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00:00This programme contains strong language and adult humour.
00:05APPLAUSE
00:31Good afternoon, good afternoon. Welcome to the Countdown studio.
00:35There was a wonderful story in the paper recently about a 96-year-old ex-RAF pilot.
00:41He was in a care home and he wasn't feeling very well.
00:45And he said to the carer, you know,
00:47one thing I'd really love to do, I'd love to fly again.
00:51And this carer went off to RAF Lossiemouth
00:56and before he knew what was going on, George Harvey,
00:58that was his name, he was a flight lieutenant in his RAF days,
01:02he had flown everything, mosquitos, all sorts of aircraft,
01:05a meteor, one of the first jets in service in the RAF.
01:09Before he knew what had happened, RAF Lossiemouth invited him up with his carer
01:14and sent him up in a little light aircraft, a little Cessna.
01:17Anyway, he enjoyed his flight.
01:20He said it could have been a bit more powerful, but thank you very much.
01:23And it was a lovely story.
01:24And Rachel, this reminds me of my wonderful father-in-law.
01:27He was a Spitfire pilot during the war
01:30and for his 80th birthday we gave him a flight in a light aircraft.
01:34And it was fantastic.
01:35He said he didn't dare land it, but he flew it around a bit
01:38and it was a lovely thing for him.
01:40And then when he died, actually,
01:42we hired a Spitfire to do a fly-past over the house.
01:45Lovely. Lovely.
01:47I love that.
01:48And it's really nice to make the most of it while someone's still alive.
01:50It's, you know, very well marking it once they're past,
01:52but for them to actually enjoy it.
01:53Absolutely.
01:54Now what about you, Rachel?
01:56You have something that you used to do a lot,
01:58but now you don't do it or don't do it as much.
02:01I miss playing football, Nick.
02:02Do you?
02:03I used to play it at school and then at university
02:05and then I played briefly in a Sunday league team
02:07and then I travel up here and up and down
02:09and not around enough to be part of a team, but I do miss that.
02:13And what position did you play in?
02:15I was an attacking centre mid.
02:17I bet you were ferocious, Rachel.
02:18I was vocal on the football field, I'll say that.
02:21Anyway, there we are.
02:22Now who's back with us?
02:23Rachel, none other than Phil Davies,
02:25a postman from Chelmsford.
02:27Used to be a copper for many, many years.
02:2930 years, I think.
02:3030 years, yeah.
02:31Cool customer.
02:32Two wins.
02:33Yeah, two, yeah.
02:34You feeling happy?
02:35I'm very happy, very relaxed.
02:36Excellent.
02:37You are a relaxed player.
02:38Now you're up against Lisa Miller,
02:40an auditor from Warrington, big Keep Fit fan.
02:43A runner.
02:44Yes, I love running.
02:45The furthest distance I've ever done is a marathon,
02:48but I lost it after about 30k,
02:50but I had a guy with me that just carried me through that last 10k.
02:54And then, whilst just 14 weeks pregnant,
02:58off you went and did a half marathon.
03:00I did.
03:01I think that's why my son's so active now.
03:03It's dragging him round 13.1 miles, really.
03:07What's he called?
03:08Elliot.
03:09Elliot.
03:10Well, I'm sure he's very proud of Mum.
03:11Anyway, good luck to you both.
03:13Big round of applause for Lisa and Phil.
03:16And over in the corner, Susie, of course,
03:19along with actor and TV and radio presenter and tricky customer,
03:25Alexis Conner.
03:26Welcome back, Alexis.
03:27Thank you.
03:28Thank you.
03:32More mischief from you a little bit later on.
03:34Oh, lots more mischief here to come.
03:36Now, Phil, off we go.
03:38OK.
03:39Good afternoon, Rachel.
03:40Afternoon, Phil.
03:41Can I have a consonant, please?
03:42Thank you.
03:44Start today with P.
03:46And a consonant?
03:48F.
03:50A vowel?
