Countdown | Friday 10th March 2017 | Episode 6537

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00:00This programme contains strong language and adult humour.
00:05APPLAUSE
00:31Good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown studio
00:35on the 40th anniversary of the discovery of the rings of Uranus.
00:40And those rings were discovered by three astronomers,
00:43Elliot, Dunham and Mink.
00:46And some would argue, hold on a minute,
00:49I thought that William Herschel discovered Uranus some 200 years ago,
00:53240 years ago, actually.
00:55And that's true, but his telescope, Rachel,
00:59apparently wasn't powerful enough to actually see those rings.
01:03So there we are.
01:05And this, of course, kicks off British Science Week.
01:08And up and down the country, all sorts of events are taking place
01:11to try and invigorate and generate interest in things scientific.
01:16For my part, at school, science was not my favourite subject.
01:20I was drifted more towards the humanities.
01:23But I think science might have intrigued you.
01:25Are you that frame of mind?
01:27Oh, I loved it, yeah, especially as you got older
01:29and it got more interesting for me.
01:31And at university, all my maths that I studied
01:33was basically the physics applied in,
01:35so it was all the science, mathsy stuff.
01:37And on rocket science, which I did last year, it's not rocket science,
01:40we did some amazing science experiments
01:42where I got to zip wire through fire to do with the heat capacity of water.
01:46Well, I saw you doing the zip wire, which was worrying, I think, for a time,
01:50but you came through that.
01:52I don't like the cold. You hear me moaning in studio all the time.
01:55750 degrees was much more preferable than being cold on the sidelines.
01:59Brilliant stuff. All right. There we are.
02:01Now, who's here? Neil is here, Rachel.
02:03Neil Poppert, physics student from the University of Leicester.
02:07With two wins. Well done, Neil.
02:09And you're joined today by Laurie Collingwood,
02:11a retired teacher from Barton-upon-Humber,
02:14up there in North Lincolnshire, I guess.
02:16Indeed. Nice part of the world.
02:18Very, very pleasant. Nice part of the world. I know it quite well.
02:20You love music and you enjoy playing in traditional and folk music sessions.
02:24Which instruments do you play, Laurie?
02:26I play guitar and harmonica and octave mandola.
02:30I sing a lot. I enjoy singing as well.
02:32You do? Not necessarily had-over-the-ear stuff,
02:35but traditional music and more recent stuff as well.
02:39Good. Big round of applause now for Laurie and Neil.
02:42APPLAUSE
02:45Well done. And over in the corner, of course, Susie Dent.
02:48And from Russia to America to Australia,
02:52and pretty much everywhere else,
02:54that wonderful Pasha Kovalev, dancer and choreographer.
02:58APPLAUSE
03:01Great to have you back, Pasha. Great to have you back.
03:04Now, Neil, let's get Countdown underway, shall we?
03:08Could I start with a consonant, please, Rachel?
03:10Thank you, Neil. S.
03:13And another, please.
03:15L.
03:17Another consonant.
03:19S.
03:21And vowel, please.
03:23E.
03:25Another vowel.
03:27O.
03:29Another vowel.
03:31I.
03:33Consonant, please.
03:35R.
03:37Consonant.
03:39Y.
03:41And a final consonant, please.
03:44And a final R.
03:47And here's the Countdown clock.
03:51CLOCK TICKS
03:54CLOCK TICKS
04:20Neil?
04:23Try seven.
04:24Neil?
04:25Rises.
04:26And...
04:27Lorries.
04:28Very good.
04:29And lorries.
04:30Yes, lorries from lorry.
04:31Yes, indeed.
04:32Very good.
04:33What else have we got? Pasha?
04:35I think seven is the most we can get from this.
04:38Another word is rissole.
04:40Rissole.
04:41A rissole, yes.
04:42Rissole, indeed.
04:43A rissole.
04:44Thank you.
04:45All right, so seven to lorry.
04:47And it's lorry's letters round.
04:49Good afternoon, Rachel. May I have a vowel, please?
04:51Start with V.
04:53Another.
04:55U.
04:56And a third.
04:58I.
04:59A consonant.
05:01G.
05:02And another consonant.
05:04C.
05:06A third consonant.
05:08T.
05:09And a fourth.
05:11R.
05:13A vowel, please.
05:16E.
05:18And a final consonant, please.
05:20And a final N.
