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00:31Well, good afternoon, and welcome to the Countdown Studio.
00:35The qualities to have in a friend, I think one of the most exciting, really, is spontaneity.
00:41But I read a story the other day that beats the spontaneity of any of my friends.
00:45It was about a woman. She was called Dawn. Dawn Walker, who's the 50th, lived in Canada.
00:51And suddenly she upsticks and flew 5,000 miles on a whim, on a whim, to Galston, near Great Yarmouth.
01:01Why? Because she saw the film yesterday, which was written by Richard Curtis,
01:07that wonderful chap who did Four Weddings and his funeral, and all those other great movies.
01:11And she thought, I'm off. And she went and she flew in.
01:13And Emma Freud, Richard Curtis's partner, heard about this and fixed for her when she landed to go and have
01:19tea with him,
01:20which really made her birthday.
01:22Galston, of course, is that charming, old-fashioned, if they'll allow me to say so,
01:27charmingly old-fashioned seaside town just by Great Yarmouth.
01:32So there we are.
01:32Isn't that nice?
01:33It's a great story.
01:34It's a good couple. I mean, they've done all the comic relief work, so they're fantastic anyway.
01:37But that's something special, isn't it, for her to remember.
01:39All right. Thank you, Rachel.
01:41Who's here? We've got John Osmond back.
01:44Three times winner. Twice on A Crucial Conundrum.
01:48Yeah.
01:48Nerve-wracking, isn't it?
01:49Skin of my teeth, yes.
01:51All right. But anyway, you've got three tucked neatly under your belt.
01:54You've got a teapot.
01:55And now you've got to get past Ben Pooley.
01:57Welcome, Ben.
01:59Teaching assistant from Oxfordshire, Whitney, I think.
02:01Yes, that's correct.
02:02And a big player on Quidditch.
02:04You've played for six years.
02:05And this, of course, is the Harry Potter game.
02:07Yes.
02:08Fast and furious.
02:09Yeah, pretty fast-paced.
02:10Full contact.
02:11Lots of tackles flying in.
02:12Yeah. All right.
02:13Well, I hope you get on very well today.
02:16Both of you, a big round of applause for Ben Pooley and John Osmond.
02:23And over in the corner, Susie.
02:25Welcome, Susie.
02:26And sitting next to Susie, it's a great pleasure to welcome, for the first time,
02:30businessman, musician, and source maestro, the great Levi Roots.
02:35Welcome, Levi.
02:39And now, John, let's get the show underway.
02:42Letters game.
02:44OK.
02:44Afternoon, Rachel.
02:45Afternoon, John.
02:46May I have a consonant, please?
02:48You may, thank you.
02:48Start today with N.
02:51And a vowel.
03:02And the last one, I.
03:18And here's the countdown clock.
03:51well john a seven a seven ben a five and your five is a pants thank you john uh pirates
04:01and
04:02pirates yes what about the corner now levi yeah we we found a nine um no yeah patronize not a
04:13bad
04:13style excellent well done anything else susie um pronates therefore eight we like pronates on
04:23countdown good way to start all right so john on seven now it's ben's letters game ben afternoon
04:31rachel afternoon ben uh can i have a vowel please thank you start with a a consonant
04:36r a vowel e another vowel o a consonant g a consonant c a vowel e a vowel e and
04:58consonant and lastly n
05:01stand by
05:34Well, Ben, five again.
05:36Five, thank you.
05:38And John?
05:39Six.
05:41Yes, Ben?
05:41Grace.
05:43Grace and John?
05:44Reneige.
05:46Oh, Reneige.
05:47Yeah, either so.
05:48Very, very good.
05:48Reneige is probably in the middle.
05:51Very good.
05:51Six.
05:51We found a couple of fishy ones as well.
05:53Conga, as in a conga eel.
05:55Conga eel, yeah.
05:56Good one.
05:57Anything else, Susie?
05:58Just six is otherwise.
