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00:00This programme contains strong language and adult humour.
00:10CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
00:30Good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown Studio.
00:35Now, if you're a Star Trek fan and you're not in Frankfurt, why not?
00:40Because today, a three-day jamboree kicks off in that great city
00:44and it's all to do with Star Trek and it's called Destination Star Trek.
00:49Fans turn up from all over the world, dressed up as Star Trek characters.
00:53Personally, I can think of nothing worse.
00:56I've never watched Star Trek. Are you a Star Trek fan?
00:59I haven't watched an episode either. I've never seen one.
01:02It just doesn't hit you in the right place.
01:04I don't know, but on the gadget show, we did have some Throneheads come in
01:08from the Game of Thrones.
01:10They dress up as the characters from the Game of Thrones.
01:13I had it on my list of things to watch. I need to watch that.
01:16I know that William Shatner hosted Have I Got News For You
01:19and was brilliant because he had no idea what was going on.
01:24And I know exactly how he feels.
01:26LAUGHTER
01:28Let's see whether we've got anybody else here who knows what's what.
01:31Andy Naylor knows what's what.
01:33Now, on two wins, you beat Douglas Horn yesterday, 104-19.
01:38You got married in 2011 and spread the celebrations out over four days.
01:44Where did all this take place?
01:46My wife lives in the south of Scotland, a little place called Kirkcudbright.
01:50I work in London, so I brought my cricket team up from London
01:55and we had the civil ceremony on Friday.
01:58Got married on Saturday and had a blessing service and a big reception.
02:02And then Sunday, Monday, the team played cricket against my Scottish team.
02:06Sounds great sport. And imaginative, too.
02:09You're joined by Johnny Hull, a chef from Chichester
02:12who enjoys writing poetry and is on his way to finishing off his first novel.
02:17Is that right, Tony?
02:19Well, it's more started, it's not on the way to finishing yet.
02:22Well, you've got to drive on there, haven't you?
02:24Yeah.
02:25Talking about driving on, you went zip-lining in the cloud forests
02:28of Monteverde in Costa Rica.
02:30Now, that sounds great crap.
02:32Above the treetops.
02:33Above the tree canopies, yeah.
02:35Fantastic. Well, good luck to you both.
02:37So a big round of applause for Johnny Hull from Chichester and Andy Naylor.
02:47Sounds like a lot of fun to me.
02:49Susie, do you fancy a bit of zip-lining later on?
02:51Definitely.
02:52Jonathan?
02:53Yeah, maybe in Salford. That's a thought, isn't it?
02:55A little tourist attraction.
02:57Between the sort of, you know, the ITV building and the BBC building.
03:00BBC, perfect.
03:01You'd cut the wire, wouldn't they?
03:03There we are. Let's get down to business now, then.
03:05Come on, Andy, take us away. It's Friday.
03:07Hi, Rachel.
03:08Hi, Andy.
03:09Vowel, please.
03:10Thank you. Start today with I.
03:12And another.
03:14E.
03:15And a third.
03:16U.
03:17And a consonant.
03:19D.
03:20And another, please.
03:22S.
03:23And another one.
03:25J.
03:26And another one.
03:28B.
03:29And, yeah, another consonant, please.
03:31T.
03:33And a final consonant.
03:35And a final R.
03:38And here's the Countdown Clock.
03:51CLOCK TICKS
04:12Now, then, Andy.
04:13I'll stick with seven.
04:15A seven, Johnny.
04:16And a seven as well.
04:17Two sevens. Right, Andy.
04:19Bruised Johnny.
04:21I'm bruised as well.
04:22Everybody's bruised.
04:24One way or another.
04:26In the corner.
04:28A few sevens.
04:29Yes.
04:30Disturb.
04:31Yes.
04:32And one I'll leave to you.
04:33Yes.
04:34Bastier.
04:35Bastier.
04:36Yes.
04:37Our old friend.
04:38They lace up at the back, I think, don't they?
04:40They can do.
04:41Yeah. Those are the ones I've come across.
04:43Seven points all.
04:45And now, Johnny.
04:46Letters game.
04:47Hello, Rachel.
04:48Hi, Johnny.
04:49Consonants, please.
04:50Thank you. Start with C.
04:53And another.
04:55X.
04:57And a vowel, please.
04:59A.
05:00And another.
05:02I.
05:04And another.
05:05E.
05:07Consonants, please.
05:09R.