05:22Contra.
05:51Yes, lorry.
05:53I'll try an eight.
05:55Eight as well.
05:57Eight from Neil, lorry.
05:59Erecting.
06:00Neil?
06:01Erecting.
06:02And erecting.
06:03Yes.
06:04Erecting is the technical term for belching.
06:07Or burping.
06:09Well, thanks for that, lorry.
06:11And Pasha?
06:13Susie?
06:14There is another eight.
06:16It's a very archaic term, but it is there.
06:19It's geniture, which is G-E-N-I-T-U-R-E,
06:23related to progeniture, et cetera,
06:25a person's birth or parentage.
06:27APPLAUSE
06:29Geniture.
06:30Yep, well done.
06:32Well done.
06:33So, 15 for lorry.
06:34Neil on eight.
06:35And we turn to Neil for a numbers round.
06:38Could I have one from the top, please, Rachel?
06:41One from the top.
06:42And therefore five little ones.
06:44Thank you, Neil.
06:45The first one of the day is eight, six, four, five,
06:51another five, and the large one, 100.
06:54And the target, 636.
06:57636.
07:15MUSIC PLAYS
07:31Yes, Neil?
07:32636.
07:33Lorry?
07:34635.
07:35635.
07:36Neil?
07:37Eight minus five is three.
07:39Yep.
07:40Five minus three is two.
07:43The other five?
07:44The other is six.
07:45It is indeed.
07:46Add that to 100.
07:48106.
07:49And times that by the remaining six.
07:51Lovely.
07:52636.
07:53Well done.
07:54APPLAUSE
07:55Well done.
07:56So, Neil, three-point lead there, 18-15,
07:59as we turn to our first Tea Time teaser,
08:01which is Along Nice.
08:03And the clue, you'd definitely get along nicely
08:05with this sort of person.
08:07You'd definitely get along nicely with this sort of person.
08:11MUSIC PLAYS
08:14APPLAUSE
08:26Welcome back. Warm welcome back.
08:28I left you with the clue,
08:30you'd definitely get along nicely with this sort of person.
08:34Because they're congenial.
08:36Congenial.
08:38So, Neil, 18, Lorry on 15.
08:40Now, then, Lorry, letters round.
08:42A vowel, please, Rachel.
08:44Thank you, Lorry. A.
08:46Another.
08:48U.
08:49And a third.
08:51E.
08:52Consonant.
08:54Q.
08:56Another consonant.
08:58S.
08:59Another consonant.
09:01B.
09:03And a fourth consonant.
09:05N.
09:07A vowel.
09:09U.
09:11Consonant, please.
09:13And, to finish, L.
09:15Stand by.
09:17MUSIC PLAYS
09:41MUSIC STOPS
09:47Yes, Lorry. Six.
09:49A six and... Six as well.
09:51Lorry. Unable.
09:53Unable and... Equals.
09:55Equals. Yes.
09:57Nothing to argue about. Nothing at all.
09:59Now, then, Pasha, what have you concocted there with Susie?
10:03Well, we found another word,
10:06which is eight-letter word.
10:08And it's unusable.
10:10Unusable.
10:12Very good.
10:14Unusable. Very good.
10:16Unusable.
10:18All right. 24 plays 21.
10:20Close-run thing here.
10:22Neil, letters round.
10:24Could I start with a consonant, please?
10:26Thank you, Neil. R.
10:28Another consonant.
10:30L.
10:32Another consonant.
10:34T.
10:35And a vowel.
10:37A.
10:38And a vowel.
10:40I.
10:41A consonant.
10:43D.
10:45A vowel.
10:47A.
10:49Vowel.
10:51O.
10:52And a final consonant, please.
10:55And a final T.
10:57Stand by.
10:59MUSIC PLAYS
11:08MUSIC STOPS
11:28Yes, Neil?
11:30Just six. A six, Laurie?
11:32Six for me.
11:34Taylor. And, Laurie?
11:36Taylor.
11:38Same way.
11:40Sixes. Can we beat it?
11:42We have one word, seven letters.
11:44Yes.
11:46Dilator.
11:48Very good.
11:50Well done.
11:52Still three points in it here.
11:5430-27. Laurie on 27.
11:56And it's a numbers round for you, Laurie.
11:58One large and five small, please, Rachel.
12:00Thank you, Laurie. One from the top row.