05:59And Reneige in orange, we had two.
06:02All right.
06:03And now, John, it's your numbers game.
06:05First of the day.
06:06Off we go.
06:07May I have two from the top and four from anywhere else, please, Rachel?
06:11You may indeed.
06:12Thank you, John.
06:12Two large, four little.
06:13And the first one of the day is one, seven, one, two, 50 and 75.
06:22And the target, 846.
06:25846.
06:55Yes, John?
06:58Uh, 850.
07:01850.
07:01Ben?
07:02Not anywhere close, unfortunately.
07:04Too far?
07:05Too far.
07:05All right.
07:05Let's stick with you, John.
07:07Yes, John?
07:08Seven times two is 14.
07:10Seven times two, 14.
07:12Subtract both the ones.
07:14For 12.
07:16Times 75.
07:17900.
07:19Subtract the 50.
07:20And take the 50.
07:21850, four away.
07:22There we are.
07:23Well done.
07:24But, Rachel, help us out here.
07:25846.
07:26I got two, one away, Nick, so leave it with me.
07:29Certainly will.
07:30Now, time for our first tea time teaser.
07:34It's a sew thread.
07:36And the clue, lots of parents get the needle if they hear inappropriate language on TV before this.
07:42Lots of parents get the needle if they hear inappropriate language on TV before this.
08:03Well, welcome back.
08:04I left with the clue.
08:06Lots of parents get the needle if they hear inappropriate language on TV before this.
08:11Before what?
08:11Why?
08:12Before the watershed.
08:14Important.
08:15Watershed.
08:16Rachel, you've got that smile.
08:18Yep.
08:18846.
08:19It didn't take me to the watershed.
08:20If you take the 50, add one for 51, times it by 7 for 357, take the 75 for 282,
08:31and then 2 plus the other one is 3, and times them together.
08:35846.
08:36Ah, well done.
08:39That's the way.
08:41So, it's back to the letters, and Ben, it's your letters game.
08:46Can I have a consonant, please?
08:48Thank you, Ben.
08:49T.
08:51Vowel.
08:52A.
08:54Another vowel.
08:55O.
08:57Consonant.
08:59R.
09:01Another consonant.
09:02S.
09:04Another consonant.
09:05C.
09:07A vowel.
09:09I.
09:10Another vowel.
09:13A.
09:14And a consonant.
09:16And lastly, D.
09:18Stand by.
09:19A vowel.
09:20A vowel.
09:23A vowel.
09:26A vowel.
09:32A vowel.
09:35A vowel.
09:37A vowel.
09:37A vowel.
09:37A vowel.
09:37A vowel.
09:46A vowel.
09:49Yes, Ben.
09:51Only a four, I'm afraid.
09:52A four, OK.
09:53John?
09:54A six.
09:56And a six.
09:56Ben?
09:57A drat.
09:59Drat, indeed.
10:00And John?
10:01Actors.
10:02Actors.
10:04Very good.
10:05Happy?
10:05Yes, very happy.
10:06Levi, what's news?
10:07Yeah, we've found a really good word.
10:10It's carotids.
10:12Yes.
10:13C-A-R-O-T-I-D-S for an eight.
10:17Yes.
10:17Yes, carotid arteries, two main arteries which carry blood to the head and neck.
10:22Very last minute, nine as well, Nick, is hidden there.
10:25And that's a radiocast, simply a radio broadcast.
10:29OK, radiocast.
10:30Radiocast.
10:33Now, John, back with you.
10:35Letters game.
10:37Consonant, please, Rachel.
10:38Thank you, John.
10:39T.
10:40And a vowel.
10:42O.
10:43And a consonant.
10:46X.
10:47And a vowel.
10:48E.
10:50And another consonant.
10:52V.
10:53Consonant.
10:55S.
10:57And a vowel.
10:58I.
11:00Another vowel.
11:02O.
11:03And a consonant.
