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00:00This programme contains strong language and adult humour.
00:04CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
00:31Good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown studio.
00:34Famous last words, Rachel. Particularly amongst famous people.
00:37Sometimes I think they're slightly concocted by their descendants.
00:41But how about this? Archimedes.
00:43Goes right back to Archimedes, apparently.
00:45This is an absolute peach, I love this.
00:48He said, Stand away, fellow, from my diagram.
00:51And was then promptly killed by a soldier.
00:54Lovely. Lovely.
00:56But more profound examples include Bob Marley, who said...
00:59And actually he's rather good. Money can't buy life, that's true.
01:02Leonardo da Vinci. I think he's a rock-bomber.
01:05I have offended God and mankind
01:07because my work did not reach the quality it should have.
01:10He didn't do badly, did he, Leonardo?
01:12He was all right, you know. I felt not bad.
01:14Humphrey Bogart said, I should never have switched from scotch to martini.
01:18Lovely. He died very young, actually.
01:21I think he was only in his late 40s, early 50s sort of thing.
01:25What about you? Do you have any favourites?
01:27Well, this is kind of a sneaky one because he didn't actually die,
01:30but my cousin, who is now dead,
01:33they all had season tickets at Man United
01:35and one time they went to Old Trafford and Barry had a heart attack.
01:39He was unconscious and then the crowd erupted as someone scored
01:42and apparently he sat up and said, Who scored?
01:45And, as I say, that story had a happy ending
01:48because he didn't die on that occasion.
01:50It's a true United fan there. Who scored?
01:53I don't want to die without knowing who scored.
01:57That's lovely. So here we are. I hope you got with us.
01:59We've got Steve back, Rachel, from Froome.
02:02Three good wins, another good score, 95 last time out.
02:06Yeah, well done.
02:07I only came for a teapot, this is good.
02:09Well, you've got a teapot, that is yours forever.
02:11Now you've got to try and get to be an OctoChamp and then the real champ.
02:16All right, you are.
02:17So it's quite a long way to go yet for you,
02:19unless, of course, Amy Benfield can put a stop to your triumphant progress.
02:24You're an occupational therapist from Halifax.
02:27Yep.
02:28Expecting twins in a few months' time.
02:30Yep, yep.
02:31Lovely.
02:33You've got two dogs.
02:34Two dogs as well.
02:35Spaniels, I think.
02:36Yep, a Cocker Spaniel and a Springer Spaniel.
02:38You like to go up on the moors with your dogs and your boyfriend too.
02:42Yep.
02:43And you like to throw a ball for the dogs.
02:46Well, yeah, Bella, the Springer Spaniel, loves the tennis ball
02:50so we were out walking one day.
02:52I went to go throw the ball, the tennis ball,
02:54but Stephen, my boyfriend at the time,
02:57actually got down then on one knee and said,
02:59don't throw that ball and then opened the ball up
03:01and there was an engagement ring inside.
03:03Lovely.
03:04What a clever thing.
03:05Just as well you weren't a bit fast for it.
03:07I was about to throw it, yeah.
03:09Well, well, well.
03:10Good luck to you both, to Steve and to Amy.
03:12Big round of applause for our contestants.
03:14APPLAUSE
03:17Lovely.
03:18And then over in the corner, Susie, of course,
03:20once again with former featherweight world boxing champion,
03:23the great Barry McGuigan.
03:25Welcome back, Barry.
03:26Thank you very much, Steve.
03:27APPLAUSE
03:30Great character. Lovely man.
03:32Now, Steve, let us go.
03:34Hi, Rachel.
03:35Hi, Steve.
03:36Consonant, please.
03:37Thank you. Start today with P.
03:39And another?
03:41N.
03:43Another?
03:45G.
03:46Another?
03:48L.
03:49A vowel?
03:51E.
03:52Another?
03:54U.
03:55Another?
03:57I.
03:58A consonant?
04:00R.
04:02And a final consonant?
04:05And a final B.
04:07And here's the Countdown Clock.
04:09CLOCK TICKS
04:39Well, Steve?
04:41Dodgy seven.
04:42A seven. Amy?
04:43Seven.
04:44A firm seven. Steve?
04:46Pringle?
04:48Pringle. Amy?
04:49Plunger?
04:51Plunger.
04:52Plunger is absolutely fine and pringle is also there.
04:56It's a verb meaning to prickle or tingle.