05:10Another one.
05:12T.
05:15And we'll have another consonant, please.
05:18L.
05:20And we'll finish on a vowel.
05:22And finish with A.
05:25Countdown.
05:45MUSIC
05:58Johnny?
05:59Just a six.
06:00A six.
06:01And?
06:02Six.
06:03Two sixes. Johnny?
06:04Taylor.
06:05Taylor and?
06:06Eclair.
06:07Eclair.
06:09Eclair.
06:10Happy enough?
06:11Yeah, I'm just going to check Taylor
06:13because the Taylor who cuts clothes is O-R at the end.
06:16It's not in the dictionary, unfortunately.
06:19What have we got else?
06:20A couple of sevens.
06:21Yes.
06:22A recital.
06:23Yep.
06:24And an article.
06:25An article.
06:26An article.
06:27Very good.
06:28All right, 13 to 7.
06:29Where were the numbers, Andy?
06:31May I have a one, two, one, two, going as far to the right as you can?
06:35This way.
06:36On your right?
06:37This way.
06:38Yeah.
06:39One, two, and a one and a two.
06:41Thank you, Andy.
06:42And for the first time today, the numbers are four, one, seven, two,
06:47another one and the large one, 50.
06:50And the target, 628.
06:53628.
07:12MUSIC PLAYS
07:26Andy?
07:28I have 625 not written down.
07:31Three away.
07:32Johnny?
07:33I've used the two twice.
07:35So you're withdrawing?
07:36Yeah, nothing to declare.
07:37Andy?
07:397 plus 4 plus 1.
07:437 plus 4 plus 1 is 12.
07:4650 plus 2 is 52.
07:49Yep.
07:50If you multiply them...
07:52624.
07:53I think you've got a one tied on.
07:55You do, the other one, 625.
07:57Three away there, Rachel.
07:59How tricky is that? 628.
08:01It's hidden in there.
08:03So, if you say 50 minus 4 minus 1 is 45,
08:08multiply that by 7 for 305.
08:15Sorry, 315.
08:18Yeah, I haven't got it wrong.
08:20And then take away the other one for 314 and times it by 2.
08:24Perfect. Thank you.
08:28Very good indeed.
08:30Andy plays seven as we turn to a teatime teaser,
08:33which is Lash Grin.
08:35And the clue, you won't be grinning for long
08:37if you run into this of an evening.
08:40You won't be grinning for long if you run into this of an evening.
08:45MUSIC
08:59Welcome back. I left with the clue,
09:01you won't be grinning for long if you run into this of an evening.
09:04If you run into a ring house.
09:07Flummoxed. What's a ring house?
09:10It is another word for a ring house,
09:13which is a large nocturnal spitting cobra.
09:16You'll find it in southern Africa.
09:18It has one or two white rings across the throat,
09:20so you can identify it, Nick.
09:22But it comes from Afrikaans, meaning a ring neck.
09:25Really? Yes.
09:27Well, I'll keep well away from one of those, then.
09:29Johnny, you're on.
09:32We'll have a consonant, please. Thank you, Johnny.
09:35T. And another.
09:38G. And again, please.
09:41P.
09:43One more.
09:45S.
09:47And a vowel.
09:49O. Another one.
09:52I.
09:54And another.
09:57U.
09:59A consonant.
10:01F.
10:03We'll finish with another consonant, please.
10:05And finish with V.
10:07Stand by.
10:11CLOCK TICKS
10:13CLOCK TICKS
10:38Yes, Johnny?
10:40A five.
10:42Six.
10:44Johnny? Spout.
10:46Spout and... Pivots.
10:48Pivots. Yes.
10:50Pivots. Pivots, very good.
10:52What else have we got in the corner?
10:54A spigot.
10:56Yes, a spigot is a small peg
10:58that you put into a big cask of wine or beer.
11:01Yeah, knock it in with a hammer.
11:03Now, then, Andy. Letters game.
11:05Rachel, start with a vowel, please.
11:07Thank you, Andy. O.
11:09And another.
11:11And a third.
11:13E. And a consonant, please.
11:15S.
11:17And another.
11:19H. And another.
11:21M. And a fourth.
11:23R. And a fifth.
11:25G.
11:27And a final consonant.
11:29And a final T.
11:31Countdown.
11:41CLOCK TICKS
12:03Andy? Eight.
12:05An eight, Johnny. The same, I think.