12:02Five little ones.
12:04Your numbers are eight, nine, six, four, three,
12:10and a large one, 50.
12:12And the target to reach, 361.
12:15Three, six, one.
12:17MUSIC PLAYS
12:35MUSIC STOPS
12:47Laurie?
12:49361, but very scribbled.
12:52All right. How about Neil?
12:55361.
12:57So, Laurie, let's go.
12:59Three plus four is seven.
13:01Three plus four, seven.
13:03360, 350.
13:05Uh-huh, 350.
13:09Eight minus six is two.
13:11Plus nine. Indeed.
13:13For the 11th. For the 11th.
13:15For 361. Lovely.
13:17Well done. And Neil?
13:19Slightly differently. 50 plus nine.
13:2159.
13:23Times by six gives 354.
13:25It does indeed. And add on the three and the four.
13:27And then three and the four, you haven't used.
13:29361. Lovely.
13:31APPLAUSE
13:35So, 40 plays 37.
13:37Still that three-point difference in Neil's favour
13:41as we turn to Pasha and Pasha.
13:43St Patrick's Day.
13:45This day week, you start your wonderful tour
13:48Let's Dance The Night Away in Red Hill, I think.
13:51And then that's the beginning of a 58 performance tour.
13:55Does it always go just as you had planned?
13:58It never goes as you planned.
14:00A lot of times, things that you cannot even predict.
14:04Sometimes it's somebody else's fault.
14:07For example, one time,
14:09they didn't wait for me to be there
14:11in order to start the show.
14:13I went to the bathroom
14:16where you couldn't hear the music.
14:18It was act two, to be fair,
14:21so they thought everything is set.
14:23They start music, couples start running on stage,
14:26and I was supposed to be there, right there in the middle.
14:29Had to run in the middle of the dance like nothing happened.
14:32Like, that's the way it was supposed to be.
14:35It's one of the ways, and sometimes your partner,
14:38if something happens, you know,
14:40you cannot control things, dress unhooked,
14:43and your partner will try to hold it,
14:45pretend that that's a part of the choreography.
14:49In severe cases, your partner would swing off the stage
14:53and suddenly you're there by yourself,
14:55suddenly thinking, OK,
14:57this is a very romantic piece of music,
14:59we're doing Roomba,
15:01I'm supposed to be in love with this girl,
15:03and she just ran away.
15:06I'm going to continue by myself,
15:08expressing my love to you all.
15:19So you've got to improvise, that's basically it.
15:23On the live shows on Strictly Come Dancing,
15:25things happen.
15:27With a lot of my partners,
15:29something comes undone,
15:31and they think the whole dress is down,
15:33and they freak out,
15:35and start crying in the middle of the dance,
15:37which kind of maybe sometimes goes well
15:39with the story of the dance,
15:41but that's irrelevant.
15:43This last past Strictly series,
15:46I was dancing with Naga Manchetti,
15:48we were doing Movie Week,
15:50and we were coming down from the ceiling,
15:52Mission Impossible, Tango,
15:54we all harnessed up,
15:56we came down, and my job was to
15:58press two buckles,
16:00unbuckle them, and let her out of that
16:02little harness, and
16:04it didn't happen.
16:06I was standing there,
16:08she's just looking at me,
16:10I'm not going to move,
16:12and I'm thinking, you have nowhere to go,
16:14you harness up,
16:16and it took a little bit longer,
16:18and then finally it happened,
16:20I was like, didn't show it,
16:22nobody would notice that.
16:24Could be stressful, but you do it brilliantly anyway.
16:26Excellent stuff.
16:28Now, what are we going to do about these three points?
16:3040 to 37, Laurie on 37,
16:32and it's Neil's.
16:34Letters round, though.
16:36Could I have a consonant, please?
16:38P.
16:40Another consonant.
16:42M.
16:44And another consonant.
16:46N.
16:48Vowel, please.
16:50Another vowel.
16:52A.
16:54Another vowel.
16:56O.
17:02Consonant, please.
17:04S.
17:06Consonant.
17:08L.
17:10And a final vowel, please.
17:12And a final U.
17:14Stand by.
17:20MUSIC PLAYS
17:46Yes, Neil?
17:48A six.
17:50And Laurie?
17:52A seven.
17:54Neil?
17:56Plains.
17:58Laurie?