03:52E.
03:53A consonant?
03:55L.
03:57A consonant?
03:59M.
04:01A vowel?
04:03E.
04:04A vowel?
04:06A.
04:07A consonant?
04:09N.
04:11And a consonant, please?
04:13And lastly, S.
04:15And here's the Countdown Clock.
04:17CLOCK TICKS
04:42CLOCK TICKS
04:47Yes, Phil?
04:48I've got a seven.
04:50A seven. Lisa?
04:51Just a five.
04:52And that five?
04:53Meals.
04:54And?
04:55I've got flamens.
04:57Flamens?
04:59Absolutely fine, yes.
05:01From Roman history, a priest serving a particular deity.
05:05Very, very good.
05:06Flamens.
05:07Now, in the corner.
05:09Alexis, Susie?
05:10Flamens for a seven.
05:12Very good, but we couldn't better that.
05:14No, we couldn't.
05:15Thank you.
05:16So, seven points to Phil.
05:17Now, Lisa, your letters game.
05:19Hi, can I start with a vowel, please?
05:21Thank you, Lisa.
05:22Start with O.
05:23And a consonant?
05:25P.
05:27And a consonant?
05:29J.
05:31And a better consonant?
05:33R.
05:34And a vowel?
05:36I.
05:37And a vowel?
05:39A.
05:41And a consonant?
05:43N.
05:45And a consonant?
05:47R.
05:49And a final vowel, please?
05:51And a final E.
05:53Stand by.
06:09MUSIC PLAYS
06:25Lisa?
06:26I'll risk a six.
06:27A six. And Phil?
06:28I've got a five.
06:29Your five?
06:30Piano.
06:31No, Lisa.
06:32A rainer?
06:33Um...
06:35Absolutely fine, yes.
06:37That was a risk, wasn't it?
06:39Paid off, though.
06:40Paid off brilliantly.
06:41Six points now to Phil's seven.
06:43As we turn to Alexis to find out what he's concocted.
06:46For seven, you could have had porneia.
06:49Porneia?
06:51More pornographic.
06:53Thank you. Anything else?
06:54No. That was the best that we could do with seven.
06:56Yes.
06:57Seven plays six. Phil on seven.
06:59Now, Phil, your numbers game.
07:01Can I have one large and five small, please?
07:03You can indeed. Thank you, Phil.
07:05Starts the day with these five smalls.
07:08We have nine, seven, four, two, seven and 25.
07:16And the target, 496.
07:19496.
07:21MUSIC PLAYS
07:35MUSIC STOPS
07:51Yes, Phil?
07:52I've got 493.
07:54And Lisa?
07:55A bit too far away, sorry.
07:57We're with you, Phil.
07:58OK, nine plus seven plus four is 20.
08:0120.
08:02Times 25 is 500.
08:03Yep.
08:04And I took away seven.
08:05And the other seven.
08:07Yep, three away.
08:08Three away.
08:09Rachel, can you crack it for us?
08:11Yes.
08:12If you say seven over seven is one,
08:15plus nine is ten,
08:17times two for your 20,
08:19and then you can times that by 25 again for 500
08:22with a four left over for 496.
08:24Brilliant.
08:25APPLAUSE
08:27Very good.
08:28Phil on 14, Lisa on six,
08:30and we turn to our first Tea Time teaser,
08:32which is Tina's nose.
08:34And the clue...
08:35Tina had a feeling her nose caused widespread excitement.
08:39Tina had a feeling her nose caused widespread excitement.
08:52APPLAUSE
08:54APPLAUSE
08:59Welcome back.
09:00I left with the clue,
09:01Tina had a feeling her nose caused widespread excitement.
09:05And the answer to that is sensation.
09:09What a sensation.
09:11Sensation.
09:1314 plays six, Phil in the lead.
09:15Lisa, your letters game.
09:17Can I have a consonant, please?
09:19Thank you, Lisa.
09:20L
09:21And a consonant?