04:58Really? I thought it was a brand, but...
05:01Well, it is.
05:02That too.
05:03Barry and Susie?
05:05Well, we had plunger, pringle, we didn't have purling.
05:10Do you better explain what that means?
05:12Yeah, with a U, it's all about a purl stitch in knitting
05:16from right to left at the front.
05:18That's simply what it is.
05:20Right, OK. Thank you for that. Amy, how about a letters game?
05:24Hi, Rachel. Hi, Amy.
05:25Please may I have a consonant?
05:27Thank you. Start with R.
05:29And a vowel?
05:31A.
05:33And another?
05:35I.
05:36And a consonant?
05:38D.
05:39And a vowel?
05:41O.
05:43And a consonant?
05:45M.
05:46And another consonant?
05:48S.
05:50And a vowel?
05:53E.
05:54And a final consonant, please?
05:56And a final M.
05:58Stand by.
06:03WHISTLE BLOWS
06:29Amy?
06:30A seven.
06:32Yes, Steve.
06:33A seven.
06:34Amy?
06:35Smalmed.
06:37And Steve?
06:38Dimmers.
06:39Dimmers.
06:41Our old friend the rheostat again.
06:43Yeah, absolutely fine.
06:45And I think you can smalm your way into a situation.
06:49You certainly can.
06:50What else have we got there? Barry, Susie?
06:52We've got mermaids, eight.
06:54Very good.
06:55And I'll let you pronounce that one.
06:57A good countdown seven, this one. Ray domes.
07:00The domes that protect radar equipment.
07:02Ray domes, indeed. Thank you.
07:0440 in a piece. First numbers game, Steve.
07:07Could I have a 1-2-1-2 from the top, please, Rachel?
07:09You can indeed. Thank you, Steve.
07:111-2-1 and 2.
07:13And the first one of the day is 9-3-7-10-1 and 25.
07:22And the target, 969.
07:24969.
07:27MUSIC
07:31MUSIC
07:58Well, Steve?
07:59First step.
08:00Let's rely on Steve for the minute, shall we?
08:02Yes, Steve?
08:0310 times 3.
08:0530.
08:06Plus 9.
08:0739.
08:08Times 25.
08:09975.
08:10Minus 7.
08:12Yep.
08:13Plus 1.
08:14969, lovely.
08:15Yeah, well done.
08:16APPLAUSE
08:19Well done, Steve.
08:2024-2, where aim is 14.
08:22As we turn to our first tea time teaser,
08:25which is goals rush.
08:27You might need 60 minutes to figure this one out.
08:30You might need 60 minutes to figure this one out.
08:34MUSIC
08:42CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
08:49Welcome back. I left you with a clue.
08:51You might need 60 minutes to figure this one out.
08:54And the answer is...
08:56..you'll need an hourglass.
08:58An hourglass.
09:00Now, if you'd like to become a Countdown contestant,
09:04you can email countdown at channel4.com
09:07to request an application form
09:09or write to us at contestantsapplications.
09:12Countdown leads LS31JS.
09:17So 24-14, Steve in the lead.
09:20Plenty of time, Amy. Try this letters game.
09:23Consonant, please, Rachel. Thank you, Amy.
09:25D.
09:27And a vowel.
09:29A.
09:30And a consonant.
09:32Y.
09:34And a vowel.
09:36U.
09:37And another.
09:39E.
09:41And a consonant.
09:43T.
09:45And another.
09:47X.
09:49And another consonant.
09:51S.
09:53And a vowel, please.
09:55And lastly, O.
09:57Don't buy it.
09:59MUSIC
10:22MUSIC
10:29Well, Amy?
10:31Six.
10:32A six, Steve?
10:33A seven.
10:34And a seven, Amy?
10:36Stayed.
10:37Stayed. And?
10:38Tuxedos.
10:39Oh, well done.
10:41Excellent.
10:42Now, in the corner?
10:43Two Ds, two Ds with an S, two Ds.
10:46Yes.
10:47That's only six. We also got tuxedo, so well done.
10:49Susie, anything else?
10:50No, that was it, actually.
10:52Today's in the sense of all my todays, all my tomorrows.
10:54We are sure.
10:55Thank you for that.
10:5631 plays 14, and it's Steve's letters game.
10:59Steve.
11:00Thanks, Nick.
11:01A consonant, please, Rachel.
11:02Thank you, Steve.
11:03G.