18:00Yes, they are the trees found in arid regions of southern Africa,
18:02bitter-tasting leaves shaped like butterfly wings.
18:04Well done.
18:06Pasha?
18:08Well, we have another eight-letter word,
18:10and it's ampules.
18:12Yes, ampules.
18:14Yeah, A-M-P-O-U-L-E-S.
18:16It's actually the one if you're having an injection.
18:18Yeah. I remember those.
18:20They used to saw the top off with a little file, yeah,
18:22and snap it off, yeah.
18:24Exactly.
18:26All right, 44.
18:28There's 40, as I say, and it's Laurie's letters round.
18:30Laurie?
18:32Vowel, please, Rachel. Thank you, Laurie.
18:34E.
18:36And another.
18:38A.
18:40And a third.
18:42O.
18:44D.
18:46Another consonant.
18:48S.
18:50And a fourth consonant.
18:52V.
18:54And a vowel, please.
18:56A.
18:58And a last consonant, please.
19:00And lastly, R.
19:02Well done.
19:14MUSIC PLAYS
19:32Yes, Laurie?
19:34Seven.
19:36A seven, Neil?
19:38I'll try a seven.
19:40Yes, Laurie?
19:42Drovers.
19:44Neil?
19:46Evaders, with an O.
19:48Not there, Neil. I'm afraid it's E-R-S, sorry.
19:50Bad luck.
19:52But what can we have? Susie?
19:54We were drovers as well, in this corner.
19:56Drovers, driving the cattle to market.
19:58Yeah, indeed.
20:00I grew up in Drove Road,
20:02which was on the road to the market,
20:04and there used to be a big sign
20:06about slackening the reins on horses,
20:08because they were going uphill.
20:10The road to market, yeah.
20:12And with the score standing 51 to Laurie now,
20:14and Neil on 40,
20:16it's Neil's numbers round.
20:18Have a care, Neil. Good luck.
20:20Can I get four large, please, Rachel?
20:22Four large, trying to make up those 11 points.
20:24Thank you, Neil.
20:26Let's see what we have here.
20:28Two little ones are eight and ten,
20:30and then the big four, as we know,
20:32100, 50, 75, 25.
20:34And your target are...
20:3630 seconds for 475.
20:38475.
21:06MUSIC
21:14Neil. 475.
21:16And Laurie.
21:18475, but not written down.
21:20So, Laurie, tell us how.
21:22I will try.
21:2450 over 25 is 2.
21:26OK. 50 over 25 is 2.
21:288 over 2 is 4.
21:30It is.
21:32Times 100. 400.
21:34You have indeed 475.
21:36Thank you, Neil.
21:3850 times 10. 500.
21:40Minus 25.
21:42Yeah. Nice and easy with these numbers.
21:44APPLAUSE
21:50So, 50 plays 61,
21:52and it's our second tea time teaser,
21:54which is hedonists.
21:56And the clue, they might be in search of pleasure,
21:58but they don't know how to tell the truth.
22:00They might be in search of pleasure,
22:02but they don't know how to tell the truth.
22:06MUSIC
22:16APPLAUSE
22:22Welcome back. I left with the clue,
22:24they might be in search of pleasure,
22:26but they don't know how to tell the truth.
22:28That's because...
22:30..they're dishonest.
22:32Dishonest.
22:34So, 61 for Laurie.
22:36Neil on 50, and it's Laurie's letters game.
22:38A vowel, please, Rachel.
22:40Thank you, Laurie.
22:42E.
22:44A second. O.
22:46And a third. E.
22:48And a consonant, please.
22:50T.
22:52A second consonant. L.
22:54Third consonant. R.
22:56A vowel, please.
22:58U.
23:00Consonant.
23:02C.
23:04And a consonant, please.
23:06And lastly, L.
23:08And the clock starts now.
23:10MUSIC
23:26MUSIC
23:44Yes, Laurie?
23:46Six.
23:48A six. Neil?
23:50Six as well.
23:52Laurie?
23:54Neil?
23:56Colour.
23:58C-U-L-L-E-R.
24:00Colour, yes.
24:02Somebody who slaughters. That's in the dictionary.
24:04To colour a herd or a flock, I suppose.
24:06Yeah.
24:08Not great to watch.
24:10Anything else?
24:12And collet also find a small collar in a clock
24:14to which the inner end of a balance spring is attached.