09:23H
09:24And a vowel?
09:25I
09:27Erm...
09:28I'll have a vowel, please.
09:30E
09:31And a consonant?
09:33T
09:34And a consonant?
09:36F
09:38And a vowel?
09:41O
09:43And a consonant?
09:45R
09:47And a final consonant, please?
09:49And a final D.
09:51Stand by.
10:22Lisa?
10:24I've just realised I've gone wrong.
10:26I've got a seven.
10:28You've got a seven and...?
10:30Seven.
10:31And a seven. Lisa?
10:33RT is the risky one, fourteed.
10:35And Phil?
10:36I've got frothed.
10:37Frothed, absolutely fine.
10:38I'm afraid no fourteed, Lisa, sorry.
10:40That's fine.
10:41Now, what can we have?
10:44Alexis?
10:45We couldn't better the frothed.
10:47We had dither, a six.
10:49I'll have a dither.
10:51I'm in a constant dither.
10:5321 plays six, and Phil, it's your letters game.
10:56Start with a consonant, please.
10:58Thank you, Phil. M
11:00And a consonant?
11:02R
11:04A vowel, please?
11:06U
11:07And a vowel?
11:09I
11:11A consonant, please?
11:13C
11:14A consonant?
11:16Y
11:19Another consonant, please?
11:21Q
11:23A vowel?
11:25E
11:27And a final consonant, please?
11:29And a final B.
11:31Stand by.
11:48MUSIC PLAYS
12:03Phil?
12:04Six.
12:05And Lisa?
12:06I couldn't get any more than a four.
12:08And that four?
12:09Mice.
12:10It's all right.
12:11Actually, I think my proper noun, cumber.
12:13C-U-M-B-E-R
12:16Yes, as in cumbersome, to hamper or hinder.
12:19Very good.
12:20Alexis?
12:21We also had a six in crummy.
12:23Crummy.
12:24With a B.
12:25Crummy.
12:26Thank you.
12:2727 to six, and it's Lisa's numbers game.
12:30Thank you.
12:31Can I have any six of your choice?
12:33Oh, OK, let's go for three from the top and three little.
12:37Mix it up a little bit. Thank you, Lisa.
12:39And for this round, they are one, ten, five,
12:44and the three big ones, 75, 50, 100.
12:47Let's see if we'll regret this.
12:49The target, 102.
12:51102.
12:53MUSIC PLAYS
13:14MUSIC STOPS
13:24Yes, Lisa?
13:25I've got 102.
13:26Thank you.
13:27102, yes.
13:28And Lisa?
13:29So, I did 50 divided by five is ten.
13:3350 over five, ten.
13:35Ten divided by ten is one.
13:37Yep.
13:38Add it to the 100 and add the other one.
13:40102. Lovely.
13:41Thank you, Phil.
13:42I did ten divided by five is two.
13:44Yeah.
13:45Add 100.
13:46Well done.
13:47Thank you.
13:48APPLAUSE
13:4937 plays 16 as we take our life in our hands and turn to Alexis.
13:55Now, then, proposition bets.
13:58What have you got, Liz?
13:59Proposition bets.
14:00So, these are little bets that you can put to your friends,
14:03your family, to just get yourself a free round of drinks
14:06or just a little bit of respect from the younger members of the family.
14:10So, for this one, we will have one of these.
14:13Now, Nick, you've got some props over there as well.
14:15Yes.
14:16So, you can bring yours out as well.
14:17So, you've got a brandy snifter, two napkins and an olive.
14:22Yes.
14:23Good.
14:24So, here's the bet.
14:26You've got to try and get the olive from one napkin to the other napkin.
14:30You can't pick the olive up with your fingers.
14:33Yes.
14:34The olive can't touch other parts of the table,
14:36so you can't sort of roll it across, and you can't touch the napkins.
14:40This is very tricky.
14:43I'll give you a clue. The glass has got something to do with it.
14:48So, you can't move the napkin over?
