly the same.
21:10Same way.
21:11Well done.
21:15So we take a tea time teaser now with a score standing 56 to 37 in Merson's favour.
21:21And that tea time teaser is very hoped.
21:24And the clue.
21:25She very much hoped the film was as good as they said, but it wasn't the case.
21:30She very much hoped the film was as good as they said, but it wasn't the case.
21:51Welcome back.
21:52I left with the clue.
21:53She very much hoped the film was as good as they said, but it wasn't the case because it
21:59had been overhyped.
22:03Very surprised there.
22:04Overhyped.
22:0656 to 37.
22:08Ed on 37.
22:09Ed, your letters game.
22:10Hi.
22:11I'll start with a vowel, please.
22:13Thank you, Ed.
22:14I.
22:15And another.
22:17E.
22:17And one more.
22:19O.
22:21And a consonant.
22:23D.
22:24And another.
22:26R.
22:28And another.
22:30P.
22:32And another.
22:35C.
22:36And another.
22:39R.
22:41And a vowel, please.
22:43And lastly, you.
22:46Countdown.
22:53And another.
23:03Bye.
23:04Bye.
23:10Bye.
23:12Bye.
23:18Ed?
23:19Eight.
23:20An eight.
23:21Yes, Mohsen?
23:22Seven, not written down.
23:24And that would be?
23:26Aw.
23:28Produce.
23:29Aw.
23:30And?
23:31Ed?
23:33Groupier.
23:33Groupier.
23:34Excellent.
23:34And why are we groaning, Mohsen?
23:36Producer.
23:37Yes, that would have given me the eight.
23:40Yeah.
23:40Bad luck.
23:41Bad luck.
23:41Bad luck.
23:42And in the corner, groupier and producer.
23:47Excellent.
23:47Well done.
23:4856 to 45.
23:49Mohsen, your letters game.
23:51Can I have a consonant, please?
23:53Thank you, Mohsen.
23:54G.
23:55And another.
23:57P.
23:58And a third.
24:01D.
24:02And a fourth.
24:04N.
24:05And a fifth.
24:07T.
24:09Vowel, please.
24:11E.
24:12And another.
24:14A.
24:15And another.
24:18E.
24:19And a final vowel, please.
24:22And a final I.
24:25Stand by.
24:27And a third.
24:42And a third.
24:43And a third.
24:49And a third.
24:49And a third.
24:49And a third.
24:51And a third.
24:54And a third.
24:57Merson?
25:02I'll go for a seven.
25:04A seven. Ed?
25:06I'll stick with a six.
25:08And your six?
25:09Taping.
25:11Merson?
25:12Peating. I don't know. That's a P-A-T.
25:15Peating. OK.
25:17No, it's just there as a noun and not as a verb. I'm sorry.
25:22Bad luck. Bad luck.
25:23Now, Len's looking astutiously there.
25:26Yes. Painted. For seven.
25:28Yes.
25:29And what's that letter?
25:31Negated.
25:32Oh, negated. Yeah.
25:34Well done.
25:35Two sevens and pedant.
25:36Yes.
25:37I don't know what that means, even.
25:38A pedant. If you're a pedant, you're pedantic and...
25:42Oh, yeah. Oh, don't be so pedantic.
25:44Yes.
25:45Well, you're certainly not pedantic, Len, that's for sure.
25:4956 to 51. Ed is climbing up the scale there.
25:54Susie.
25:56Let's give them the rest.
25:57The origins of words. What have you for us today?
25:59I have an email from Bert Bishop, who wrote in and says,
26:04is there any link between chum and companion?
26:07Two words for friendship.
26:11And etymologically speaking, there isn't, but the two have quite nice stories behind them.
26:16So I'll start with companion, and that means someone who you share your bread with.
26:22It comes from com, meaning with, and panis, bread, in Latin.
26:26So it's literally somebody with whom you sit down to eat.
26:29And exactly the same idea is behind mate, which is related to meat.
26:34So people would sit down together and eat their meat or eat their food together.
26:40So anyway, to go back to friendship, that's companion, somebody who you eat your bread with.
26:45Chum is a little bit less old, really.
26:48It's first recorded in 1864.
26:50And it actually then meant a chimney sweep's assistant.
26:52And it came from that word chimney, believe it or not.
26:56And it came to be this chummy, which is a famous form of address, really, by police to suspects.
27:01You'll find them in the old cop programs.
27:03Just a little bit of hint, a hint of menace there when you call somebody chummy.
27:08And in 1892, there was a penny paper called Chums, which was published.
27:12But it was really first in wartime that the word took off.
27:16So veterans of World War I were known to each other as the Chums.
27:20And this sense of the word is slightly different.
27:22It probably comes from a shortening of Chamberfellow.
27:25So the equivalent of a roommate today was somebody with whom you shared your digs.
27:31A word, incidentally, that comes from the gold rush and the diggings there,
27:34which were accommodation as well as the gold mines.
27:37But yes, there's bread, there's Chamberfellows and there's chimney sweeps.
27:41So all quite interesting story behind Bert's questions.
27:43Lovely.
27:44Well, good.
27:4856 to 51, Moten on 56.
27:51And Ed, off we go.
27:53Letters go.