12:07All right, let's see.
12:09Andy, shortage.
12:11Shortage. A guess.
12:13What else have we got in the corner?
12:15We were well beaten there.
12:17We had hamster.
12:19Our old friend the hamster.
12:21What's that, seven? Yes.
12:23All right, very good.
12:2534-15. Now, then, Johnny, we're back with you for a numbers game.
12:29Can I have one big number
12:31and five little ones from the bottom row, please?
12:34You can indeed. Thank you, Johnny.
12:36One large, five small.
12:38For this round, they are one, four, seven,
12:42another one, five, and 100.
12:46And the target, 434.
12:49434.
13:09CLOCK TICKS
13:21Johnny? 434.
13:23434. Andy? 434.
13:25Both of you? OK.
13:27So, Johnny, four times the 100.
13:30Four times the 100 for 400.
13:32Then five times seven.
13:3435. And less one of the ones.
13:36Lovely. 434. Andy?
13:38100 plus seven.
13:40100 plus seven, 107.
13:42Times four. 428.
13:44And add on five plus one.
13:46Well done. 434 again.
13:48APPLAUSE
13:53Very good. But now we're going to have a chat with Jonathan.
13:56So, you graduated at Durham in physics,
14:00training, got involved, got married.
14:031990. And here we go.
14:05Young, married man, suddenly the children start coming in
14:08right at their time.
14:10Exactly. That you're at the peak of your sporting prowess.
14:14Yeah, my first major medal was at the World Championships
14:17in Stuttgart in 1993.
14:19And my first child, Sam, was born 7th August.
14:23I hope it was the 7th of August.
14:25LAUGHTER
14:27It was the 10th of August. I've forgotten his birthday.
14:30Anyway, it was early August, and he was late,
14:32and my wife was induced.
14:34And then I went off to Stuttgart to compete
14:37in the World Championships.
14:39And then I won a bronze medal.
14:41So, my first major medal.
14:43And then I called home, or called the hospital that evening
14:46to speak to my wife, who was in a bit of a state.
14:48She said, you have to come home immediately.
14:50I said, I can't, because my medal ceremony's been delayed
14:53and it's not until the next day.
14:55She said, I don't care about your medal ceremony.
14:57You have to come home.
14:59So I was like, oh, well, young father and all of that,
15:01and I spoke to the national coach.
15:03He says, don't be ridiculous.
15:05He says, one extra day is not going to hurt anybody.
15:07He says, you're going to stay here and get your medal.
15:09So I did. I stayed there and got my medal,
15:11and then obviously went back home and all was fine.
15:13And then 1995, Nathan was born in the May,
15:16and then I went on to break the world record in the August.
15:19And he didn't sleep one wink for the first eight months.
15:24So I look back now, in that kind of period of time,
15:26leading up to breaking the world record, that whole season,
15:29I think I had an unbroken night's sleep.
15:31So it was crazy.
15:32And then the final story's from Sydney,
15:34when I won my gold medal in Sydney.
15:36I landed back in Newcastle, and I got off the plane,
15:40and there was a jag on the tarmac,
15:43and my family was in it.
15:45I got in there with my wife and my two boys,
15:47drove to the boys' school, did an assembly,
15:50and then left them at school.
15:52Brilliant. A lovely way to end.
15:55Yeah, fantastic.
15:56And there was another little story that I was told about
15:59by the research department here,
16:01is that your little chaps, when they were young,
16:03they used to put a towel on the floor.
16:05He'd put a towel down at one end of the living room,
16:07and then he'd go to the other end,
16:09and he'd get, like, the family clapping,
16:12and then he'd run and he'd jump onto the towel.
16:15And the same son, Sam, when he was a little bit older,
16:18said to me,
16:19when I grow up, I want to be Jonathan Edwards.
16:22Very good stuff. A lovely story.
16:2944 points to 25, Andy in the lead,
16:31and we're back with you, Andy. Letters game.
16:34Rachel, a consonant, please.
16:35Thank you, Andy. S
16:37And another.
16:39K
16:40And another.
16:42R
16:43And a vowel, please.
16:45O
16:46And another.
16:47A
16:48And a third one.
16:50E
16:51And a consonant, please.
16:53S
16:54And another.
16:56Z
16:57And a final consonant.
16:59And a final S.
17:02Stand by.
17:21MUSIC PLAYS
17:35Andy?
17:36Seven.
17:37A seven, Johnny?
