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00:00This programme contains strong language and adult humour.
00:05APPLAUSE
00:31Good afternoon, and welcome to the Countdown Studio.
00:34Let's talk about revenge.
00:36A dish best served cold, that's the old adage.
00:39And I've got some little stories here for you, Rachel, to amuse you.
00:42There was a chap who was stopped and fined for speeding.
00:47And he was very upset about this,
00:49because he didn't actually feel that he had been speeding at all.
00:53So what would he do? He went to complain
00:56and to ask for the fine to be lifted, removed.
00:59He went on the website, that's what you do.
01:01But in fact, the police website, the domain had expired.
01:05And he couldn't get on it. He thought, hello, I'll buy it.
01:09So he bought the website and converted the whole website
01:13into a list of all those places
01:15where speeding cameras were currently located.
01:18Some would say a public service.
01:20The other one that I rather liked was a student.
01:23And in halls of residence, his computer was pinched.
01:27He thought, this is terrible.
01:29But he was a bright lad, and he was in the computer sciences department.
01:33And so he hacked into his own computer
01:35and found the thief dancing around his room
01:39before stealing the computer, or whatever.
01:42And so he was able to locate this young chap,
01:45tell him that he had found him out, and then put it online.
01:50Millions of hits later, the thief came and said,
01:54oh, please, please take it off.
01:56And he said, I'll take it off next Thursday, maybe.
01:59Nice story? Lovely story.
02:01How about you? Have you ever needed to take revenge?
02:05I think the dangerous thing with revenge
02:07is people who are the stags, or the best men,
02:10and organise the groom's stag do before having had their own.
02:14Because some of the stuff they do...
02:16Actually, it was my friend who was the bride
02:18that she hired for her now-husband, a stripper,
02:22a very, yes, very strange stripper.
02:25So, basically, once she'd hired this lady to do her little show with him,
02:29it was kind of fair game with what we did with her.
02:32So we dressed her up like an anatomically incorrect tortoise.
02:36As you do. And that was revenge on his behalf.
02:39Exactly. Well, tell you who didn't live dangerously.
02:42Yes, it was our friend Phil Davis over there.
02:45Ex-policeman, ex-CID man from Chelmsford.
02:48Wow. You had a strong debut performance, as we say.
02:52Yeah, a bit of luck as well.
02:54Well, maybe, but you came through very strongly. How are you feeling now?
02:57I'm fine, yeah, very relaxed now.
02:59All right. Now, you're joined, Phil, by Simon Block,
03:02retired administrator from Little Common East Sussex.
03:05And, Simon, you worked for the British Boxing Board of Control
03:08for nearly 30 years, and I think at the end of your career
03:11you were the General Secretary, is that right?
03:13That's correct, Nick, yes.
03:15Between 2000 and 2008, you were the General Secretary.
03:18Yes. Who was the greatest British boxer?
03:21It's always a difficult question to answer,
03:24but in terms of sheer, freakish, God-given talent, Nassim Hamed.
03:28OK. And worldwide?
03:31Sugar Ray Leonard, in my opinion.
03:33Thank you very much. Big round of applause, then, for Phil and Simon.
03:40Susie's over there. Welcome back, Susie.
03:42Be careful of the chap sitting next to you. Yes, he's back.
03:45Actor, writer, presenter, the real hustler, Alexis Conron.
03:48Welcome back. Thank you very much.
03:52Good to see you. Good to see you. Good to be back.
03:54Now, then, Phil, off we go.
03:56Afternoon, Rachel. Afternoon, Phil.
03:58Can I start with a consonant, please? You can. Let's start today.
04:01With N.
04:04Er, consonant, please.
04:07S.
04:08A vowel.
04:09E.
04:11A consonant.
04:13R.
04:14A consonant.
04:16Z.
04:18A vowel.
04:19I.
04:21A vowel.
04:23O.
04:25A consonant.
04:27B.
04:29And a consonant, please.
04:31And lastly, T.
04:33Stand by.
04:41CLOCK TICKS
05:04Well, Phil? Er, I'll try a nine.
05:07I'm sure, but I'll try one.
05:09No, not Simon. Six.
05:11And that six? Brazen.
05:13Now, Phil, I'm going to go for bronziest.
05:16Just check that one, and it's not there, I'm afraid.
05:20And similarly, there's no A for brazen, I'm afraid, Simon.
05:23Sorry.
05:24Now, then, what can we have?
05:27We can have bronzers for seven.
05:29Thank you. Susie, anything else?