11:04Another.
11:06R.
11:07Another.
11:09W.
11:10Another.
11:12S.
11:13A vowel.
11:15U.
11:17Another.
11:18A.
11:19Another.
11:21O.
11:23A consonant.
11:25R.
11:26And a final vowel, please.
11:28And a final E.
11:30Stand by it.
11:49MUSIC PLAYS
12:03And Steve?
12:05Just a six.
12:06Amy?
12:07I'll go a risky seven, then.
12:09Right. Steve?
12:10Wages.
12:12And Amy?
12:13Growers.
12:14Yes.
12:15Oh, very good.
12:16Yep.
12:17Tomato growers.
12:18Roses.
12:19That sort of thing.
12:20Yes.
12:21Very nice.
12:22Now, in the corner?
12:23Grouser.
12:24G-R-O-U-S-E-R.
12:25Seven.
12:26Mm.
12:27And growers.
12:28Well done.
12:29Yep.
12:30Grouser.
12:31Grumbles and complains a lot.
12:32It's a grouser.
12:33I'm a bit of a grouser today.
12:3431 to 21, ten points in it.
12:36Amy, your numbers game.
12:39Please have one from the top and five little ones.
12:41Thank you, Amy.
12:42One large, five little.
12:44And your chance to draw a level.
12:46These five little ones are eight, five, five,
12:51another eight, one, and the large one, 25.
12:55And the target, 394.
12:58394.
13:16Yes, Amy?
13:30394.
13:32Steve?
13:33394.
13:34Thanks.
13:35Amy?
13:36Eight plus eight is 16.
13:37Yep.
13:38Times five, 25.
13:40400.
13:41Five plus one is six.
13:43Perfect.
13:44Take it away.
13:45And Steve?
13:46Yep, same.
13:47Same way?
13:48Yep.
13:50APPLAUSE
13:53So, still that ten-point difference with Steve in the lead.
13:56We turn to Barry.
13:58Barry, what have you for us today?
14:01Well, on the last show,
14:03we talked about the fight I had before I fought for the world title.
14:06It was the fight that really gave me my world title fight,
14:09which was against a guy called Juan Laporte.
14:12We then got the world title fight,
14:14and Eusebio Pedrosa,
14:16who was one of the longest-reigning champions in the 20th century,
14:21had held the title for seven and a half years.
14:23He'd made 19 successful defences.
14:26He wouldn't come to Belfast,
14:27because at that time it was a very troubled place,
14:30and it was very dangerous.
14:32So he would only come to England.
14:35So we put the fight on in Loftus Road,
14:38which was right directly behind the BBC headquarters at that time.
14:4427,000 people there that night.
14:46Incredible.
14:47And Pedrosa was a superb fighter,
14:49and I knew that that was the only way I could win the fight,
14:52was to put him under pressure and sustain pressure.
14:55So I kept on top of him.
14:57I got control of it, hurt him in the ninth,
14:59had him out on his feet in the 13th round.
15:02But like the laudable champion he was,
15:04he stayed in there right to the end,
15:06and won a 15-round decision.
15:08One of the last 15-rounders that the UK's ever had.
15:12Then it was reduced to 12 rounds for safety reasons.
15:15But what a night.
15:16The celebrations were incredible.
15:18Came home a couple of days later,
15:20and in Belfast 75,000 people came out to see me in Royal Avenue.
15:25And two days later I went to Dublin.
15:27250,000 people turned out.
15:30And it took me an hour and a half to go the length of O'Connell Street.
15:34I almost was as big a draw as the Pope.
15:37So it was a great time,
15:39and if you talk about the best fight of my life, that was it.
15:43That was the highlight of my boxing career.
15:45Fantastic.
15:50Amazing.
15:52I bet London ran out of Guinness that night.
15:54Can you imagine?
15:55They certainly did.
15:56Can you imagine? Fantastic. Thank you, Barry.
15:5941 plays 31, Steve in the lead,
16:01and it's Steve's letters game. Yes, Steve?
16:03Consonant, please, Rachel.
16:04Thank you, Steve. P.
16:06And another?
16:08T.
16:10Another?
16:11B.
16:13Another?
16:14M.
16:16A vowel?
16:17A.
16:19Another?
16:20O.
16:22Another?
16:23E.
16:25A consonant?
16:27H.
16:29And another consonant, please?
16:32And lastly, K.
16:34Stand by.
