Countdown | Friday 10th August 2018 | Episode 6886

  • 2 days ago
Transcript
00:00This programme contains strong language and adult humour.
00:05APPLAUSE
00:31Well, good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown Studio.
00:34Here we are, Friday, Rachel, Friday, the weekend coming up.
00:37Now, if you're planning to do anything strenuous, don't.
00:40Why? Because today, officially, I don't know who these officials are,
00:46but they have decreed it lazy day.
00:49Today is lazy day.
00:51Very nice, too.
00:52Don't have to do anything.
00:53And the important thing is you shouldn't feel guilty about it.
00:56But can you relax guilt-free?
00:58Oh, yeah.
00:59And what do you do?
01:00Oh, yeah.
01:01Preferably, you'd be on an island somewhere, wouldn't you?
01:03But it wouldn't start with an alarm clock at all.
01:06And I just like being outside.
01:08I'm right down the end of the road from Hyde Park,
01:11so I wander along there and watch everyone with their dogs and ducks and geese.
01:15I think that's tremendous.
01:16It's how I like to recharge my batteries.
01:18You have to.
01:19I know. All right.
01:21Now, who have we got? We've got the policeman back.
01:23We've got policeman Steve Rush from Norfolk back.
01:28Well done.
01:29And you beat old Eddie, who's a three-time winner.
01:32So well done for you.
01:34Now, you're joined, Steve, by James Billington,
01:36a corporate responsibility executive from Nottingham.
01:39And perhaps Steve would like to prick his ears up a little bit now
01:42because you went off masquerading as the mayor of Stafford
01:48and you evaded capture.
01:49What happened?
01:51Yes, so Stafford's my hometown, where I'm originally from.
01:54And for some reason, I don't really know,
01:56but I set up a Twitter account to say that I was the mayor of that town.
02:00Yes.
02:01People believed it.
02:02I don't know why or how.
02:04So it got to a point where I had to sort of make a mayoral chain
02:07and I was sort of going out opening sort of things.
02:12You got to believe it.
02:13Yeah.
02:14Go on.
02:15And obviously until it got win to the local borough council, who...
02:18And the police, presumably.
02:20Not yet.
02:21LAUGHTER
02:23What a laugh.
02:24Anyway, you've given up that now, have you?
02:26Yes, absolutely.
02:27Well done.
02:28Well, listen, have a lot of fun today.
02:30And let's have a big round of applause for Steve and James Billington.
02:33APPLAUSE
02:37And Susie's over at the corner on this Friday.
02:40And for the final time, it's a pleasure to have with us
02:43presenter, writer and comedian Griff Rees-Jones.
02:46APPLAUSE
02:49Good luck.
02:52Anyway, let's get down to business with Steve.
02:54Steve Rush.
02:55Good afternoon, Rachel.
02:56Afternoon, Steve.
02:57Can I start with a consonant, please?
02:58Thank you. Start today with M.
03:00And another.
03:02R.
03:03And another.
03:05S.
03:06And another.
03:08T.
03:09And one more.
03:11R.
03:12And a vowel, please.
03:14E.
03:15And another.
03:16A.
03:17And another.
03:20E.
03:21And a final vowel, please.
03:23And a final I.
03:26Stand by.
03:48MUSIC
03:59Well, Steve?
04:01Slightly risky eight.
04:03And James?
04:04Six.
04:05And your six?
04:06Master.
04:07Yes.
04:08Can you be a masterer?
04:10Ooh.
04:11Um, I don't think...
04:13Ooh, actually, I'm completely wrong.
04:16To overcome someone or something is a masterer.
04:18I didn't think it would be there, but it is, Steve.
04:20Well done.
04:21Wow, well done.
04:22Griff and Susie.
04:23Griff?
04:24Well, obviously, you can get to a point
04:26where you've got a steamy show going on,
04:30you know, but you can be steamier.
04:32Steamier?