05:31Er, boniest for another seven, and bonzer.
05:33I quite like bonzer. The Australian expert was bonzer.
05:36Bonzer. For six.
05:38Bonzer, yeah.
05:39All right, Simon. Good afternoon, Rachel.
05:41Afternoon, Simon.
05:42A consonant, please.
05:43Thank you. Start with Y.
05:47A consonant.
05:49G.
05:51Consonant.
05:53R.
05:55Vowel.
05:57A.
05:59Vowel.
06:01O.
06:03Consonant.
06:05L.
06:06Vowel.
06:08I.
06:11Vowel.
06:13E.
06:14And consonant.
06:15And lastly, R.
06:18Stand by.
06:37CLOCK TICKS
06:50Simon?
06:51Six.
06:52And Phil?
06:53I've got a five.
06:54And that five?
06:55Ogler.
06:56Ogler, yes.
06:57Simon?
06:58Jailor.
06:59Yes, you can spell it that way with a G-A. Very good.
07:01Jailor.
07:02And over in the corner?
07:03I don't know.
07:04I think we also had Goria for six as well.
07:06Yeah. Susie?
07:07That was it. Jailor and Goria were our two.
07:09Thank you very much.
07:10So, Simon on six. Phil yet to score.
07:13Phil, it's numbers.
07:15Thank you.
07:16Can I have one large and five small, please?
07:18You can indeed. Thank you, Phil.
07:20One from the top, five little.
07:21And for the first time today, the selection is three,
07:24eight,
07:25one,
07:27nine,
07:28six,
07:29and 25.
07:30And the target, 303.
07:32303.
08:01Yes, Phil?
08:02Yeah, I've got 303.
08:04Simon?
08:05303.
08:06Thank you, Phil.
08:07OK, three plus nine is 12.
08:09Yep.
08:10Times 25.
08:11300.
08:13Then eight plus one minus six is three.
08:17Perfect. 303. Lovely.
08:19Thank you.
08:20Simon?
08:21The same way, except I said eight minus six plus one.
08:24Yeah, that's great.
08:26Thank you.
08:27APPLAUSE
08:28So, Simon, on 16 points, Phil on ten,
08:31as we turn to our first tea-time teaser,
08:35which is Holy Groin.
08:37And the clue, she's studied this for years,
08:40so she definitely knows about it.
08:42She's studied this for years,
08:44so she definitely knows about it.
08:47MUSIC
08:51APPLAUSE
09:01Welcome back. I left you with the clue,
09:03she's studied this for years, so she definitely knows about it.
09:06And the answer to that one is rhinology.
09:09Rhinology.
09:10Something to do with the cartilage in the nose and what have you?
09:13Yes, the branch of medicine concerned with conditions affecting the brain.
09:17Yes, the branch of medicine concerned with conditions affecting the nose.
09:21Thank you. 16 to 10, Simon in the lead.
09:23Simon, your letters game.
09:25Consonant, please.
09:26Thank you, Simon.
09:27H
09:29Vowel.
09:31A
09:33Vowel.
09:34E
09:36A consonant, please.
09:38F
09:41Consonant.
09:43S
09:45A consonant.
09:48L
09:49Vowel.
09:51A
09:54A vowel.
09:57O
09:59And consonant.
10:00And lastly, V.
10:02Stand by.
10:03MUSIC
10:15MUSIC CONTINUES
10:35Well, Simon?
10:36Six.
10:37Now, Phil?
10:38Yes, six as well.
10:40Simon?
10:41Halves.
10:42And Phil?
10:43Very good. Very, very good.
10:44Now, Alexis?
10:45We've cooked up half loaves as well.
10:47Yeah. Is it?
10:48Yeah.
10:49It's the same ones.
10:50Thank you, those two.
10:51Thank you.
10:52So, 22 to 16, and it's Phil's letters game now.
10:55Yes, Phil?
10:56Consonant, please.
10:57Thank you, Phil.
10:58C
10:59A consonant.
11:01R
11:02A vowel.
11:04O
11:06A consonant.
11:08F
11:10A consonant.
11:11S
11:13A vowel.
11:15E
11:16A vowel.
11:18U
11:20A consonant.
11:22P
11:23And a consonant, please.
11:25And the last one, N.
11:27Stand by.
11:28MUSIC
11:41MUSIC
12:00Yes, Phil?
12:01Eight.
12:02Now, Simon?
12:03Six.
12:04And that six?
12:05Forces.
12:06Phil?