17:02MUSIC
17:08Steve?
17:09Five.
17:10A five. Amy?
17:11Only a four.
17:13And that four is?
17:14Poet.
17:15Poet and?
17:16Bathe.
17:17And bathe.
17:18Barry and Susie?
17:19Apothem.
17:20Yes.
17:22That's seven.
17:24Seven.
17:25If you could explain the definition.
17:27Yes.
17:28Apothem is a term from geometry,
17:30deriving from the centre of a regular polygon
17:32at right angles to any of its sides.
17:35Well, I'm dashed.
17:37Thank you very much.
17:39Thank you. 46-31.
17:41Amy, your letters game.
17:43Consonant, please, Rachel.
17:45Thank you, Amy. F.
17:47And a vowel?
17:49A.
17:50And a consonant?
17:52Q.
17:54And another?
17:56S.
17:58And a vowel?
18:00E.
18:01And a consonant?
18:03G.
18:04And a consonant?
18:06J.
18:08And a vowel?
18:10A.
18:12And another vowel, please?
18:15And lastly, E.
18:17Stand by.
18:19MUSIC
18:28MUSIC CONTINUES
18:50Amy?
18:51Just a four.
18:53A four, Steve?
18:54The same four.
18:55Amy?
18:56Safe.
18:57Fees.
18:58Susie and Barry?
19:00Well, we had safe. We didn't have fees.
19:03No.
19:04What about you, Susie?
19:05We had jags, as in stabs, pierces or pricks.
19:09But that four was our best as well.
19:12Yeah.
19:13Now, 50-35.
19:15Let's see what Steve's going to do with this numbers game.
19:18Yes, Steve.
19:19A one, two, one, two from the top, please, Rachel.
19:22Thank you, Steve. One, two, one and a two.
19:25And the five smalls this time are four.
19:28One, seven, five and six.
19:32And the large, 50.
19:34And your target, 519.
19:36519.
19:38MUSIC
19:56MUSIC STOPS
20:09Steve?
20:10517.
20:12Two away. Amy?
20:14517, but badly written down.
20:17How badly?
20:19How badly?
20:20Tell us how you got that.
20:2250 plus one.
20:2451.
20:25And then six plus four is ten.
20:27Four more written there, yes.
20:29I know what you're talking about. Just ignore me.
20:31Then times them together.
20:33510.
20:34And then add on the remaining seven.
20:36Can't have been worse written down than that.
20:38Well done.
20:39There we go. Same way?
20:40Same way, Nick, yeah.
20:41Yeah.
20:42APPLAUSE
20:43Well done.
20:45However, only perfection works in this studio.
20:49Rachel, what do you reckon? 519?
20:51Yes, if you say seven plus four is 11.
20:55Times by 50 is 550.
20:58And then six times five is 30.
21:01Take that away and take the one for 519.
21:03Well done. Perfect.
21:05APPLAUSE
21:07Thank you, Rachel.
21:08So, 57 to 42.
21:10Steve still in the lead as we turn to our second tea time teaser,
21:13which is man detail.
21:15And the clue, the man told me in great detail all about his new flooring.
21:20The man told me in great detail all about his new flooring.
21:25MUSIC
21:33APPLAUSE
21:41Welcome back. I left with the clue,
21:43the man told me in great detail all about his new flooring.
21:48That would have been laminated flooring.
21:51Laminated is the word we're looking for.
21:53Now, 57 to 42, Steve in the lead.
21:56Amy, don't let him get away. Letters game.
21:59Thank you. Consonant, please, Rachel.
22:01Thank you, Amy. T.
22:03And a vowel.
22:05A.
22:06And a consonant.
22:08S.
22:09And another.
22:11T.
22:13And a vowel.
22:14E.
22:16And a consonant.
22:18P.
22:20And another.
22:22T.
22:24And a vowel, please.
22:27A.
22:28And a final consonant.
22:30And a final.
22:31W.
22:33Stand by.
22:46MUSIC
23:06Well, Amy?
23:07Just a five.
23:09A five. And Steve?
23:10Five for me as well, Nick.
23:12Amy?
23:13State.
23:14I managed to find taste.
23:17Now, Barry and Susie, what have you got?
23:21A test and...
23:24Pronounce that one, Susie.
23:26Pat.
23:27P-A-T-T-E-S comes straight from the French, meaning a paw.
23:31Pat.