04:33Yeah, you can be steamier than the next steamy shows.
04:36And brilliantly, there's also Emirates there,
04:39which is, as we know, a place.
04:41So you can include that.
04:43There's a bit of a proper noun, though, isn't there?
04:45Well, it's in Emirates, so it's the kingdom of an emir.
04:48Oh, is it?
04:49Yes.
04:50Oh, I see.
04:51So Emirates, we just ignore the fact that it's also a place
04:54and say that it's where an emir hangs out.
04:56Hangs out, yeah.
04:57And several of them.
04:59And now, James, it's your letters game.
05:00Good afternoon, Rachel.
05:01Afternoon, James.
05:02Can I have a consonant, please?
05:04Start with S.
05:05And a vowel?
05:07A.
05:08And a consonant?
05:10T.
05:12And a vowel, please?
05:15And a consonant?
05:17T.
05:19And a consonant?
05:21N.
05:23And a vowel?
05:25A.
05:27And a consonant, please?
05:29G.
05:31And a final vowel?
05:33And a final U.
05:35Stand by.
05:44MUSIC PLAYS
06:06Yes, James?
06:08I think an eight.
06:09Thank you. Steve?
06:11I'll stick with a safe five.
06:13Your five?
06:14A state.
06:15James?
06:16Stagnate.
06:17Very nice. Excellent.
06:19Well done.
06:22Well done.
06:23Anything else, Susie and Griff?
06:25Gauntest?
06:27Yes.
06:28The most gaunt person in the room.
06:30That's a good one.
06:31The gauntest person.
06:32Susie?
06:33Otherwise, I was enjoying gateaus for seven.
06:35Well done, James.
06:36Eight apiece.
06:37And, Steve, it's your numbers game.
06:39Can I have two large numbers and then the other four, please?
06:42Of course you can. Thank you, Steve.
06:44Two big, four little to start us off.
06:46And this first selection of the day is...
06:4810, 3, 2, 8, 75 and 25.
06:54And the target...
06:55882.
06:56882.
06:58MUSIC PLAYS
07:13MUSIC STOPS
07:29Yes, Steve?
07:30I've got 883, Nick.
07:32One away. James?
07:34883 as well.
07:36Steve?
07:37I said ten plus two is 12.
07:40Yep.
07:41Times the 75...
07:43900.
07:44..is 900.
07:4525 minus the 8...
07:4717.
07:4817, and take that off 900.
07:50He taked 3, one away.
07:52And James?
07:53I've gone 75 times 10 is 750.
07:55Yep.
07:5625 times 5 is 125.
07:58Sorry, where did you make your... How did you make your 5?
08:01From the 3 and the 2.
08:02So that was the 3 and the 2.
08:04And then what was the last part?
08:06Sorry, so that's 750 and 125.
08:09Add them up for 875 and then there's an 8.
08:11Yep.
08:12And you just about got away with that.
08:14Well done.
08:15Thank you, Rachel.
08:17Where's it got to?
08:18It is there.
08:20If you say 75 minus 25 is 50.
08:243 minus 2 is 1.
08:26Take that away for 49.
08:28And then 10 plus 8 is 18.
08:31And times them together.
08:32Perfect.
08:33APPLAUSE
08:34Perfect.
08:36Thanks, Rachel. Let's have a tea time teaser.
08:39The first of the day, it's Repeat Rob.
08:42And the clue, he would repeatedly rob people
08:45and live a life without any principles.
08:47He would repeatedly rob people
08:49and live a life without any principles.
09:00APPLAUSE
09:06APPLAUSE
09:08Welcome back. I left you with the clue.
09:10He would repeatedly rob people
09:12and live a life without any principles.
09:15He was, in fact, clearly a reprobate.
09:18Reprobate's the answer.
09:20Now, 50 apiece. James, your letter's going.
09:24Can I have a consonant, please?
09:26Thank you, James. X.
09:28And a vowel, please?
09:30E.