12:07Pounces.
12:08So, are we happy, Susie?
12:10I am happy, yes.
12:11Good.
12:12Specified in the dictionary, absolutely fine.
12:14Now, what else have we got?
12:16We've also got pre-focus for eight.
12:18Very good. Susie?
12:20Yes, that's brilliant.
12:22So, noting a light bulb designed so that its beam is focused
12:25automatically when fitted inside a lamp.
12:27Pre-focus.
12:28That's it.
12:29APPLAUSE
12:30Thank you.
12:31So, Phil has started two points ahead, 24 to 22,
12:35and we turn to Simon for a numbers game.
12:38Yes, Simon?
12:39Could I have two large and four small, please, Rachel?
12:42You can indeed, thank you, Simon.
12:44Two from the top, four from the bottom,
12:46and they are three, five, eight, one, 75 and 25.
12:54And the target? 549.
12:56549.
12:58MUSIC
13:09MUSIC
13:30Well, Simon?
13:31555.
13:33Mm. Phil?
13:35549.
13:36Right.
13:37So, three times five is 15.
13:39Yep.
13:40Take away eight?
13:41Seven.
13:42Seven.
13:43Times 75?
13:44525.
13:45525.
13:46Plus 25?
13:47550.
13:48Take away one.
13:49Perfect. 549. Well done.
13:50Well done indeed.
13:51APPLAUSE
13:54So, that's 34 to 22.
13:57But let's turn to Alexis.
13:59Alexis, you're best known as an actor, I guess.
14:02Tremendous hit with the Durrells.
14:04It was a great, great series.
14:06You have another string to your bow.
14:08Well, several, actually. But today?
14:10Well, it is winning a free round of drinks off people.
14:15That's a handy skill to have, I've got to say.
14:17So, today I'm going to show you some of the tricks.
14:20So, you've all got some props.
14:22Well, Nick, you've got a napkin, so now's your time to take it out.
14:25Right. There you go.
14:27Susie, you've got one as well. Mm-hm.
14:29So, this is the bet.
14:31You bet people...
14:33You give them a napkin that's been pre-torn like this.
14:35All you've got to do is you've got to tear it into three pieces.
14:41But you're not allowed to let go of the ends of your fingers here.
14:46You've got to tear it into three pieces.
14:48Susie, pick yours up.
14:50OK, so you've got to tear it into three pieces.
14:52How would you go about doing that?
14:54OK, keep going.
14:56That's just two pieces.
14:58So, you'd lose the bet.
15:00Nick, do you want to have a go?
15:02One.
15:04No, no, no. Why?
15:06Because you've let go with one hand and now it's gone into the other.
15:09I could have done it, because I could have done...
15:12You can't let go from... I haven't.
15:14You can't let go from these fingers here, Nick.
15:16Stop trying to cheat. Stop trying to cheat.
15:18I'm being a clever dick. You're being clever, Nick.
15:20Sorry. You show us.
15:22OK, this is the way to do it, all right?
15:24You're not going to let go from these fingers.
15:26Go on. You just simply...
15:30Oh! There you go.
15:32We should have thought...
15:34Three pieces. It's enough.
15:36One napkin and three pieces to buy you a whole round of drinks.
15:39Well done.
15:41Keep going. Well done.
15:44Well done. Clever trick.
15:46And, actually, it's looking you in the face, isn't it, really?
15:49Yeah. It is with all these things.
15:51They're designed to confuse you,
15:53and you kind of think, well, I can do this. It's really easy.
15:56I'll just pull really quickly. Some people go really slowly.
15:59Some people go really quickly. It doesn't make a difference.
16:01It won't happen unless you have that third anchor point,
16:05which is your lips.
16:07Very good. 34 plays 22.
16:09Now, then, we have to keep an eye on this, Alexis, I think.
16:12It's Phil's letters game. Phil.
16:14Go for consonant, please.
16:16Thank you, Phil. P
16:18A consonant.
16:20S
16:21A vowel.
16:23I
16:25A consonant.
16:27G
16:28A vowel.
16:30O
16:32A consonant.
16:34H
16:36A vowel.
16:38I
16:40A consonant.
16:42R
16:43And a consonant, please.
16:44And the last one, N.
16:46Stand by.
17:00CLOCK TICKS
17:16Well, Phil?
17:18Seven.
17:20Simon?
17:21Seven.
17:22And Phil?
17:23Prizing.
17:24Yes, Simon.
17:25Hirings.