17:38Just a five, I'm afraid.
17:40And that five?
17:41Sears.
17:42Sears, yes.
17:43Soakers?
17:44Soakers.
17:45Yes. Just checking this.
17:47Yeah, it's there at the end of the entry for soak.
17:50Soakers.
17:51And in the corner, what news?
17:53Soakers as well.
17:54Yeah.
17:55Yeah.
17:56Just one less letter can be an asker,
17:58so askers is there, but soakers was the best.
18:00Not easy.
18:01No, it was a tough one.
18:02Not easy at all.
18:0351 plays 25.
18:04Johnny, we're back with you.
18:06Letters game.
18:07Have a vowel, please.
18:08Thank you, Johnny.
18:09A
18:11And a consonant.
18:14M
18:15And another.
18:17N
18:18And a vowel, please.
18:20E
18:21And another.
18:23O
18:25Consonant.
18:27D
18:29And another.
18:31T
18:33And a vowel.
18:36I
18:38And a consonant, please.
18:40And the last one.
18:41M
18:42Stand by.
18:44MUSIC PLAYS
18:49MUSIC CONTINUES
19:14Johnny?
19:17A risky eight.
19:18A risky eight. How about Andy?
19:20Eight.
19:21Eight. Firm eight. Come on, Johnny.
19:23I was trying diamante with an O rather than the second A.
19:27Um, yeah. It's not there with the O.
19:31Let me just see if it's a variant spelling of diamante.
19:34Um, no, it's not, I'm afraid.
19:38Andy, what was yours?
19:39Mine's the same.
19:40OK.
19:41Sorry, it has to be with two As.
19:43Bad luck.
19:44Yes.
19:45Well done. Now then, what have we got there?
19:47Jonathan?
19:48You could have had inmate six.
19:50Yes, but on an eight.
19:52Dominate.
19:53Dominate. Perfect.
19:55All right. Well done.
19:57APPLAUSE
19:59And Andy and Johnny remain the same, 51 to 25.
20:03We turn to Andy for a numbers game. Andy?
20:06Two from the top, please, and any other four of your choice.
20:09Thank you, Andy. Two large and four little ones.
20:13So the four small ones are two, ten, nine and another nine.
20:18And the large ones, 50 and 75.
20:21And the target, 455.
20:23455.
20:44MUSIC PLAYS
20:56Andy?
20:57455.
20:59Very briskly said, Johnny.
21:01455. OK, Andy?
21:03Nine over nine is one.
21:05Nine over nine, one.
21:06Add two.
21:07Is three.
21:08And add 50.
21:09Add 50, 53.
21:11Multiply by ten.
21:12And subtract 75.
21:14Yep.
21:15Lovely. 455.
21:17Very good. Johnny?
21:18I went about it a different way.
21:20I said 50 times one of the nines.
21:2250 times nine is 450.
21:24Then ten divided by two.
21:26It is five.
21:27And add it on.
21:28455. Lovely.
21:29Very good.
21:30APPLAUSE
21:3561 pays 35.
21:37And here's a tea time teaser with you in mind, Johnny, as a chef.
21:41And the teaser is sage mint.
21:43And the clue, furious while cooking the asparagus, perhaps.
21:47Furious while cooking the asparagus, perhaps.
21:52MUSIC PLAYS
21:59APPLAUSE
22:08Welcome back.
22:09I left with the clue, furious while cooking the asparagus, perhaps.
22:13And the answer is steaming.
22:15He was steaming.
22:1761 to 35, Andy in the lead.
22:20Johnny, your letter's game.
22:22We'll start with a consonant, please.
22:24Thank you, Johnny. G.
22:26And another.
22:28P.
22:30And another.
22:32N.
22:34A vowel.
22:36E.
22:37Another one.
22:39O.
22:40And another.
22:41E.
22:43A consonant.
22:45L.
22:47And a consonant.
22:49M.
22:53We'll go for another consonant, please.
22:55And the last one, D.
22:57Countdown.
22:59MUSIC PLAYS
23:07MUSIC CONTINUES
23:29Yes, Johnny.
23:31I'll go for a seven.
23:33Andy?
23:34Six.
23:35And your six?
23:36Longed.
23:38Longed. Now then, Johnny.
23:40I'm going to try melon-ed.
23:42Um, unlikely, I think, Johnny.
23:44It's not there, I'm afraid. Just melon the noun.
