Countdown | Wednesday 8th March 2017 | Episode 6535

  • 2 months ago
Transcript
00:00This programme contains strong language and adult humour.
00:20CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
00:32Good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown studio
00:35on the day that, way back in 1817,
00:38the New York Stock Exchange was formed.
00:41Apparently, this is sort of an insider tour of Wall Street,
00:44and, of course, anybody who saw that wonderful Leonardo DiCaprio film,
00:48Wall Street will remember.
00:50That's to say, the wolf of Wall Street, of course,
00:53will remember what a beautiful building it was.
00:55And these insider tours, the great one that I did,
00:59the insider tour, was in Berlin,
01:01and I found myself in Berlin with my dog, actually,
01:04and it was fantastic.
01:06It was a five-hour walk around all the iconic sites of the war, frankly,
01:13the Third Reich, and it was the most informative thing.
01:17Absolutely brilliant.
01:18What about you? Do you like tourist cities?
01:21Well, I think on the other end of the spectrum,
01:23when I went to LA, I did the tour of the stars' houses.
01:28You do feel a little bit creepy, cos they go,
01:30there's Oprah's house and there's Justin Bieber's bin
01:33and, you know, all this kind of really weird stuff.
01:36There'll be buses stopping outside your house.
01:39I hope so.
01:40People all peering and you look out the window.
01:42This is where she puts her bins out in the morning.
01:46Lovely stuff.
01:47Now then, Rachel, who have we got?
01:49We've got Carl Bates back, proving to be a formidable player here.
01:52Three wins to his name.
01:54Welcome back, Carl.
01:55Now, you're joined today by Neil Poppat, a physics student from Leicester.
02:00That's right. You're a Londoner, right?
02:02I am. I'm from London originally, but studying in Leicester.
02:04All right.
02:05But you're also, when we talk about running,
02:08you finished a 10k race in the Olympic Stadium,
02:11and then something happened that would embarrass you
02:14until your dying day, and what was that?
02:16So, just as I was finishing,
02:19I got overtaken by an elderly gentleman
02:22who was pushing his wife in a wheelchair.
02:25And, unfortunately, my brother happened to capture it on camera,
02:29so it's been posted all over social media.
02:32Oh, right. We can look you up on YouTube, maybe.
02:35I'm afraid so, yes.
02:36Excellent. We'll do that as soon as the show's over.
02:38All right. Well, good luck today. Good luck, Neil. Good luck, Carl.
02:41Big round of applause for our contestants.
02:47And over in the corner, Susie, of course, as ever.
02:50And he's about to head off on a Mammoth UK tour.
02:5358 performances, I think.
02:55It's dancer and choreographer Pasha Kovalev.
02:58Welcome, Pasha.
03:02Now, then, Carl, letters round.
03:05Hi, Rachel. Hi, Carl.
03:07Could I have a consonant, please? Thank you.
03:09Another day with T.
03:11And a vowel?
03:13E.
03:14And a consonant?
03:16G.
03:18And another consonant?
03:20L.
03:22And a vowel?
03:24A.
03:26A consonant?
03:28S.
03:30A vowel?
03:32I.
03:34A consonant?
03:36J.
03:38And another consonant, please?
03:40And the last one? S.
03:42And here's the Countdown Clock.
04:09Yes, Carl?
04:11Risky seven.
04:13Neil? I'll stick with a six.
04:15Your six?
04:17Gilets.
04:19Gilets. Now, then, how much of a risk is this, Carl?
04:21We're about to find out.
04:23Salties.
04:25It's a sort of crocodile, isn't it?
04:27Salties. Sorry.
04:29I think that should be absolutely fine.
04:31You're right, Nick, rather.
04:33Saltwater crocodile. Australian slang.
04:35Salties.
04:37Salties.
04:39APPLAUSE
04:41Good gamble there, Carl.
04:43Now, over in the corner,
04:45Pasha and Susie, what have you got?
04:47Pasha?
04:49We've got a couple of sevens,
04:51like eights, and...
04:53Silages.
04:55Also there, to silage is a verb.
04:57Sort of decomposing grass, isn't it, for cattle?
04:59Yeah, to make silage or to preserve grass.
05:01Silage. Yeah.
05:03Neil? Headers round.
05:05OK. Can I have a consonant, please?
05:07Thank you. Start with B.
05:09And another, please.
05:11G.