11:05And lastly, G.
11:06And it's Countdown.
11:09And it's Countdown.
11:39Well, John?
11:41A six.
11:42A six.
11:43Ben?
11:43A five.
11:44And the five is?
11:45Stove.
11:46Stove.
11:47Yes, John.
11:49Ogives.
11:50Yes, ogives.
11:50They are pointed or Gothic arches.
11:53Yeah, that will give you a six.
11:54Very good.
11:55Quite obscure, isn't it?
11:58An ogive.
11:58Never heard of it.
11:59Yeah.
11:59Levi, what have you got?
12:00Can I have you got?
12:01Just another couple of sixes.
12:03Best one I've got is Soviet.
12:06Soviet, yeah.
12:07Indeed.
12:08So is he anything else?
12:09No.
12:09Elected local district or national council in the former Soviet Union.
12:12Indeed.
12:13The Soviets.
12:14Right.
12:15Ben, it's a numbers game for you.
12:19Can I have two large and four from everywhere else, please?
12:21You can indeed.
12:22Thank you, Ben.
12:23Same again.
12:23Two from the top, four not.
12:25And these four small ones are two, nine, five, four.
12:30And the large two, 50 and 75.
12:34And the target, 288.
12:37288.
13:09Yes, Ben.
13:10I got 286.
13:12286.
13:13And John?
13:15288, I think.
13:17Let's try.
13:18Let's see what you've got.
13:1950 times five.
13:2150 by five, 250.
13:23Nine times four.
13:2536.
13:26Add those and the two.
13:28Well done.
13:28288, lovely.
13:30Excellent.
13:30Well done.
13:34Well, good start for John there, Ben.
13:36Plenty of time, so don't worry about a thing.
13:39And now we turn to Levi.
13:41Levi, you had what I think might be considered a full life.
13:45And you've met some extraordinary people.
13:48And you've even ended up playing football with one of them.
13:51Tell us about that.
13:52I did.
13:52And it's one of these moments that you always say, people always say, never meet your heroes.
13:58Because I remember when I was in school and I knew I wanted to be a musician.
14:03At the time, Bob Marley was the biggest musician from Jamaican reggae anyway.
14:07And I kept looking around in school for the name that my father had given me.
14:11And he'd given me the name of Keith Valentine Graham.
14:15And when I looked it up at the time in school, back then in the 70s, I found that Keith
14:20Graham is a Scottish name.
14:22And I kept looking in the mirror and thinking that I don't look Scottish.
14:25You know, something is wrong there.
14:26And it was through Bob Marley's music, listening to his music, that I wanted to change my name so that
14:33I could be, you know, announced and staged as a boy.
14:36Ladies and gentlemen, introducing Keith.
14:39Ladies and gentlemen, introducing Levi Root, sir.
14:42And it was many years after that that we had a call from Bob Marley and his team while he
14:48was in exile here in the 70s, in the late 70s, and asked us to play a game of football
14:53in Battersea Park.
14:55And, Nick, it was the most amazing thing, if you can imagine.
14:58You know, you've revered somebody all your life.
15:01And you've not met him in a concert.
15:04And he's asked you to play football with him.
15:06So we arrived in Battersea Park on a Sunday, and Bob Marley and the Whalers, the whole team, arrived in
15:14the park.
15:15And in those days, my heroes was defensive heroes.
15:19You know, people like Ron Chopper Harris and modern-day Tony Adams and people like that who take no prisoners
15:25at all.
15:25And Bob Marley is a bit of a Maradona type of a player, very short, very low sense of gravity
15:33on the ball,
15:34very difficult to knock off the ball, great footballer, by the way.
15:37I mean, a lot of people said if he did make it as a singer, he would have made it
15:40as a footballer.
15:42And I can vividly now remember, because it is one of my most talked-about name drops.
15:47I remember him coming at me down the middle, and my other central defender would be shouting at me, you
15:52know,
15:53get him, Levi, get him, get him, get him.