27:54Let's have a consonant, please.
27:56Thank you, Ed.
27:57H.
27:58And another.
28:01Z.
28:03Let's try a vowel instead.
28:05E.
28:07And another one, please.
28:09A.
28:10And one more.
28:12O.
28:14And a consonant.
28:15N.
28:16And a consonant.
28:19W.
28:20And another one.
28:23S.
28:25And a final consonant, please.
28:28And a final N.
28:30Dunbar.
28:31N bredant.
28:32Point.
28:38Good.
28:55More answered.
28:56Oh,
28:56and another.
28:57go.
28:59No.
29:00No.
29:00No.
29:00No.
29:02Yes, Ed?
29:03Five.
29:04Five, Mohsin?
29:05Five.
29:06Ed?
29:06Shown.
29:07And?
29:08Zorns.
29:10Mm-hmm.
29:12Can we get beyond that, Len, Susie?
29:14Not a lot.
29:15We were on fives as well.
29:17Oh, you can have...
29:18If you dye your hair with henna, you can have henna's.
29:21It's those of a...
29:21That will give you a six.
29:23But really tricky.
29:24Yeah.
29:24Really tricky.
29:25All right.
29:26So, Mohsin, last letters game.
29:30Consonant, please.
29:31Thank you, Mohsin.
29:32P.
29:33And another.
29:36M.
29:38A vowel, please.
29:40U.
29:41And another.
29:43E.
29:44A consonant, please.
29:46G.
29:48And another.
29:49C.
29:50And a third.
29:52L.
29:54Vowel, please.
29:57I.
29:58And finish off with a consonant.
30:03And finish with T.
30:05Stand by.
30:06And finish off with a consonant.
30:08And finish off with a consonant.
30:17And finish off with a consonant.
30:22And finish off with a consonant.
30:22And finish off with a consonant.
30:22And finish off with a consonant.
30:23And finish off with a consonant.
30:24And finish off with a consonant.
30:25And finish off with a consonant.
30:26And finish off with a consonant.
30:36Mosen, just a four.
30:39A four, Ed?
30:40Six.
30:41And a six.
30:43Getting interesting.
30:44Mosen?
30:45Glue.
30:46And Ed?
30:48Limpet.
30:49Yes.
30:50Limpet.
30:51Well done.
30:52Well done.
30:53Look, you've squeezed a head.
30:56Pretty good.
30:57Len?
30:58Susie?
30:59Gimlet.
31:00For six, yeah.
31:02Yep.
31:03Impute is another six to attribute usually something wrong to somebody.
31:08But we couldn't get beyond six.
31:09All right.
31:10So Mosen, 61, and Ed on 62.
31:13Mm-hmm.
31:14Ed, your numbers game.
31:17One large, five small, please.
31:18Thank you, Ed.
31:19Your last chance to avoid a crucial conundrum.
31:22Good luck.
31:23Last numbers of the day are two, ten, three, another ten,
31:28another two, and 25, and this target, 153.
31:34One, five, three.
31:36One, five, three.
32:06Ed?
32:07One, five, three.
32:08One, five, three, Mosen?
32:10One, five, three.
32:11Thank you, Ed.
32:12Ten, take two, take two.
32:14Four, six.
32:15Times by 25.
32:16One, 15.
32:17And add on the three.
32:18That'll do it.
32:20Mosen.
32:21Yeah.
32:22There we go.
32:24So.
32:28Mosen really has been stretched here.
32:3171 plays 72, which means we go into the final round,
32:35and it's a crucial countdown conundrum.
32:37Gentlemen, fingers on buzzers.
32:39Let's roll that crucial countdown conundrum.
32:42Conundrum.
33:09Ed.
33:10Good.
33:11Mobilized?
33:13Mobilized.
33:14Let's see whether you're right.
33:16Tension.
33:17Mobilized.
33:17Well done.
33:23Well done, Ed Morrison.
33:24I'll come back to you.
33:26Ah, Mosen, Shabir.
33:28Fantastic.
33:28You had two great wins.
33:30Yeah.
33:3089 apiece.
33:32And along comes Ed Morrison and takes you away.
33:35But he doesn't take your goodie bag.
33:36He doesn't take your teapot away from you.
33:39And he doesn't take our hearty thanks for coming here all the way from Riyadh to compete with us.
33:45It's fantastic.
33:46Thank you so much.
33:48Ed.
33:49See you tomorrow.
33:50Well done indeed.
33:51Well done.
33:52See you both tomorrow.
33:54Len and Susie, of course.
33:56Wow, that was a close run thing.
33:59Tactical game.
33:59A couple of impossible numbers rounds and then a couple of gambles in there.
34:02Could have gone either way.
34:03And a crucial.
34:04Yep.
34:05Right at the end.
34:06Tremendous.
34:07We'll see you tomorrow.
34:07See you tomorrow.
34:08Join us then.
34:09Ed will be back.
34:10Same time, same place.
34:11You be sure of it.
34:11A very good afternoon.
34:13Contact us by email at countdown at channel4.com, by Twitter at C4Countdown, or write to us at
34:20Countdown, Leeds, LS3, 1JS.
34:23You can also find our webpage at channel4.com forward slash countdown.