17:27I'm beginning to think hiring is there as a verbal noun,
17:30meaning you could put an S on it.
17:33It's not, I'm afraid, so sorry.
17:35Kind of at the S, but not with.
17:37Now, Alexis.
17:39We've also got shoring.
17:41Yeah.
17:42For seven.
17:43And horsing.
17:44For seven.
17:45Horsing.
17:46Horsing about. Stop horsing about.
17:48Oh, you can have horsing on its own without...
17:50Yes.
17:51Stop horsing.
17:5322 plays 41.
17:55Round in, Simon. Your letters again.
17:57A vowel, please, Rachel.
17:59Thank you, Simon. A.
18:01Consonant.
18:03R
18:05Consonant.
18:07T
18:09Vowel.
18:11E
18:13Vowel.
18:15A
18:17Consonant.
18:19W
18:21Vowel.
18:23A
18:25Consonant.
18:27N
18:29And consonant, please.
18:31And lastly, S.
18:33Stand by.
18:53MUSIC PLAYS
19:03Yes, Simon?
19:04Six.
19:05A six and...?
19:07Seven.
19:08A seven. Simon?
19:10Waster.
19:11Yes, Phil?
19:12Saunter.
19:13Nice. Yes.
19:14Very good.
19:16And the corner?
19:17There is an eight.
19:18Unawares.
19:19Unawares.
19:20Very good.
19:23Anything else, Susie?
19:25No. Caught me unawares.
19:27Unawares. Very good.
19:2948 plays 22, Phil.
19:31Numbers have rolled round again.
19:33Thank you.
19:35One from the top and five little, please.
19:37Thank you, Phil. One large, five small.
19:39Coming up again.
19:41And for this one, they are one,
19:43four,
19:45nine,
19:46eight,
19:47seven,
19:48and the big one, 25.
19:50And the target, 831.
19:52831.
19:54MUSIC PLAYS
20:21MUSIC STOPS
20:23Well, Phil?
20:25I've got 832.
20:27And Simon?
20:29I lost that one, I'm afraid, didn't it?
20:31Phil?
20:32OK. Eight times four.
20:34Eight times 432.
20:36Plus one.
20:37Plus 133.
20:38Times 25 is 825.
20:40It is.
20:41Plus seven.
20:42Plus seven. One away. 832.
20:44Pretty good. Not quite there, though.
20:46Is it possible, Rachel? 831?
20:48Lots of ways for one away, so leave it with me.
20:51Thank you. Thank you.
20:5355 to 22.
20:55And it's tea time teaser time.
20:57And it's Sped Canal and the clue.
20:59They never sped along the canal,
21:01they took their time and took in the wonderful views.
21:04They never sped along the canal,
21:06they took their time and took in the wonderful views.
21:09MUSIC PLAYS
21:19APPLAUSE
21:26Welcome back. Welcome back. I left with the clue.
21:28They never sped along the canal,
21:30they took their time and took in the wonderful views.
21:33They took in the wonderful landscape, in fact.
21:36Landscape's the word we're after.
21:38And Rachel was after 831.
21:40I found it.
21:41If you say seven times eight is 56.
21:45Minus four is 52.
21:4755 minus nine is 16.
21:50Times those together for 832 and take away the one for 831.
21:54Well done, Rachel.
21:58Perfect, in fact.
21:59Now, 55 to 22.
22:01Fill in the lead and it's Simon's letters game.
22:03Yes, Simon. A consonant, please, Rachel.
22:05Thank you, Simon.
22:06T
22:08A consonant.
22:10M
22:12A vowel.
22:14E
22:16C
22:18A vowel.
22:20I
22:23A consonant.
22:25P
22:28A vowel.
22:30E
22:32A vowel.
22:34O
22:36And a consonant.
22:37And lastly, L.
22:39Stand by.
22:41MUSIC PLAYS
22:47MUSIC CONTINUES
23:11Yes, Simon.
23:12Six.
23:13Six. Phil.
23:14Eight.
23:15Eight. Simon.
23:16Police.
23:17Yes, Phil.
23:18Complete.
23:19Very good. Very, very good.
23:21Very complete.
23:22Now, Alexis.
23:23Complete was our eight as well, but we had epitome for seven.
23:26Good one.
23:27Epitome, yeah.
23:28Anything else, Susie?
23:29Polemic is also there for seven.
23:31Polemic. Thank you.
23:3263. Good score.
23:3463 to 22 and it's Phil's letters game.
23:37OK. A consonant, please, Rachel.