15:55And I'm seeing, you know, the greatest man alive in music coming at me with the ball.
16:00And I'm thinking, hmm, should I do a Chopper Harrison one or not?
16:06And he scored an at-trick the day because I allowed him to go past me at every time.
16:12And at the end of the day, you know, he would bring out the food and have a chat and
16:16have a little sing-song in the park.
16:17And it was absolutely fantastic for me, you know, to see your heroes.
16:22And they say, don't meet your heroes.
16:24But for me, when I met this man, you know, I knew now why I chose him the name Levi
16:29Roots,
16:30because of his music and because of his vibe and everything.
16:33But I was actually rubbish in the football field because I just never wanted to tackle him.
16:39And you just, you never tackle God.
16:42Exactly.
16:43So I let him go past me, scored an at-trick.
16:45Never forget it.
16:46Absolutely fantastic memories.
16:47What a lovely story.
16:51A lovely story.
16:52Thank you, Levi.
16:54All right.
16:55Now then, John, let's get back to the business of today.
16:59It's a letters game.
17:01A consonant, please, Rachel.
17:03Thank you, John.
17:03R.
17:04And a vowel.
17:06A.
17:07A consonant.
17:09K.
17:11A vowel.
17:13I.
17:14A consonant.
17:17S.
17:18Another consonant.
17:21N.
17:22Vowel.
17:24Vowel.
17:25A consonant.
17:29M.
17:31Another consonant, please.
17:34And lastly, B.
17:37Stand by.
17:38A consonant.
17:39A consonant.
17:50A consonant.
17:52A consonant.
17:53A consonant.
17:55A consonant.
17:55A consonant.
17:55A consonant.
17:55A consonant.
18:08Well, John?
18:10A seven, Nick.
18:12A seven. Ben? A six.
18:14And a six. Your six?
18:15A banker. Thank you.
18:17Thanks, Ben. And John? Bankers.
18:20Bankers are bad luck, Ben.
18:22That is a shame.
18:23Now, in the corner, Susie and Levi?
18:26Yeah, we found one that's really close to my heart.
18:29It's from in the kitchen.
18:30It's the ramekins.
18:31It's quite a lot for an eight.
18:33And we've also found in box for a seven.
18:36In box. Thank you.
18:38Now, Ben, your letters go.
18:41Can I have a consonant, please?
18:42Thank you, Ben.
18:43G.
18:45Vowel.
18:46O.
18:48Consonant.
18:50T.
18:51Vowel.
18:53A.
18:54Consonant.
18:55P.
18:57Consonant.
18:59M.
19:00Vowel.
19:02E.
19:04Consonant.
19:06W.
19:08And another consonant. Thank you.
19:09And the last one.
19:11T.
19:12Stand by.
19:13C.
19:14T.
19:14T.
19:15T.
19:16T.
19:17T.
19:43Yes, Ben.
19:44Four, I'm afraid.
19:46Okay, and John?
19:48I think a seven.
19:50Ben?
19:51Wept.
19:53Yes, John?
19:55Pottage with two Ts?
19:56Yes.
19:57We were just looking at that.
19:58A soup or a stew, staying with a foodie theme.
20:01Is that a mess of pottage?
20:03Mess of pottage, exactly.
20:04Same deal.
20:05Then the Elstale, Levi?
20:06I know, pottage is a very good one.
20:08Again, it's a very foodie thing.
20:10I think this is set up for me.
20:12With a decent sauce.
20:14Now, Ben, Susie, anything else?
20:16Seven with the top.
20:17That'll do.
20:19Now, John, it's your numbers game.
20:20Off we go.
20:22Could I have one large and five small this time, please, Rachel?
20:26You can indeed.
20:27Thank you, John.
20:27One large coming up.
20:28And the five little ones this round are four, ten, two, five, and seven.
20:36And the large one, 75.
20:38And the target, 660.