14:49You can't move the napkin over.
14:51You can't prod this over with a glass.
14:53You can't do that because then the olives touch the table,
14:56and that's against the rules.
14:58So, I can't do...
15:00Oh, you're close.
15:01There?
15:02No, because you're moving the napkin.
15:03So, I can't move the napkin?
15:04No.
15:05But you're very close.
15:07Nick?
15:08No.
15:09I'll tell you what.
15:10There is a spectacular way of doing this,
15:12which I think you'll agree.
15:14So, you take the brandy snifter,
15:16and you're going to use physics again.
15:22Wow.
15:23That's very clever.
15:24From one to the other without touching the olive,
15:26and the olive didn't touch the table.
15:28There you go, Nick.
15:31He's done it!
15:34Well done!
15:36Isn't that good?
15:38You would never think of that, would you?
15:40No, all these things require you to use some bit of logic
15:43that you wouldn't get to very easily.
15:45There's plenty of ways to do it,
15:47but I think this way is the most fun way.
15:49I think there isn't a cocktail bar in the world
15:53where we can't get free drinks now.
15:55There you go.
15:56That's wonderful.
15:57Thank you.
15:58You're welcome.
15:59Oh, I'm so pleased about this.
16:01Can't tell you.
16:02Thank you.
16:03Now, where are we?
16:0437 to 16, Phil on 37.
16:07Oh, Phil.
16:08Let us go.
16:09Thank you.
16:10Consonant, please.
16:11Thank you, Phil.
16:12N.
16:13And a vowel?
16:15O.
16:17A consonant?
16:19S.
16:20A consonant?
16:22T.
16:24A consonant?
16:26S.
16:28A vowel?
16:30I.
16:32A consonant?
16:34G.
16:36A consonant?
16:38N.
16:39And a vowel, please?
16:41And lastly, U.
16:43Stand by.
17:03CLOCK TICKS
17:15Yes, Phil?
17:16Seven.
17:17And Lisa?
17:18Seven.
17:19Phil?
17:20Outings.
17:21And Lisa?
17:22Tossing?
17:23Yes.
17:24Alexis?
17:25I think we had ousting as well for seven.
17:28That's good.
17:29Yeah.
17:30To oust.
17:31Ousting.
17:32Anything else, Susie?
17:33Can't have oustings, unfortunately.
17:35That isn't there for eight, so stuck with a seven.
17:38Thank you.
17:39Lisa, your letters again.
17:40Can I have a consonant, please, Rachel?
17:42Thank you, Lisa.
17:43P.
17:44And a vowel?
17:46E.
17:48And another vowel?
17:50A.
17:52And a consonant?
17:54D.
17:55And another consonant?
17:57M.
17:59And a consonant, please?
18:01L.
18:02And a vowel?
18:04E.
18:06And a consonant?
18:08S.
18:10And a final consonant, please?
18:12And a final R.
18:14Stand by.
18:16CLOCK TICKS
18:29CLOCK TICKS
18:45Lisa?
18:46I've got a seven.
18:48A seven. And Phil?
18:49Seven.
18:50Lisa?
18:51I've got plaiters.
18:52Yes, Phil?
18:53Sampler.
18:54Sampler is very good.
18:55Yeah.
18:56Excellent.
18:58Susie and Alexis, what have you got?
19:00We possibly have a nine.
19:03Right.
19:04Which is emplaster.
19:06Yes.
19:07Emplaster.
19:08Just checks.
19:09Emplaster.
19:10Yes. It's actually a noun.
19:11It's a medicinal preparation in the form of a sticky paste
19:14applied to the skin on a piece of linen or leather,
19:17so it's a historical medicinal remedy.
19:20APPLAUSE
19:2351, page 30.
19:2551. And it's Phil's numbers game.
19:28Can I have one large and five small, please?
19:30You can indeed. Thank you, Phil.
19:32I'll go from this end.
19:33And these five small ones are four, two, nine, ten and six.