05:13And another consonant.
05:15L.
05:17And a vowel.
05:19O.
05:21And another.
05:23A.
05:25And another vowel, please.
05:27E.
05:29Consonant, please.
05:31C.
05:33N.
05:35And finish with a vowel, please.
05:37And finish with...
05:39I.
05:41Countdown.
06:03MUSIC PLAYS
06:11Neil?
06:13I'll go for a seven.
06:15A seven. Carl?
06:17I'll play so you can go with a six.
06:19That six?
06:21Global. Global. Neil?
06:23Cabling.
06:25Cabling is great for seven.
06:27Global, you need two Ls.
06:29Carl, I'm afraid.
06:31Pasha?
06:33Well, we have a couple more sevens.
06:35One of them is angelic,
06:37just like ladies on this programme.
06:39And coinage.
06:41Coinage. Very good.
06:43Coinage.
06:45Seven apiece, and it's Carl's numbers round now.
06:47Carl?
06:49Can I have one from the top and any other five, please, Rachel?
06:51You can indeed. Thank you, Carl.
06:53One large one, five little ones coming up.
06:55And for the first time today,
06:57your selection is one, nine,
06:59seven, four,
07:01and the large one, 25.
07:03And the targets have reached 572.
07:05572.
07:07MUSIC PLAYS
07:29MUSIC STOPS
07:37Yes, Carl?
07:39No, I've gone wrong, actually.
07:41Neil?
07:435, 7, 1.
07:45Just one away. Let's try it. Nick?
07:47So if you do 9 plus 8 plus 7...
07:49Yes, 9 plus 8 plus 7, 24.
07:51Take away the 1.
07:53Take away the 1, 23.
07:55Times that by the 25.
07:57And then take away the 4.
07:59Yep, well done. One away. Lovely.
08:01Near but not perfect.
08:035, 7, 1, but 5, 7, 2. Rachel, can you?
08:05Oh, similarly,
08:07if you say 9 plus 8 plus 7
08:09is 24,
08:11but then if you say
08:1325 minus 1 is another 24,
08:1524 squared is 576,
08:17and then take away the 4,
08:195, 7, 2.
08:21Superb.
08:23APPLAUSE
08:25So we've got 14, 7.
08:27We reach for our first Tea Time teaser,
08:29which is the stadium, and the clue.
08:31Everyone in the stadium knew
08:33it wasn't a foul, it was a dive.
08:35Everyone in the stadium knew
08:37it wasn't a foul, it was a dive.
08:39MUSIC PLAYS
08:47APPLAUSE
08:49APPLAUSE
08:53Welcome back.
08:55I left you with the clue.
08:57Everyone in the stadium knew
08:59it wasn't a foul, it was a dive.
09:01And the answer to that one,
09:03it was simulated.
09:05It was a simulated foul.
09:07So, Neil on 14, Carl on 7,
09:09and it's Neil's letters.
09:11Could I start with a consonant, please?
09:13Thank you, Neil.
09:15T.
09:17T.
09:19And a third?
09:21R.
09:23And a vowel, please?
09:25U.
09:27Another?
09:29A.
09:31Another vowel?
09:33E.
09:35A consonant, please?
09:37T.
09:39And a consonant?
09:41N.
09:43And a final vowel, please?
09:45And a final?
09:47A.
09:49Well done.
09:51MUSIC PLAYS
10:15MUSIC STOPS
10:19Neil?
10:21A six.
10:23A six and? A seven.
10:25Neil? Curate.
10:27Curate. Now?
10:29Untreat.
10:31Untreat. Why not?
10:33Oh, not there. That's untreatable.
10:35Right. I stand corrected.
10:37What have we got otherwise? Pasha and Susie?
10:39Oh, we've got a very wonderful word.
10:41Eight letters.
10:43Truncate. To truncate.
10:45Short. Exactly.
10:47Well done.
10:49APPLAUSE
10:51To truncate. To shorten.
10:5320 plays seven.
10:55Neil on 20, and it's Carl's letters round now.
10:57Carl?
10:59Could I have a consonant, please, Rachel?
11:01Thank you, Carl. S.
11:03And a vowel?
11:05O.
11:07And a consonant?
11:09R.
11:11S.
11:13And a vowel?
11:15E.
11:17And a consonant, please?
11:19B.
11:21A vowel?
11:23U.
11:27A consonant?
11:29S.