24:16Indeed.
24:18And that's the collet, eh?
24:20All right, so 56 plays 67.
24:22Laurie on 67. Neil, letters?
24:24Can I start with a consonant, please?
24:26Thank you, Neil.
24:28G.
24:30Another consonant.
24:32P.
24:34And another?
24:36D.
24:38And a fourth consonant, please.
24:40F.
24:42And a vowel?
24:44E.
24:46Another vowel?
24:48A.
24:50O.
24:52Another vowel?
24:54E.
24:56And a final consonant, please.
24:58And a final P.
25:00Stand by.
25:20MUSIC PLAYS
25:34Yes, Neil?
25:36I'll try a six.
25:38Laurie? Six.
25:40Now, Neil?
25:42A fapt.
25:44Laurie? Gapt.
25:46Gapt. Absolutely fine in the dictionary.
25:48Anything else? Pasha?
25:50We have another six-letter word,
25:52which is apogee.
25:54Yes.
25:56Meaning a climax, a finale of something, an end.
25:58Indeed, the apogee.
26:00Yes.
26:02Well done. 73 plays 62.
26:04Susie, we call upon you and your wonderful origins of words.
26:06Now.
26:08Well, a bit of a sad one today,
26:10cos this month marks the anniversary
26:12of the first official concentration camp
26:14in Dachau in Germany.
26:16Nazi Germany.
26:18And I just thought I would look at
26:20the original meaning of a holocaust
26:22before it became permanently attached
26:24to one of the most terrible events
26:26in our recent history.
26:28The term looks back to the Greek
26:30holocauston.
26:32It's spelt with a K.
26:34And that translates as a total burning.
26:36So the holo means whole,
26:38as in a hologram, which is a whole
26:40three-dimensional image, if you like.
26:42And causton, which means burning,
26:44is related to caustic.
26:46And it denoted originally a sacrificial
26:48offering to a god
26:50that was completely consumed by fire,
26:52whether it was a deity or
26:54a replica of a deity
26:56or an animal that was a sacrifice
26:58to the god. And within the Christian
27:00tradition, a holocaust began to appear
27:02around the middle of the 13th century.
27:04And it was usually used in
27:06reference to Abraham's offering to
27:08God of his son Isaac.
27:10And William Tyndale, who's one of the
27:12first translators of the Bible into English,
27:14looks at a piece in Mark's gospel
27:16which speaks of loving God with all one's
27:18might and compared it to a great
27:20and he said it was a greater thing than all
27:22holocausts and sacrifices.
27:24But it was during the second half
27:26of the 17th century that it became
27:28or began to be used more
27:30generally to mean a total
27:32destruction. In fact, John Milton was the first
27:34to use it in this way. And throughout the
27:36war, the holocaust was a word chosen
27:38to describe these holocausts
27:40because of the enormous scales.
27:42So it's a little bit like ground zero,
27:44which had a meaning before it became permanently
27:46attached to the Twin Towers.
27:48That was the site of a nuclear bomb. And before
27:509-11, it was used
27:52in respect of Hiroshima
27:54more often than not. But
27:56holocausts, like ground zeros, become permanently
27:58attached to a single terrible,
28:00terrible event. So a bit
28:02bleak today, but it's good to remember.
28:04And often a word can paint as many pictures
28:06as images themselves.
28:08APPLAUSE
28:14Amazing. 73 plays 62.
28:16Laurie in the lead.
28:18And it's Laurie's letters
28:20game now. Vowel, please, Rachel.
28:22Thank you, Laurie. O.
28:24And another. I.
28:26And a third. A.
28:28And a fourth, please.
28:30I.
28:32Consonant. T.
28:34Second consonant.
28:36W.
28:38Third consonant.
28:40N.
28:42A vowel.
28:44U.
28:46And a consonant, please.
28:48And lastly, N.
28:50And the clock starts now.
28:52MUSIC PLAYS
29:06MUSIC CONTINUES
29:22Laurie.
29:24Seven. A seven. Neil.
29:26Just a five. Your five?
29:28Mount.
29:30Laurie. Manitou.
29:32Yep, very good, Laurie. Manitou.
29:34Very good words. Among certain Algonquian
29:36North American Indians, a manitou
29:38is a good or evil spirit,
29:40which is revered.
29:42Indeed. Yep.