20:40Six, six, zero.
20:43And the five little ones this round are four, ten, two, five, and seven, two, five, and seven, two, five,
21:02and seven, two, five, and seven, one, two, five, and seven, one, two, five, and seven, one, one, one, one,
21:03one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one,
21:03one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one,
21:03one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one,
21:03one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one, one
21:14Yes, John.
21:15660.
21:17660 and Ben?
21:18660 as well.
21:20Thank you, John.
21:2275 minus 5.
21:2470.
21:25Minus 4.
21:25Minus 4, 66.
21:27Times 10.
21:28Perfect, 660.
21:30No, Ben.
21:317 add 2.
21:327 plus 2 is 9.
21:34Times 75.
21:35Times 75, 675.
21:37Minus 10.
21:38Minus 10.
21:39Minus 5.
21:40Lovely, well done.
21:41Very good.
21:44Well done, 66 to 10 as we turn to our second Tea Time Teaser, which is Nose Lifts.
21:51And the clue.
21:52He was known for being tall and for having plenty of room upstairs.
21:56He was known for being tall and for having plenty of room upstairs.
22:15Welcome back.
22:16Welcome back.
22:17I left you with the clue.
22:17He was known for being tall and for having plenty of room upstairs.
22:21And the answer to that one is, yes, you've got it, loftiness.
22:25Loftiness.
22:27Now, 66 to 10.
22:29John in the lead and it's Ben's letters game.
22:30Yes, Ben.
22:31Thank you, Nick.
22:33Can I have one vowel, please?
22:35Thank you, Ben.
22:36A.
22:37Consonant.
22:39N.
22:40Another consonant.
22:42J.
22:43Vowel.
22:45I.
22:47A consonant.
22:48L.
22:50Another consonant.
22:52S.
22:53A vowel.
22:55U.
22:56Another vowel.
22:59E.
23:00And a consonant, thank you.
23:01And the last one.
23:02N.
23:04Stand by.
23:06And a consonant.
23:20And a consonant.
23:23And a consonant.
23:24And a consonant.
23:24And a consonant.
23:24And a consonant.
23:24And a consonant.
23:25And a consonant.
23:25And a consonant.
23:30And a consonant.
23:36Well, Ben. Five, unfortunately. Five. And John? Six. And a six. Yes, Ben. Lanes. Thank you. Yes, John. Saline. Saline's
23:49good for six. Saline. Well done. Well done. Now, Levi and Susie. Yeah, we found another cute word. On nails
23:56for seven. Yes. On nails. Thank you, Susie. Anything else? No, that was definitely the best we could do.
24:02Well done. Thanks, Levi. Seventy-two plays ten. John, your letters go. Could I have a consonant, please, Rachel? Thank
24:09you, John. F. And a vowel. A. And a consonant. Y. And a vowel. E. Another consonant. R. Another consonant.
24:27V. A vowel. A.
24:32A consonant. R. And another consonant, please. And the last one. N.
24:44Stand by.
25:17John.
25:18Five.
25:20Five, Ben.
25:21Four.
25:21And a four is fear.
25:24Thank you, John.
25:26Raven.
25:27Raven.
25:28Yes, like ravens.
25:30Now, in the corner, pretty tough choice, I guess.
25:33Levi.
25:34Yearn.
25:35Yearn, yep.
25:37And fairy, you can spell fairy the old-fashioned way, F-A-E-R-Y.
25:43But just fives for us, isn't it?
25:44It's really tricky.
25:45No.
25:4777 to 10.
25:48Susie, let's come back to you now for your wonderful origins of words.
25:52What have you for us today?
25:53I have a question from Terry Catamole.
25:56It's one of my regular e-mailers, actually.
25:59And he asks simply, why a rasher of bacon?
26:02And most fictionists will tell you that the origin for the name of a thin slice of bacon is shrouded
26:08in mystery.