11:31And another vowel, please?
11:33And lastly, A.
11:35Stand by.
11:37MUSIC PLAYS
11:41MUSIC STOPS
12:07Yes, Carl?
12:09Er, six?
12:11A six and...?
12:13I'll try a seven.
12:15A seven, Carl?
12:17Er, baser?
12:19Er, brasses?
12:21Brasses. Absolutely fine. Yes.
12:23The plural? Yeah, decorative object made of brass.
12:25You can pluralise that version, so that's fine.
12:27Um, no.
12:29Would you say basers, Carl?
12:31No, six, baser.
12:33B-A-S-S-E-R.
12:35B-A-S-S-E-R. OK.
12:37I'm afraid we're not.
12:39Sorry. OK.
12:41Sorry. Good luck.
12:43Now, Pasha and Susie?
12:45We had a few more sevens.
12:47One of them is arousers.
12:49Yes.
12:51Abusers. Yeah.
12:53And, er... Buses.
12:55Buses. People who bus tables.
12:57Who clear tables in a restaurant.
12:59OK, so American. It's an Americanism, yeah.
13:01Busboys. Yes.
13:03All right. Thank you. 27 plays seven.
13:05Let's have a numbers round for Neil.
13:07I'll have one from the top, please, Rachel.
13:09Thank you, Neil. One large one.
13:11Five littlens coming up in this time.
13:13Small numbers are nine,
13:15seven, two,
13:17six and four.
13:19And the big one, 75.
13:21And this target, 164.
13:23164.
13:35MUSIC PLAYS
13:55Neil? 164.
13:57164. Carl?
13:59164. Thank you.
14:01Neil?
14:0387 times by the two.
14:0582 times two, 164. Lovely.
14:07And Carl? I've done it the same way.
14:09OK.
14:11There we are.
14:13APPLAUSE
14:15So, still a bit of a lead for Neil there.
14:1737 to Carl's 17.
14:19As we turn to Pasha.
14:21Pasha, basically, you danced all your way across Russia,
14:23and then across the States,
14:25to Los Angeles, and then you came back.
14:27You danced on Broadway, I think.
14:29Yes, I did. And in Blackpool.
14:31What was the most unusual place,
14:33I guess, that you've danced?
14:35The most interesting place
14:37I've been dancing at
14:39was underwater.
14:41Oh, right. Oh, yes.
14:43No-one probably would think you can dance
14:45underwater, but...
14:47First time I joined Strictly,
14:49and after the first series,
14:51me and my dance partner,
14:53Chelsea Healy,
14:55we took part in sport relief.
14:57A little competition.
14:59We were competing against
15:01Harry Judd and Alena Villani at that point.
15:03And we were dancing
15:05underwater. So we had proper
15:07scuba diving gear. Very little
15:09tiny thing that wouldn't
15:11restrict your movement much.
15:13But for me, the weird feeling
15:15was that, well, you're wearing clothes,
15:17and when you're going swimming,
15:19you usually don't wear much clothes.
15:21And here, you're dressed up in
15:23full ballroom attire.
15:25It kind of feels like
15:27it doesn't belong there, and you're
15:29underwater in that mask.
15:31I had to go up and down
15:33so many times
15:35because I kind of started on the top
15:39at the water's surface, and then
15:41would have to dive down.
15:43My eyes were red for a
15:45week after that. I think they were
15:47all shattered
15:49in a way. So I was like a little
15:51rat, I guess. A little mouse
15:53with red eyes. But it was such
15:55a great experience because you have
15:57so much freedom.
15:59And things you can do underwater, you would
16:01never even think of attempting
16:03to do in normal
16:05conditions. So if you jump, you
16:07kind of, like dancing on the moon,
16:09you jump and you float.
16:11Fantastic. Graceful stuff.
16:13I wish I'd seen it. Maybe it's on YouTube.
16:15It is on YouTube. You still can catch up.
16:17Well, look it up.
16:19Alright.
16:21APPLAUSE
16:23Underwater with
16:25Pasha. My word.
16:2737 to 17.
16:29Neil's in the lead and it's Carl's
16:31letters round now. Carl.
16:33Can I have a consonant please, Rachel?
16:35Thank you, Carl. P.
16:37And a vowel? E.
16:39And a consonant?
16:41F.
16:43And another consonant?
16:45M.
16:47And a vowel, please? O.
16:49And a consonant?