23:47Sorry.
23:48Was a gamble.
23:49Yeah.
23:50And what else have we got in the corner?
23:52Eloped.
23:53Eloped.
23:54And that thing you stick in your computer to make it connect to the Internet.
23:58A dongle.
23:59A dongle.
24:00All right. 67 to 35.
24:02Andy, back on again. Letter's game.
24:04Please, Rachel.
24:05Thank you, Andy.
24:07N.
24:08And a vowel.
24:10A.
24:11And a consonant.
24:13R.
24:14And a vowel, please.
24:15I.
24:16And another vowel.
24:18E.
24:20And a consonant.
24:22S.
24:23And a consonant.
24:25N.
24:27And another consonant.
24:29Y.
24:30And a final vowel, please.
24:33O.
24:34Countdown.
25:03MUSIC STOPS
25:07Andy?
25:08Just six.
25:09A six. Johnny?
25:10Just a six here as well.
25:11All right. So, Andy?
25:12Senior.
25:13Johnny?
25:14And arisen.
25:16Arisen.
25:17Very nice, yes. Very good.
25:18Very good. Very good.
25:20And the corner, Jonathan.
25:22A six here too. Sinner. Anything else?
25:25Um, no. Just sixes. It's quite a tough one, that one.
25:28Quite tough. Quite tough, indeed.
25:3073 points to 41. Well done.
25:32But now it's time for Susie.
25:34Susie, your origins of words.
25:36Where will you lead us today?
25:38To the disco, Nick.
25:40Oh, good. Go on, then.
25:41Take you to the disco.
25:42In the early 60s,
25:44a nightclub opened its doors in a very quiet city,
25:47as it was then, of Aachen in West Germany.
25:49But it was there that a very small revolution took place
25:52in music terms.
25:54It was the Scotch Club,
25:56one of the very many restaurant-cum-dance halls of the time.
26:00But it had one exception,
26:02because rather than hire a live band,
26:04the owner decided that he would instead install a record player.
26:08As you can imagine, it didn't go down very well,
26:10so the clientele weren't best pleased.
26:12And it might have failed altogether,
26:14except there was one reporter there
26:16who'd had quite a lot to drink, by all accounts.
26:18He was called Klaus Quirini,
26:20and he stepped up to the decks
26:22and he galvanised the whole audience
26:24by playing records and then introducing each of them.
26:26And he claimed to be the first ever nightclub DJ.
26:30So you might think that this club, the Scotch Club,
26:32was the first disco,
26:34but actually there were quite a few nightclubs
26:36on the left bank in Paris
26:38that were using the term as their name.
26:40And it's a borrowing from French,
26:42and it means a library of phonograph records.
26:44It's formed after bibliothèque, as you might expect.
26:46But the word disco didn't arrive until a little bit later.
26:50And the first description we have is not of the nightclub,
26:53but it is actually from a newspaper
26:55that coined an adjective to describe
26:57a very racy, see-through outfit,
26:59which was known as a discotheque.
27:01And it got a little bit more refined
27:03as the summer of 1964 came about.
27:06It became a short, sleeveless dress
27:08that was also known as a discotheque.
27:10And that raises the intriguing possibility
27:13that the dress actually came before the nightclub.
27:16And the OED, the Oxford English Dictionary,
27:18aren't completely sure,
27:20and they've put out an appeal to the public
27:22that if anyone has any record of the word disco
27:25that predates 1964, or even if it's from 1964,
27:28please send it in, because they want to find out
27:31which came first, the dress or the nightclub.
27:33We think the nightclub,
27:35but the records at the moment suggest the dress.
27:37Well, I'm doused.
27:39APPLAUSE
27:44There were a lot of short dresses around in 1964, I can tell you,
27:47cos I was there. Oh, absolutely.
27:49But I've never heard of the discotheque dress.
27:51No, you probably would have had to have been in Paris at the time.
27:54Ah. Not in South Kent, then.
27:57No, all right. Never mind, it was fun in South Kent too.
28:0073 to 41. Andy's there.
28:03Johnny, you're back on. Letters game.
28:05I'd like a consonant, please.
28:07Thank you, Johnny.
28:09N
28:10And another?
28:12P
28:14And a vowel?
28:16I
28:18And another?
28:19A
28:20And a consonant?
28:22N
28:23Another?
28:25T
28:27A vowel?
28:30O
28:33And a consonant?