29:44Well done, Laurie. 80 points.
29:4680 points to 62. And...
29:48Pasha. Pasha and Susie.
29:50I think manitou was the best word.
29:52Yeah? That was ours. Let's stay with that one.
29:54All right. So, final
29:56letters game for Neil. Another, Neil.
29:58Consonant, please.
30:00Thank you, Neil. X.
30:02Another.
30:04T. Another consonant.
30:06S.
30:08A vowel.
30:10O.
30:12Another vowel.
30:14E. And another vowel.
30:16O.
30:18A consonant.
30:20M.
30:22A
30:24consonant.
30:26Z.
30:28And a final
30:30vowel. And a final
30:32E.
30:34Stand by.
31:00MUSIC PLAYS
31:06Yes, Neil?
31:08Just a five. A five.
31:10Laurie? I'll try a six.
31:12Neil? Oozes.
31:14Oozes and...
31:16Emotes? Yes, to show emotion.
31:18To emote something. Very good.
31:20Emotes. You can ooze emotion, too, I suppose.
31:22Now,
31:24in the corner, we've got
31:26Pasha and Susie conspiring there.
31:28What have you got? Conspiring and quickly
31:30crossing something out. That was ours as well.
31:32Emotes. That's it? Yes.
31:34Well done. All right. 86
31:36to 62 as we go into the final
31:38numbers round. Laurie?
31:40One large and five small, please.
31:42Rachel? Thank you, Laurie. One from the top row
31:44and five little ones for the final numbers
31:46game this week. And this selection
31:48is 1, 3,
31:507, 6,
31:524 and 25.
31:54And the target
31:56is to get 495.
31:58495.
32:26Yes, Laurie?
32:28496. 496.
32:30One away. Neil?
32:32496 as well.
32:34Laurie?
32:367 x 3 is a 21.
32:38Take away one is 20.
32:407 x 3, you sound very despondent.
32:4221, 20.
32:44Times 25. 500.
32:46Minus 4. Yes, that's for one away.
32:48496. Well done. Yeah, exactly.
32:50Same way, Neil?
32:52But, Rachel, 495?
32:54There were a couple of ways.
32:56If you say 7 x 25
32:58is 175.
33:00Minus the 6
33:02and the 4 for 165
33:04and times that by 3, you get 495.
33:06Well done.
33:08Thank you, Rachel.
33:12Now it's time to go into our final round.
33:14So, Neil and Laurie,
33:16fingers on buzzers.
33:18Let's roll today's countdown conundrum.
33:24BUZZER
33:26Laurie?
33:28Glamorous? Glamorous.
33:30Let's see whether you're right.
33:32Here we go. Glamorous. Good man.
33:34APPLAUSE
33:36Good man.
33:38APPLAUSE
33:40First time out,
33:42under 103. That's tremendous.
33:44Neil? There we go.
33:46But you go home, you know, with your goodie bag
33:48and your teapot, knowing that you've
33:50had two good wins.
33:52So that's something to be proud of.
33:54And you travel with our best wishes.
33:56Yeah, it's been a blast. Thanks very much.
33:58You enjoyed it? Yeah. That's the main thing.
34:00Laurie Collingwood, we shall see you
34:02on Monday. Well done.
34:04Great opening score. Thank you.
34:06103 points, my word.
34:08And we shall see you both on Monday.
34:10Have a restful weekend.
34:12Pasha and Susie too, of course.
34:14All right, we'll see you then on Monday.
34:16Wow, Laurie started off with a
34:18blast, hasn't he?
34:20A century in his first innings.
34:22Very impressive. Expecting good stuff next week.
34:24Quite. See you then. See you then.
34:26Monday. Join us then.
34:28Same time, same place.
34:30You be sure of it. A very good afternoon.
34:32Contact us by email
34:34at countdown at channel4.com
34:36by Twitter at
34:38c4countdown or write to us at
34:40countdown leads ls31js
34:42You can also find our
34:44webpage at channel4.com
34:46forward slash countdown.
34:48They're running round all excited, noses wet
34:50and tails wagging. And that's just the
34:52owners. Crufts 2017 continues
34:54today at four. And tonight at nine
34:56these ones are allowed on the sofa, but
34:58only if they've been good. It's the brand new series
35:00of Gogglebox. Next though, Sandy
35:02standing by with 15 to 1.

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