16:51P.
16:53And another consonant?
16:55G.
16:57A vowel?
16:59I.
17:01And a consonant?
17:03And the last one? T.
17:05Stand by.
17:21CLOCK TICKS
17:37Carl.
17:39No, I've used two letters again, so nope.
17:41Neil? Just a four.
17:43A four. Which is?
17:45Pipe. Pipe. Yep.
17:47Pipe. Now, Pasha.
17:49Can we beat that, surely?
17:51Yes. We have one word
17:53consisting of six letters
17:55and it's muppet. Muppet?
17:57Yes. Can we have muppet?
17:59That's what Rachel always calls me.
18:01She calls you a muppet? Muppet.
18:03Oh, a muppet. Yes.
18:05I was hoping it wasn't muppet.
18:07A muppet.
18:09Yes.
18:11Alright. 41 plays out.
18:1317. Neil in the lead, alright.
18:15And it's Neil's letters game now.
18:17Could I start with a consonant, please?
18:19Thank you. Start with Z.
18:21And
18:23another.
18:25F.
18:27And a vowel?
18:29A.
18:31And a consonant?
18:33D.
18:35And another?
18:37R.
18:39Vowel, please.
18:41E.
18:43Another vowel?
18:45Um...
18:47A consonant, please.
18:49D.
18:51And a
18:53final vowel, please.
18:55And a final E.
18:57Countdown.
19:15MUSIC PLAYS
19:29Neil?
19:31Er, six.
19:33A six. Carl? And a six as well.
19:35Yes, Neil? Er, feared.
19:37No, Carl.
19:39Got feared as well.
19:41Alright.
19:43And
19:45can we beat six, I wonder?
19:47Yes, we certainly can. And it's going to be
19:49faddier.
19:51Somebody who's very faddy. Yes.
19:53Seven letters. He's faddier than the next.
19:55Alright.
19:5747 plays 23.
19:59And now it's a numbers round
20:01for Carl Bates.
20:03Could I have one from the top and any other five?
20:05You can indeed, thank you, Carl.
20:07Another one large one, five at all.
20:09Selection. And this time it's
20:11six, ten,
20:13one, seven,
20:15and a big one, 25.
20:17And the target, 608.
20:19608.
20:21MUSIC PLAYS
20:41MUSIC STOPS
20:53Yes, Carl?
20:55No, not close enough.
20:57Too far? Neil?
20:59607, not written down.
21:01Take it away.
21:03Ten plus nine...
21:0519. Plus six...
21:0725. Minus one.
21:0925 is 600. Yep.
21:11And add on the seven.
21:13And add the seven. One away. 607.
21:15Pretty close. One away.
21:17But 608. Rachel, can you help?
21:19Oh, yes. One way.
21:21We could have said nine times
21:23seven is 63.
21:25Minus 25 is
21:2738. And then ten
21:29plus six is 16.
21:31And times them together. Oh, well done.
21:33Thank you, Rachel. 608.
21:35APPLAUSE
21:37That's the way it's done.
21:39Now, our second
21:41tea time teaser is
21:43Rob's Quite.
21:45And the clue, Rob's quite keen
21:47on using a nickname. Rob's quite keen
21:49on using a nickname.
21:53MUSIC PLAYS
21:59APPLAUSE
22:07Welcome back. I left with the clue,
22:09Rob's quite keen on using
22:11a nickname. And the answer to that,
22:13of course, is sobriquet.
22:15Which you can spell S-O-U
22:17as well, but of course that will be
22:19ten letters and therefore we'll spoil it,
22:21because we only use nine letters
22:23for our tea time teaser. So there we are.
22:25Quite. Neil on 54
22:27and Karl on 23.
22:29And it is
22:31Neil's Letters Game.
22:33Could I start with a consonant, please?
22:35Thank you, Neil.
22:37T. And another?
22:41M. And third
22:43consonant?
22:45N. And a vowel,
22:47please? U.
22:49And another?
22:51E.
22:53And another
22:55vowel? O.
22:59And a consonant, please?
23:01R.
23:03And another
23:05consonant?
23:07S.
23:09And a final
23:11vowel? And
23:13a final U.
23:15Don't know.
23:17MUSIC PLAYS
23:33MUSIC CONTINUES
23:47Neil? I'll try a risky
23:49eight. Karl?
23:51Eight. And a firm eight.
23:53Neil? Mounters.