23:39Thank you, Phil.
23:40T
23:41A consonant.
23:43L
23:45A vowel.
23:47E
23:48A vowel.
23:49A
23:51A consonant.
23:53D
23:54A consonant.
23:56T
23:58A consonant.
24:00V
24:02A vowel.
24:04I
24:06And a consonant, please.
24:08And lastly, X.
24:10Stand by.
24:12Stand by.
24:42Yes, Phil.
24:43Seven.
24:44And Simon?
24:45Six.
24:46Yes, Simon.
24:47Dative.
24:48And?
24:49Valeted.
24:50You need two Es for valeted, unfortunately.
24:53Oh, OK.
24:54Sorry, Phil.
24:55What can we have, I wonder? Alexis?
24:57Dative, which Simon's got, definitely, and taxied for six as well.
25:02Taxied?
25:03Taxied, yeah.
25:04Susie?
25:05That was it, six plus.
25:06It'll do. It'll do.
25:0728 plays 63 and it's Susie we turn to now
25:11for another instalment in Susie's wonderful origins of words.
25:14Well, we're going to talk about mischievous people
25:18or adjectives and nouns that we describe people who are up to no good with.
25:23And I'm going to start with imp.
25:25Imp is quite a sweet word nowadays.
25:27You might say, you little imp to a mischievous child.
25:30But it was originally something much more serious than that.
25:33It all began with an Anglo-Saxon word, actually, for a young shoot of a plant.
25:39It started off innocently enough.
25:41It's related to implants. It's all about grafting plants.
25:44But over time, it shifted from the offshoot of a plant
25:48to the offshoot of a human being.
25:50So it's applied to children, not just any children,
25:53but children of the devil who came from hell.
25:56They were small demons or spirits
25:58who could get up to all sorts of nefarious deeds
26:00and were really not very nice to encounter at all.
26:03Over time, it lost its sting, if you like,
26:06and today we apply it, as I say, to somebody who's a little devil
26:09but used in a slightly mischievous, affectionate way, I suppose.
26:13Ogre is another noun which can describe all sorts of horrible things.
26:18It's kind of kept its power.
26:20In the past, in fairy tales and folklore, ogres ate children.
26:24And if you look in the Oxford English Dictionary,
26:26there's evidence of that from very early on.
26:28A translation of Arabian Nights in reference to a human-eating giant.
26:33An ogre who stay in remote places
26:35and make use of 1,000 wiles to surprise and devour passengers.
26:39But to look for the history of this is quite interesting
26:41because it involves J.R.R. Tolkien.
26:43Tolkien was famously involved in the Oxford English Dictionary.
26:47He wrote the definition for walrus, for example,
26:50which you can still find in the OED today.
26:52But in Lord of the Rings, there are the orcs.
26:55The orcs are the ugly, malevolent, goblin-like creatures
26:59who ride wolves and attack in hordes.
27:01Absolutely horrible things.
27:03Now, he knew his Anglo-Saxon J.R.R. Tolkien
27:06and he knew that for them, an orc, O-R-C, was a demon.
27:10And he took it straight from there
27:12and he was responsible for bringing that word back into currency.
27:15But it's linked to ogre because both ogre and orc, as Tolkien used it,
27:19go back to Orcus, who was the Roman god of the underworld.
27:23So very, very serious origins there.
27:25But I love the way that ogres and orcs come together
27:28and how Tolkien revived not just that, actually,
27:30but many words that he knew from Anglo-Saxon.
27:32Fantastic. Wonderful.
27:34APPLAUSE
27:3763 to 28. Phil on 63.
27:40Simon, your letters go.
27:42A consonant, please, Rachel.
27:44Thank you, Simon. B
27:46And a vowel?
27:48E
27:50And a consonant?
27:52T
27:54A vowel?
27:56I
27:58A consonant?
28:00W
28:02A vowel?
28:04U
28:06A consonant?
28:08D
28:10A vowel?
28:12I
28:14And a consonant?
28:16And the last one, M.
28:18Stand by.
28:26CLOCK TICKS
28:48Yes, Simon.
28:50A five, Nick. Five and...?
28:52I've got a six but not Riddendale.
28:54Timed.
28:56No.
28:58Imbued. Lovely. Very, very nice.
29:00Imbued.
29:02And over in the corner, Alexis.
29:04Imbued was the best we could come up with as well.
29:06Yes.
29:08Permeated with a feeling or tinged with colour.
29:10It's a lovely word.
29:12Thank you.