23:32Pat. But, yes, six is first.
23:3562 to 47, Steve.
23:38Letters game.
23:39Thank you. A consonant, please, Rachel.
23:41Thank you, Steve.
23:42N.
23:44V.
23:45Another.
23:47T.
23:48Another.
23:50S.
23:51A vowel.
23:53O.
23:54Another.
23:56E.
23:57Another.
23:59A.
24:00A consonant.
24:02M.
24:04And a final consonant.
24:06And a final D.
24:08Stand by.
24:10MUSIC
24:13MUSIC CONTINUES
24:40Yeah, Steve?
24:42Just a five not written down, Nick.
24:44Amy?
24:45Six.
24:46And a six. Steve?
24:48Mates.
24:49Now Amy.
24:50Moaned.
24:51Yes.
24:52Fine.
24:53Very helpful, moan, actually. Barry and Susie, what have you got?
24:56We've got a great one. You're going to have to tell me what this means.
25:00It's novated.
25:02Novated.
25:03N-O-V-A-T-E-D.
25:05And...
25:06Demons with the A.
25:08Ah, yes, the old-fashioned.
25:10Old-fashioned demons.
25:12And to novate is to put a new contract in place of an old one
25:16in legal situations.
25:18Indeed. Thank you. 62-53, well done, Amy.
25:21And now it's Susie we turn to. Give these guys a rest.
25:25Susie, your origins of words. And today?
25:28Today, thanks to Roger Pinney.
25:31I think you pronounce it P-I-N-H-E-Y.
25:33But thank you to Roger for writing in.
25:35He lives in Dorset and he said,
25:37recently used two words and I wonder if you can tell me where they came from.
25:41And he's added another one as well.
25:43So they are chocoblock, kerfuffle and skidaddle.
25:46So a brilliant trio.
25:48And I'll start with the one that we don't know much about
25:51and that's the glorious word skidaddle.
25:53It was probably in use in British dialect before going over to the US
25:57but certainly most of the first records are from the US.
26:01And in fact, the first printed records are from the US Civil War.
26:05So the New York Tribune of 1861 reports that
26:21More than that, we simply don't know.
26:23It's possibly a fanciful formation like another favourite,
26:26absquatulate, which is to leave somewhere in a hurry.
26:29I like that one.
26:30I'll move on to chocoblock,
26:32where a choc is a wedge or a block that is placed against a wheel
26:36to prevent it from moving or to support it.
26:38And we use it in that sense in chocks away, for example.
26:42And it's probably from an old French word meaning a block or a log.
26:46But chocoblock, we do know, was originally a nautical expression like so many
26:50and it referred to a pair of pulley blocks
26:53which had ropes threaded between them to form a hoist or a tackle.
26:58And when they were pulled so close together
27:00that the two blocks touch, you can't lift them anymore.
27:03But that's chocoblock.
27:05And finally, kerfuffle, which is a wonderful word.
27:09And the answer to this one, as you might guess,
27:11is it's all about onomatopoeia, the sound.
27:14It goes back to fuffle, a Scottish verb from the 1500s,
27:19meaning to throw into disorder.
27:21So you might have fuffled hair, for example, which is great.
27:24The ker bit is very common in Scottish to add a bit of intensity.
27:27So we have kermerring, for example, which is to make a low murmuring sound.
27:32And possibly my favourite, these ones are spelled C-U-R, but the same idea.
27:37Kerglaff.
27:38And a kerglaff is the shock you feel when plunging into icy water.
27:42So it's a good one when you step into the shower
27:44and get a bit of a nasty shock, you get a kerglaff.
27:47Very good.
27:53Thank you. Thank you.
27:54Thank you. 62-53.
27:56And, Amy, in the final stretch now, make the most of it.
27:59It's a letters game.
28:00Thank you. I'll start with a vowel, please, Rachel.
28:02Thank you, Amy. I.
28:04And a consonant.
28:06R.
28:08And another.
28:10L.
28:12And a consonant.
28:14F.
28:16And a vowel.
28:18E.
28:20And another.
28:22U.
28:23And a consonant.
28:25S.
28:26And a consonant.
28:28N.
28:30And a final consonant, please.
28:33And a final S.
28:35Stand by.
28:53MUSIC STOPS
29:08Amy?
29:09Seven.
29:10A seven, Steve?
29:12Just six.
29:13Your six?
29:15Finals.
29:16Amy Benfield.