26:09But one really early lexicographer assumed it must be called a rasher because it was hastily roasted or hastily eaten,
26:18which is probably true.
26:19It's said that it's the one thing that will turn a vegetarian.
26:22It's the smell of sizzling bacon.
26:23And if it is that, then it has a link with eclair, eclair from the French for lightning, so-called,
26:29we think, because it goes down in a flash.
26:33Back to bacon, though, there's a more plausible explanation, and that's that it comes from an old sense of rash,
26:39meaning to cut or to slash, from the French araché, which means to tear away.
26:44And that refers to the practice of scoring meat before grilling it or frying it.
26:50And finally, pork itself, pork comes from the Latin porcus, meaning a pig.
26:55And one thing that definitely doesn't fit in this family, but I like it anyway, is the porcupine, because originally
27:01it was thought to be a type of pig.
27:03And porcupine goes back to the Latin meaning prickly, pig.
27:08Very good.
27:09So good.
27:15Delicious.
27:15When she was talking pork, I was doing that.
27:17Yes.
27:18Me too, because I'm vegetarian, so we should have all done that.
27:21All right.
27:22Now, then, what a menu that was.
27:24Now, Ben, your letters came.
27:27Thank you, Nick.
27:28Can I have a vowel, please?
27:29Thank you, Ben.
27:30I.
27:31A consonant.
27:33L.
27:35A consonant again.
27:37P.
27:38Another consonant.
27:40D.
27:41A vowel.
27:43A.
27:44Another vowel.
27:46O.
27:47A consonant.
27:49M.
27:51A vowel.
27:53U.
27:55And a consonant.
27:56And the last one.
27:58S.
27:59Stand by.
28:01A vowel.
28:04A vowel.
28:06A vowel.
28:10A vowel.
28:12A vowel.
28:16A vowel.
28:16A vowel.
28:17A vowel.
28:17A vowel.
28:17A vowel.
28:17A vowel.
28:17A vowel.
28:17A vowel.
28:17A vowel.
28:17A vowel.
28:17A vowel.
28:31Yes, Ben?
28:32Five.
28:33Thank you. Five from Ben and John?
28:35I think an eight.
28:37Right.
28:39And Ben?
28:40Spoil.
28:41Now then, John?
28:43Diplomas.
28:44Yes, very well spotted. That's excellent.
28:46Well played.
28:46Well played.
28:50And over in the corner, any more eights?
28:52Can we beat it or match it?
28:53No, well, Diplomas, I think we were beaten there by you, John,
28:56because we got that very late in the day.
28:58But that is, and also Lipomas for a seven,
29:01which are benign tumours of fatty tissue.
29:05And uploads as well for a modern seven.
29:08Thank you very much.
29:1085 plays 10.
29:11John, your letters game now.
29:13Final letters game.
29:14A consonant, please, Rachel.
29:17Thank you, John.
29:18N.
29:19And a vowel.
29:20E.
29:21A consonant.
29:23D.
29:24And a vowel.
29:26I.
29:27A consonant.
29:29W.
29:30Another consonant.
29:31H.
29:33And a vowel.
29:35A consonant.
29:36A consonant.
29:39R.
29:41And another consonant, please.
29:44And the last one, L.
29:47Countdown.
29:49A consonant.
29:49A consonant.
29:54A consonant.
30:00A consonant.
30:01A consonant.
30:04A consonant.
30:05A consonant.
30:05A consonant.
30:06A consonant.
30:06A consonant.
30:06A consonant.
30:06A consonant.
30:06A consonant.
30:10A consonant.
30:19Yes, John?
30:21A seven.
30:22A seven, Ben?
30:23A seven as well.
30:24Thank you, John.
30:26World.
30:26World and?
30:27World as well.
30:28OK, just show your piece of paper to John.
30:30There we go.
30:32That's it.
30:33And over in the corner there, Levi and Susie?
30:36Yeah, we found relined.
30:38Yep.