23:55And Karl? Numerous.
23:57Numerous.
23:59Both absolutely excellent.
24:01Both in the dictionary. Very good.
24:03APPLAUSE
24:07Now, any more eights in the corner?
24:09Pasha? Yes, we can add one more eight
24:11to this collection. Remounts?
24:13Yes. Yes. And anything else?
24:15And remounts. No, it was a nice round,
24:17though, that one. Very good.
24:19Thank you very much. 62, please.
24:21Karl's 31. And it's Karl's
24:23letters round now. Good luck, Karl.
24:25Can I have a consonant, please? Thank you, Karl.
24:27N.
24:29And a vowel? I.
24:31And a consonant?
24:33P.
24:35And another consonant?
24:37Oh, dear. S.
24:39And another
24:41consonant, please?
24:43N.
24:45And a vowel?
24:47E.
24:49And a...
24:51another vowel, please?
24:53O.
24:55Consonant?
24:57D.
24:59And a vowel, please?
25:01And the last one?
25:03E.
25:05And the clock starts now.
25:27CLOCK TICKS
25:37Karl? Eight.
25:39Eight. Neil?
25:41I'll stick with a seven.
25:43Your seven? Ponies.
25:45Ponies and Karl?
25:47Poisoned. Poisoned?
25:49I have to disallow both,
25:51unfortunately, cos poison takes two O's
25:53rather than two E's, and
25:55ponies is a six. Neil, I think you just saw that.
25:57Yeah. So no can do on either front,
25:59I'm afraid. That's a disappointment.
26:01But you will cheer us up, I'm sure.
26:03Now, then. Pasha and Susie?
26:05Yes?
26:07Finally, we got a nine-letter word.
26:09Brilliant. And it's pensioned.
26:11Pensioned. Well done.
26:13APPLAUSE
26:19That's very good. That's just to really make our
26:21contestants unhappy.
26:23There's a nine in there.
26:25So 62 plays 31 still,
26:27and we turn now to Susie
26:29and her wonderful origins of words.
26:31Susie? Well, there are quite a few
26:33words in the Oxford English Dictionary
26:35with very long entries,
26:37a set being one of the most famously long
26:39entries in there, but bar
26:41is another real multitasker,
26:43and in fact there are very few
26:45words as multifunctional, if you like,
26:47as bar. We have bars of soap, bars of chocolate,
26:49bars serving drink,
26:51bars that we can put criminals behind,
26:53and in Britain, members of the
26:55bar who can help
26:57put them behind bars.
26:59So many, many examples.
27:01We have bars in music as well, don't we, of notes.
27:03Go back to its history.
27:05The word entered English from French
27:07in the early Middle Ages.
27:09Its history before then is a little bit murky.
27:11We're not quite sure exactly where it
27:13came from. But right from the start
27:15it began to branch out,
27:17if you like. Its earliest use
27:19was for fastening a gate
27:21or a door. So people used it for
27:23various kinds of barrier,
27:25which of course is related to the
27:27word bar. And this barrier
27:29was typically a long, rigid piece of
27:31wood or metal or other substance that was
27:33used as an obstruction or as a fastening
27:35or in fact a weapon.
27:37Then in court, a bar
27:39marked off the area around the judge's
27:41seat. It separated the judge from
27:43the prisoners, from the criminals, as was thought.
27:45And at the ends of court, where
27:47prisoners were trained
27:49in England, a bar separated
27:51student lawyers from those who had
27:53already qualified. And a
27:55student was called to the bar
27:57in order to become a fully
27:59fledged barrister. Of course, barrister
28:01also has that bar behind it.
28:03And from there, rather, the bar
28:05came to mean the whole body of
28:07barristers or the barrister's profession.
28:09That's about 400 years old, that use.
28:11But perhaps our favourite sense of
28:13bar came into use at exactly
28:15that moment. That was a barrier, again,
28:17or a counter from which
28:19drinks are served.
28:21Brilliant. Well done.
28:25Very good. Alright.
28:2762, please. 31. And it's
28:29Neil's letters round.
28:31Now, Neil. Start with a consonant, please.
28:33Thank you, Neil. N.
28:35And a...
28:37Another consonant. D.
28:39And a...
28:41third.
28:43W.
28:45And a fourth consonant.
28:47S.
28:49And a vowel.
28:51O.
28:53And another.
28:55E.