19:40And the big one, 75.
19:43And this target, 857.
19:45857.
19:55MUSIC PLAYS
20:16Well, Phil?
20:17I'm sorry, I've lost you. I don't know what I've got. Sorry.
20:19Lisa?
20:20I've got 856.
20:22It'll do.
20:23So I did 75 plus nine plus two.
20:2784.
20:2886.
20:29Times ten.
20:30860.
20:31And take away the four.
20:33And you haven't used that. Yeah, one away. Lovely.
20:35Well done. Well done.
20:37But 857, can you get closer?
20:39Yes, it was there.
20:40If you say six minus four is two,
20:44plus 75 for 77,
20:47nine plus two is 11,
20:49times those together for 847,
20:52and add on the ten for 857.
20:54Perfect. Perfect.
20:56So Lisa on 37, Phil on 51,
20:59as we turn to our second tea time teaser,
21:02which is on 16.
21:04And the clue, on your 16th birthday,
21:06your parents let you stay out longer than usual.
21:09On your 16th birthday,
21:11your parents let you stay out longer than usual.
21:15MUSIC PLAYS
21:20APPLAUSE
21:30Welcome back. I left with the clue.
21:32On your 16th birthday,
21:34your parents let you stay out longer than usual.
21:36They gave you, in fact, an extension.
21:40Extension.
21:41That's what we're after.
21:4337 plays 51. Phil in the lead,
21:45and it's Lisa's Lettuce Game. Off we go, Lisa.
21:48Can I have a vowel, please, Rachel?
21:50Thank you, Lisa. U.
21:52And a consonant?
21:54K.
21:56And a vowel?
21:58A.
21:59And a consonant?
22:01N.
22:02And another consonant, please?
22:04S.
22:06And a vowel?
22:08I.
22:10And a consonant?
22:12R.
22:14And another vowel?
22:16A.
22:17And a final consonant, please?
22:19And a final W.
22:21Stand by.
22:23MUSIC PLAYS
22:47MUSIC STOPS
22:53Lisa?
22:54I've got a five.
22:55A five and Phil?
22:57Yeah, I've got a five as well.
22:58Lisa?
22:59Sauna.
23:00And?
23:01Rains.
23:02Yes.
23:03Can we get beyond five, I wonder?
23:05You can get to seven.
23:06Oh, yes.
23:07With saurian.
23:09We're talking crocodiles?
23:11Yes, we are. Exactly right. S-A-U-R-I-A-N.
23:13Of or like a lizard.
23:15Yeah.
23:16Saurian it is.
23:1956-42.
23:21Phil in the lead.
23:22Phil, let us go.
23:24A consonant, please.
23:25Thank you, Phil.
23:26D.
23:28A vowel?
23:30E.
23:32A consonant, please?
23:34X.
23:35A consonant?
23:37M.
23:39A consonant?
23:41G.
23:43A vowel, please?
23:45O.
23:47A vowel?
23:49O.
23:51A consonant, please?
23:53T.
23:55And a final consonant, please?
23:57And a final T.
23:59Stand by.
24:16MUSIC
24:31Well, Phil?
24:32Six.
24:33And Lisa?
24:34A six as well.
24:35Phil?
24:36Muted.
24:37Now, Lisa Miller.
24:38Exactly the same.
24:40Now, can we match or even beat six?
24:43Alexis?
24:44So one better.
24:45Yes.
24:46With a seven.
24:47With mottoed.
24:49Mottoed?
24:50Yes.
24:51Simply an adjective, something that bears a motto,
24:53so a phrase that encapsulates the beliefs of a particular person
24:57or institution.
24:58Mottoed.
24:59Thank you.
25:0062-48.
25:01Susie?
25:02We're back with you now.
25:04We're attentive.
25:05We're waiting to hear of your origins of words for today.
25:09Well, I've been talking recently about spirits and demons
25:12from folklore and myth.
25:14And most of the words, ogres and imps, devils themselves,
25:17you would expect to be on the list.