29:18Sorry.
29:19A fussier.
29:21Well done.
29:23Barry and Susie?
29:24Infusers.
29:26An infuser.
29:28An infuser. All to do with infusing tea, for example.
29:32Lots of medical terms as well, but infusers will get you to an eight.
29:36Well done.
29:38Infusers.
29:41Very good.
29:43Into the final letters game now, then, Steve.
29:46Have a care. Letters game.
29:48Thank you. Consonant, please, Rachel.
29:50C.
29:51R.
29:52And another.
29:54D.
29:55Another.
29:57P.
29:58Another.
30:00T.
30:01A vowel.
30:03O.
30:04Another.
30:05I.
30:07Another.
30:09O.
30:11Consonant.
30:13L.
30:15And a final vowel, please.
30:17And a final I.
30:19Stand by.
30:48MUSIC STOPS
30:51Steve?
30:53Five.
30:54Nick?
30:55Amy?
30:56Five.
30:57Steve?
30:58Pilot.
30:59And?
31:00I also got pilot.
31:01There we go.
31:02All good?
31:03Two good players. Very good.
31:05And over in the corner?
31:07Tripoli.
31:08Yes.
31:09Tripoli?
31:10Not as in the capital of Libya, but in the sense of a rotten stone.
31:15And there's another word for Tripoli,
31:17which is decomposed limestone that's used as a paste for polishing metals.
31:22Oh, that's Tripoli. Really?
31:24Thank you. 67 to 65, only two points in it.
31:27Amy, your numbers game.
31:29Please, I have two big ones and four small ones.
31:32You can indeed, thank you, Amy.
31:34Two large, four little, and hopefully a crucial conundrum to finish the week.
31:37The final numbers are...
31:391, 3, 10, 5,
31:432, 75 and 50.
31:45And the target to reach, 285.
31:48285.
32:14Amy?
32:16285.
32:18Steve?
32:19285.
32:21Right. Amy?
32:233 plus 1 is 4.
32:25Yep.
32:26Times by the 50 for 200.
32:29200.
32:30Add on the 75 and the 10.
32:32Lovely. 285, well done.
32:34And Steve?
32:35Yep, slightly different.
32:373 plus 1 times the 75 for 300.
32:40Times 75 for 300.
32:43Minus the 10, minus the 5.
32:45Same result, well done.
32:46Well done indeed.
32:51So, 77 plays 75,
32:54which means you've got an exciting crucial conundrum, yeah?
32:59Fingers on buzzers, good luck to you both.
33:02Let's roll today's crucial countdown conundrum.
33:09Yes, Steve?
33:10No, I was going to say parenting, sorry.
33:13Down to you, Amy.
33:18Amy?
33:20Tampering.
33:21Oh, Amy, what have you done?
33:23Let's have a look.
33:25There it is!
33:29You weren't absolutely sure about that.
33:32Why did you hit it so soon?
33:34You could have taken all that time.
33:36Fantastic.
33:37Anyway, listen, you take the day.
33:3985 to Steve, who's a very good player.
33:42Oh, I've had the time of my life, Nick.
33:44I'm happy with that, 3 and 1.
33:45Thank you so much for coming.
33:47Thank you, I've had a great time, thank you.
33:49I'm very pleased to hear that.
33:50We want people to enjoy themselves.
33:52Amy Benfield, look at you.
33:55Excellent, see you on Monday.
33:56Well done.
33:58Have a peaceful weekend.
34:00All right.
34:01So, Barry, see you Monday, yeah?
34:04Looking forward to it.
34:05Great stories, they're magnificent.
34:06Thank you, great stuff.
34:07Susie, see you on Monday.
34:08See you then.
34:09All right.
34:10So, look at Amy.
34:11Yeah, three brains are better than one, exactly.
34:13Ironic that Steve went for parenting as well.
34:15I think she was putting him off there.
34:17Yeah, this is Amy's fault, Barry.
34:19That's very good.
34:20We'll see you Monday.
34:21See you then.
34:22Brilliant stuff.
34:23Join us on Monday.
34:24Amy will be back, same time, same place.
34:26You'll be sure of it.
34:27Yes, a very good afternoon to you.
34:29You can contact the programme by email at countdown at channel4.com,
34:33by Twitter at c4countdown,
34:35or write to us at countdownleads ls31js.
34:39You can also find our webpage at channel4.com forward slash countdown.

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