29:14Phil, final letters game for you.
29:16Start with the vowels, please.
29:18E
29:20And a consonant?
29:22U
29:24A consonant?
29:26L
29:28A vowel, please.
29:30I
29:32A consonant?
29:34D
29:36A consonant?
29:38R
29:40A consonant?
29:42N
29:44And a final consonant, please.
29:46And a final L.
29:48Stand by.
29:50CLOCK TICKS
29:52CLOCK TICKS
30:18Well, Phil? Seven.
30:20Seven. Simon? A six.
30:22And that six is...?
30:24Duller. Duller. And Phil?
30:26Unlined.
30:28Yeah. Yeah.
30:30Alexis?
30:32Couldn't be that. We had a very odd word.
30:34Nerdle.
30:36I love nerdle. A nerdle? What is a nerdle, again?
30:38In the plastic industry, it's a tiny pellet of plastic
30:40but it can also be referred to
30:42within the toothpaste industry
30:44for the perfect swish of toothpaste
30:46that you have on your toothbrush
30:48That is a nerdle.
30:50That's what I'm going to be thinking when I put my toothpaste on tonight.
30:52We'll never, ever be able to shake that one off, will we?
30:56Lovely nerdle.
30:5876 to 28.
31:00And Simon, your numbers game.
31:02Could I have two large and four small again, please, Rachel?
31:04You can indeed, thank you, Simon.
31:06Two from the top four left to finish the day.
31:08And these four small ones are
31:10nine, one, five and four.
31:12And the big ones,
31:14175.
31:16And this target, 959.
31:18959.
31:46Yes, Simon?
31:48No, I'm too far out, I'm afraid.
31:50How about Phil?
31:52959.
31:54Off we go.
31:56100 times 9.
31:58900.
32:00Plus 75.
32:02975.
32:045 minus 1 is 4.
32:06Yep.
32:08Times 4.
32:10Is 16.
32:12Take it away.
32:14OK, well done.
32:1696 points as we go into the final round.
32:18Gentlemen, you know how it's done.
32:20Fingers on buzzers, let's roll today's countdown conundrum.
32:26BELL RINGS
32:28Phil?
32:30Shimmered.
32:32Shimmered. Let's see whether you're right.
32:34Said with confidence. Here we go.
32:36Shimmered indeed. Well done.
32:38APPLAUSE
32:4096.
32:42We'll come back to you in a second.
32:44Simon, not bad, 28. He's a considerable player.
32:46But thank you so much for coming.
32:48You take this goody bag back to
32:50Little Common in East Sussex
32:52and continue your good work.
32:54You're Honorary Secretary, I think, of the Commonwealth Boxing Council.
32:56That's right, yes.
32:58So you're keeping your hand in, as it were.
33:00Yes, I'm responsible for all the Commonwealth Championships
33:02that take place in Britain and around the world.
33:04Which Commonwealth country do you think
33:06has got the greatest sort of, I suppose,
33:08string of fighters over the years?
33:10Which country produces the best boxers?
33:12Well, the United Kingdom dominates
33:14the Commonwealth Championships.
33:16Yeah.
33:18And one of my jobs is to try and
33:20give opportunities to boxers
33:22from countries outside the United Kingdom.
33:24And we've had a lot of good champions
33:26over the years, and even recently
33:28from outside the United Kingdom.
33:30But there's no doubt that Britain, the United Kingdom,
33:32dominates the Commonwealth Championships.
33:34Yeah. Well, thanks so much for coming.
33:36And have a good journey. Safe journey home.
33:38Thank you very much. Brilliant stuff.
33:40And we shall see Phil Davies tomorrow.
33:42Congratulations. Well done.
33:44Thank you very much.
33:46And we'll see Alexis tomorrow.
33:48More tricks?
33:50More tricks coming your way tomorrow.
33:52By the end of this week, you'll all be hustlers.
33:54Look forward to seeing you tomorrow.
33:56And Susie, too, of course.
33:58See you both tomorrow. And Rachel, of course.
34:00In the meantime, I'm going to avoid Alexis in the bar.
34:02I think so.
34:04Absolutely right. We'll see you tomorrow.
34:06Take care of it. A very good afternoon to you.
34:26It's a very special day for women.
34:28And we're celebrating with our newest,
34:30youngest and most opinionated generation.
34:32All girls tonight in the secret life
34:34from five-year-olds at eight next this afternoon
34:36to Scotland's for Village of the Year
34:38with Penelope Keith.