25:19But I don't think you would put this word on the list of spooky things,
25:23and that is the animal, the lemur.
25:26Because lemur actually means spirit of the dead in Latin,
25:30and there's quite a story behind it.
25:32They were given their name by Carl Linnaeus,
25:35and he was the founder of the names of many of our animals.
25:38And he was clearly familiar with mythology
25:41and the works of Roman poets like Virgil and Ovid.
25:44In Roman tradition, lemuris, rhymes with please,
25:49were believed to be the ghosts of all those
25:52who had not been afforded proper burial rights
25:55or had died leaving unfinished business behind them.
25:59And ultimately they were ghosts of lots of people from sailors
26:03who had been lost at sea, from suicides,
26:05who weren't then granted a proper burial.
26:07To murder victims, criminals who had been executed in some grisly way.
26:13So lots of unquiet souls who were said to haunt the streets of Rome
26:17looking for peace and looking for solace.
26:20It's the same sort of ideology, I suppose,
26:22that's behind the idea of ghosts today.
26:24And the idea is that they would rise at night
26:27and, as I say, walk along the streets,
26:29haunting their former homes and neighbourhoods.
26:32So it's quite a sort of spooky idea.
26:34But from there, if you skip forward a few millennia,
26:37this Swedish naturalist who I mentioned, Carl Linnaeus,
26:40entered a record of the creature that he called the lemur
26:43in his Sistema Naturale.
26:45Now, that was the book, as I say, in which he created a lot of the names
26:49from Latin for the animals that we know today.
26:52Why did he do it? It seems a bit of a weird choice.
26:54But he says, I call them lemurs because they go around mainly by night
26:58in a certain way similar to humans and roam with a slow pace.
27:02So, despite all their cuteness,
27:04he obviously saw something quite spooky, perhaps their expressive eyes,
27:07their nocturnal habits, the sort of human-like expression
27:10that they take on as if they're lost souls
27:13that made him go all the way back to mythology and to choose his word.
27:17I love that.
27:18It's sort of ancient Rome's creepiest ghosts, really,
27:20haunting the streets of Rome,
27:22have inspired the lemurs that we know today.
27:25Brilliant.
27:27Very good.
27:2962-48, Phil on 62.
27:32Lisa, your letters again.
27:34Can I have a consonant, please, Rachel?
27:36Thank you, Lisa.
27:37S
27:38And a vowel?
27:39E
27:41And a consonant?
27:43G
27:45And another consonant?
27:47W
27:48And a vowel?
27:50U
27:52And another vowel, please?
27:54I
27:56And a consonant?
27:58T
27:59And another consonant?
28:01D
28:03And I'll finish off with a consonant, please.
28:07And finish with S.
28:09Stand by.
28:29MUSIC
28:42Yes, Lisa?
28:44I've got a six.
28:45A six. And Phil?
28:47Yeah, I've got a six as well.
28:48Lisa?
28:49Suited.
28:50And Phil?
28:51Guides.
28:52Yeah, absolutely fine.
28:54Any more sixes or can we beat it?
28:56Couple of sevens.
28:57Discussed.
28:58Yes.
28:59Studies.
29:00Yes.
29:01Widgets.
29:03I beg your pardon?
29:04Widgets.
29:05Widgets.
29:06Widgets are also there, so small gadgets, anything mechanical.
29:08Lovely.
29:09Yeah, another seven.
29:10Good selection, thank you very much.
29:1268-54, and Phil, into the final letters game.
29:16Can I start with a vowel, please?
29:18Thank you, Phil.
29:19E
29:20And another vowel?
29:22O
29:23A consonant, please?
29:25C
29:27Another consonant, please?
29:29H
29:30A vowel?
29:32A
29:34A consonant, please?
29:36D
29:38A consonant?
29:40M
29:42A consonant?
29:44T
29:46And a vowel, please?
29:47And lastly, I.
29:49Clock starts now.