28:57And another.
28:59O.
29:01And a
29:03consonant, please.
29:05P.
29:07And a final
29:09consonant.
29:11And a final T.
29:13Stand by.
29:41MUSIC STOPS
29:45Neil. Er, seven.
29:47Seven, Carl. Er, seven as well.
29:49Neil. Er, spooned.
29:51Now, then. Swooped.
29:53And swooped. Susie?
29:55Pasha? Well, we have
29:57another seven, which is
29:59swooned. Swooned.
30:01Perfect. Swooned.
30:0369 plays. 38.
30:05And it's Carl's final
30:07letters round. Good luck, Carl.
30:09Another consonant, please, Rachel.
30:11Thank you, Carl. H.
30:13And a vowel.
30:15I.
30:17And a consonant.
30:19T.
30:21And a vowel.
30:23A.
30:25A consonant.
30:27D.
30:29A vowel, please.
30:31O.
30:33A consonant.
30:35W.
30:37A consonant.
30:39L.
30:41And a...
30:43another vowel,
30:45please. And finally,
30:47another I.
30:49Stand by.
30:51MUSIC PLAYS
31:07MUSIC CONTINUES
31:21Carl. I haven't written it down,
31:23but a five? A five
31:25and Neil? Just a four.
31:27Your four? Er, toad.
31:29Toad and?
31:31Tidal. Tidal.
31:33Yes. Really good. Nice, this one.
31:35Could we beat five?
31:37No, unfortunately, we have to stick with fives.
31:39We have a couple more.
31:41Loth and Waldo.
31:43Very good. Fives all round.
31:45Waldo.
31:47And now it's 69 for Neil
31:49and Carl on 43.
31:51And it's the final numbers round.
31:53Neil.
31:55One from the top again, please.
31:57One from the top. Five little
31:59to finish the day.
32:01And this final selection is
32:03five, one,
32:05eight, four,
32:07and 75.
32:09And your target, 563.
32:11563.
32:13MUSIC PLAYS
32:33MUSIC CONTINUES
32:43Neil.
32:45563.
32:47And Carl.
32:49566.
32:51Neil.
32:5375 minus four is 71.
32:5571.
32:57Times by eight is 568.
32:59It is indeed 568.
33:01And five. 563.
33:03Lovely. Well done.
33:05APPLAUSE
33:07Well done, Neil.
33:09And so, with the score standing at 79
33:11to Carl's 43, we turn
33:13to the final round.
33:15It's conundrum time, gentlemen.
33:17Fingers on buzzers. We're about to roll
33:19today's countdown conundrum.
33:21MUSIC PLAYS
33:27Angelfish.
33:29Angelfish. Let's see whether you're right.
33:31Angelfish indeed.
33:33Well done.
33:37A good score. 89.
33:39Oh, Carl, you had such
33:41a great run. And then somebody
33:43pops up and takes it all away.
33:45But they don't take away
33:47your three wins. They don't take away
33:49your goodie bag or your teapot.
33:51So that's what you take back
33:53to Soham with our very best wishes.
33:55Good player. Good player.
33:57Neil wins today.
33:59Well done. We see you tomorrow.
34:01See you tomorrow. Congratulations.
34:03And over in the corner, of course,
34:05we shall see you both tomorrow.
34:07Pasha and Susie too, of course.
34:09More origins of words from you.
34:11See you both tomorrow. See you then.
34:13And Rachel too, of course. See you tomorrow.
34:15I'm going to go and do some further research
34:17into Susie's origin of words and go to the bar.
34:19Very conscientious. Indeed.
34:21All right. See you tomorrow. See you then.
34:23Join us then. Same time, same place.
34:26Contact us by email at
34:28Countdown at Channel4.com
34:30By Twitter at C4Countdown
34:32Or write to us at Countdown
34:34Leeds LS3 1JS
34:36You can also find our webpage at
34:38Channel4.com forward slash Countdown
34:43Tonight's 8 o'clock Hidden Restaurants
34:45with Michelle Rue Jr. Secret Eateries
34:47Food Mavericks and a Feast on a Floating Calf
34:499 o'clock the Royal House of Windsor
34:51continues with a look at Prince Philip's
34:53radical attempts to modernise the royal family
34:55using the power of TV
34:5715 to 1 is next
34:59and the intro includes words of inspiration
35:01Why? Hashtag
35:03International Women's Day

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