28:35D
28:39And we'll have another vowel, please.
28:41And the last one.
28:43E
28:44Stand by.
28:50CLOCK TICKS
29:16Johnny?
29:17Just a seven.
29:19Seven. Andy?
29:20Eight.
29:21An eight. Johnny?
29:23Notepad.
29:24A notepad. Andy?
29:26Antinode.
29:27Happy enough?
29:28You've got the two Ns there. It's a term from physics.
29:30It's the position of maximum displacement in a standing wave system.
29:34Sounds very complicated, but it's there as a word. Brilliant.
29:38Well done.
29:41And what else have we got over there? Jonathan?
29:43A couple of eights. Anointed?
29:45Yep.
29:46And antipode?
29:48Yes, use the P instead of the N.
29:50It's the direct opposite of something, the antipode.
29:53Very good.
29:54So, Andy, here we are, last letters game of the day,
29:56and it's yours. Off you go.
29:58A vowel, please, Rachel.
30:00Thank you, Andy.
30:01I
30:02And another one?
30:03E
30:04And a third?
30:05U
30:06And a consonant?
30:08H
30:09And another one, please?
30:11R
30:12And another?
30:13T
30:14And a fourth?
30:15F
30:16And a fifth?
30:18Q
30:19And a final consonant, please?
30:22And a final R.
30:24And here's the Countdown Clock.
30:47CLOCK TICKS
30:56Andy?
30:57Seven.
30:58And how about you, Johnny?
30:59Seven or so.
31:00Two sevens. Andy?
31:02Further.
31:03Yes, Johnny?
31:04And further too.
31:06Same. All right, well done.
31:08And in the corner, Jonathan.
31:10We had further too.
31:12Yeah.
31:13Might be an eight?
31:14There is, yes.
31:15Thurifer.
31:16With T-H-U-R-I-F-E-R.
31:19It's an acolyte or devotee
31:21carrying a censer in a religious ceremony.
31:24So, carrying incense.
31:25Very good.
31:2688 to 48.
31:28Here we go, Johnny.
31:29The last numbers game of this Friday.
31:32I'm going to go for two large and four small, please.
31:35Thank you, Johnny.
31:36Two large, four small.
31:37And for the final time this week,
31:39the numbers are one, two, four, nine and 125.
31:47And the final target of very small, 203.
31:50203.
32:09MUSIC PLAYS
32:23Johnny?
32:24203.
32:25203. Andy?
32:27203.
32:28No surprises there.
32:30Now then, Johnny.
32:32Two times the hundred.
32:34Two times the hundred for 200.
32:36And four take one.
32:38203.
32:39Very straightforward.
32:40Thank you, Andy.
32:41I do it the same way.
32:42Same way. All right, we don't need to argue about this, I don't think.
32:45So, there we are.
32:4698 plays 58 as we plough into the final round, conundrum round.
32:50So, Andy, Johnny, fingers on buzzers, please.
32:53Let's reveal today's Countdown conundrum.
33:00Oh, no, I was going to say penniless.
33:02Penniless. Let's have a look at it.
33:05Good man.
33:06Well done.
33:12Did you suddenly have second thoughts?
33:14Yeah, I suddenly thought, oh, has it got two Ns, two Ss?
33:18Well, you did very well.
33:20You came through very fast indeed.
33:2298 to 68, but you're up against Andy.
33:25And on this occasion, it's back to Chichester with you
33:29and back to being chef, cooking great food, I'm sure.
33:33Take this goodie bag with you as well.
33:35And we shall be seeing you on Monday,
33:38when you'll be confronted over in the corner by Janet Street Porter,
33:43the great Janet Street Porter, Scourge of Fleet Street.
33:45Look forward to it. You have a quiet weekend.
33:47Susie, have a lovely weekend.
33:49Jonathan, come back soon, because it's a great pleasure to have you here,
33:54a popular guest and a really great guy.
33:56It's been lovely, thank you.
33:58And it's the 10th of August, my son's birthday.
34:01Just so you know, I do know when he was born.
34:03It's too late, you're still going to get home.
34:06Very good. All right.
34:08Have a good weekend, Rachel. You too.
34:10We'll see you on Monday. Excellent stuff.
34:12Join us on Monday, Janet Street Porter will be here
34:14and so will Andy Naylor.
34:16Same time, same place, you'll be sure of it.
34:18Good afternoon.
34:31APPLAUSE

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