29:51MUSIC
29:57MUSIC
30:22Yes, Phil?
30:23I've got a seven.
30:24And Lisa?
30:25I've got a seven as well.
30:26Phil?
30:27It's matched.
30:28And the same.
30:30Lovely.
30:31And in the corner, Alexis?
30:33We also had matched, but you can also have mitched.
30:36Yes.
30:37Mitched.
30:38It's chiefly Irish, but you'll find it in dialects up north as well,
30:42and on the west it's to play truant, so to be mitched from school.
30:45That's right.
30:46Anything else?
30:47No.
30:48Mitching, all right.
30:4975-61, into the final numbers game.
30:52For Lisa.
30:53Yes, Lisa?
30:54I'm going to try six little ones.
30:56I would have suggested that.
30:57Good gamble as well.
30:58Well done, Lisa.
30:5914 points left, 20 remaining.
31:01Good luck.
31:02Final numbers game is seven, two, seven, four,
31:07eight and five.
31:10And the target, 733.
31:13733.
31:15MUSIC
31:25MUSIC
31:45Well, Lisa?
31:47I have got 734, I hope.
31:51All right.
31:52How about Phil?
31:53Now, Lisa, this is very important.
31:55OK.
31:56I've done five times eight is 40.
32:00Five times eight, 40.
32:02Oh, I've used the eight twice, I've already gone wrong.
32:05Oh!
32:06Bad luck.
32:07Bad luck.
32:08That was going to get exciting.
32:10Now, Rachel.
32:12I think I've found a way.
32:14If you say four plus two plus seven is 13,
32:19times by seven is 91, times by eight is 728
32:25and you have five left over.
32:27Oh.
32:28Blimey, fantastic.
32:29APPLAUSE
32:32Amazing, thank you.
32:3475 to 61 as we go into the final round.
32:37So, Phil, Lisa, fingers on buzzers.
32:40Let's reveal today's Countdown Conundrum.
32:43MUSIC
32:50BUZZER
33:13Nope. Stumped.
33:15Let's roll it and see.
33:17What have we got?
33:19Nullified. There we go.
33:21Never mind.
33:23But what's not nullified is your continued run of success, Phil.
33:27So you're back tomorrow, well done.
33:29Thank you.
33:30Good man.
33:31And Lisa, well played, 61.
33:33That's a good score.
33:34I'm sure your little Elliot will be watching
33:36and be very proud of Mummy as she comes through the door
33:39with her goodie bag back in Warrington.
33:41Thank you very much indeed for coming
33:43and you travel safely home.
33:45Thank you very much.
33:46And we shall see you tomorrow.
33:47Yes.
33:48Well done, well done.
33:49Thank you.
33:50We shall see you tomorrow.
33:51I'm so pleased about that trick, I can't tell you.
33:53I can't wait to get into a bar.
33:55LAUGHTER
33:56More than usual, actually.
33:58Yes, you'll have more from me tomorrow.
34:00Susie, see you tomorrow?
34:01Yep.
34:02Lovely.
34:03I've never seen you look so happy.
34:04Wasn't it fun, though?
34:05Fantastic wrist action.
34:06That was, yeah, first time, well done, Nick.
34:08That's good wrist action, always has been.
34:10Now, see you tomorrow.
34:11See you tomorrow.
34:12Same time, same place, you'll be sure of it,
34:14a very good afternoon.
34:15Contact us by email at Countdown at Channel4.com,
34:19by Twitter at C4Countdown,
34:21or write to us at Countdown, Leeds, LS3, 1JS.
34:25You can also find our web page at Channel4.com,
34:28forward slash Countdown.
34:32Kirsty's on one side, Phil's on the other,
34:34and a couple's winter home is stuck in the middle.
34:37Will they love it or list it?
34:38Find out tonight at eight.
34:39Next today, we join Penelope Keith
34:41as she visits Robin Hood's Bay in North Yorkshire,
34:44Village of the Year is coming up.

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