30:39A seven.
30:40Yes, change that round a little bit.
30:42And you have red line for another seven.
30:44And we just had world.
30:46So seven's all the way.
30:48Well done.
30:48Ninety-two, seventeen.
30:50And now, Ben, it's your numbers game.
30:52Good luck.
30:52Thank you, Nick.
30:53Can I have two large and four from anywhere else, please, Rachel?
30:56You can indeed.
30:56Thank you, Ben.
30:57Final one of the day coming up.
30:59And this last selection is two, one, seven, nine, one hundred and fifty.
31:07And your target, four hundred and three.
31:09Four zero three.
31:11Four zero three.
31:12Four zero three.
31:27Four zero three.
31:42Yes, Ben.
31:43402.
31:44402, John.
31:46Also 402.
31:47Nah, Ben.
31:497 add 1 is 8.
31:517 plus 1, 8.
31:53Times that by 50.
31:54Times 50, 400.
31:56And add 2.
31:57And add 2, 402, yep.
31:581 away.
31:59And John?
32:00The same, except I did 9 minus 1 is 8.
32:03Lovely.
32:04There we go.
32:05So, 403 is actually what we needed.
32:08Can you help, Rachel?
32:09Loads of voice for 1 away, but leave it with me next.
32:12All right, so it's 99 to 24.
32:16In John's favour as we go into the final round.
32:19Fingers on buzzers.
32:20It's conundrum time, chaps.
32:22Let's roll today's countdown conundrum.
32:53Yes, John?
32:56Sabotaged.
32:57Sabotaged.
32:58Let's see whether you're right.
33:00Sabotaged.
33:02Over the 100.
33:03Well done.
33:04Over the line.
33:08Well played, John.
33:09Well played.
33:10I'll come back to you in a second.
33:11Ben, well done.
33:13It was a bit of a slow start, but you were up against somebody who's now got four wins tucked
33:18under his belt.
33:18So, pretty strong competition.
33:20So, well played.
33:21That's what I'm going to say.
33:22Well played.
33:22Thank you, Nick.
33:23You take this goodie bag back to the school in Whitney.
33:26Good luck with the Quidditch.
33:28Don't get hurt.
33:28Try not to.
33:29Thank you very much.
33:29Thank you, Nick.
33:31Stunning.
33:32Four wins.
33:33Not bad, eh?
33:35We'll see you tomorrow.
33:36Okay.
33:36We'll see you tomorrow.
33:37Very good.
33:37Well done.
33:38And we'll see you both tomorrow, Levi and Susie.
33:41Yeah?
33:41Yes, absolutely.
33:42Levi, we've got to dig into your career.
33:44It's been extraordinary from making The Source and now, next year, a feature film about you.
33:49But we'll touch on these things tomorrow.
33:52All right?
33:52We'll see you tomorrow.
33:53Well done.
33:54Now, Rachel.
33:56Yes.
33:56Rachel Riley, what have you got?
33:58No homework tonight.
33:58If you say 100 plus 7, 107, 9 minus 1 is 8, times them together for 856, take away the
34:0950 for 806, and divide it by 2, 403.
34:13Wow.
34:14Well done.
34:18Excellent stuff.
34:19We'll see you tomorrow.
34:20See you tomorrow.
34:21Join us then, same time, same place.
34:23You'll be sure of it.
34:24A very good afternoon to you all.
34:27Contact us by email at countdown at channel4.com, by Twitter at C4Countdown, or write to us at Countdown, Leeds,
34:36LS3, 1JS.
34:37You can also find our webpage at channel4.com forward slash countdown.
34:45Powerful new drama starting tonight in Channel 4.
34:48Sarah Lancashire stars in The Accident at 9.
34:50At 10, trying various treatments and regimes after his cancer diagnosis.
34:56Bill Turnbull staying alive.
34:58In search of winter warmth next this afternoon, though.
35:01Have a place in the sun.