09:32And a consonant?
09:34N.
09:36And a vowel?
09:38O.
09:40And a consonant?
09:42R.
09:43And another consonant?
09:45W.
09:47And a vowel?
09:49A.
09:51And a consonant?
09:53G.
09:55And a final vowel?
09:58And a final U.
10:00Stand by.
10:04CLOCK TICKS
10:31Hmm. James?
10:33Six. Steve?
10:35I'll try risky six.
10:37James?
10:38Orange.
10:39And Steve?
10:40Is there such a thing as a wanger?
10:42W-A-N-G-E-R.
10:45Um...
10:47Yes, there used to be.
10:49LAUGHTER
10:51In the 70s.
10:53It's in there, but with an H, I'm afraid.
10:55Oh, OK. Yeah, sorry.
10:57That's how you spell it, eh?
10:59Susie and Griff.
11:01Well, I had Waggoner.
11:03Yes, yes.
11:05Very nice. Good.
11:07Waggoner's Arms. Susie?
11:09Yeah, that will take you to a seven.
11:11Really tricky, otherwise. Guano for five.
11:13But, yeah, Waggoner, about the best.
11:15That's it, thank you.
11:1721 plays 15, James on 21.
11:19Steve? Steve, you're back again.
11:21Can I start with a consonant, please?
11:23Thank you, Steve. R.
11:25And another, please?
11:27F. And another?
11:29L. And another?
11:33P. And another?
11:35R. And a vowel, please?
11:37O. And another vowel?
11:39I. And another?
11:43E. And a final vowel, please?
11:45And a final A.
11:47Stand by.
11:59MUSIC PLAYS
12:21Well, Steve? Just a six on those.
12:23Six, and James? Sixes also, yeah.
12:25Steve?
12:27Parole. James?
12:29And pilfer. Parole and pilfer.
12:31Griff and Susie?
12:33Well, profile is in there.
12:35Yes. And profiler?
12:37Yes, criminal profiler.
12:39That will give you an eight.
12:41Good enough.
12:4327 plays 21.
12:45Now, James, it's your numbers game.
12:47One large one and five small ones, please.
12:49One from the top this time.
12:51And five little ones.
12:53And they are...
12:55..three, six, four, one,
12:59and the large one, 100.
13:01And the target...
13:03663.
13:05663.
13:07MUSIC PLAYS
13:25MUSIC STOPS
13:35Well, James?
13:37666.
13:39Three away. Steve?
13:41663.
13:43Off we go.
13:45I said 100 plus five
13:47plus four
13:49plus one is... 110.
13:51110 times six...
13:53..and there should be a three.
13:55There is indeed. 663.
13:57Very good.
13:59APPLAUSE
14:01That puts you back in the lead.
14:03There's 31 to James' 27
14:05as we turn to Griff.
14:07Griff, it's your last day with us.
14:09What have you got for us today?
14:11Well, I was just thinking, when you were talking about laziness,
14:14I was so impressed by Rachel's ability to go and lie in the pub.
14:18Because I had a sort of sabbatical
14:22in about 2002,
14:24and I went away and I sailed a small boat
14:26all the way to the Baltic
14:28and up to St Petersburg
14:30in search of a sort of blissful sort of emptiness.
14:34And I went with two blokes
14:36who just were so feckless
14:38that I had become the daddy of the boat.
14:40And I had to spend my whole time like Captain Bly
14:42ordering them about and sort of pushing them on.
14:44It was quite...
14:46We ended up, though, finally,
14:49coming out of Russia
14:51and you have to sail down the Gulf of Finland
14:53and the wind was blowing.
14:55It was a beautiful evening in September
14:57and we sailed into Finland for the first time.
15:00And Finland has 80,000 islands on its south coast.
15:04It's just an extraordinary landscape to enter.
15:07And we sailed in and we came to this wonderful castle
15:10and the sun was setting and we put out an anchor
15:13and it was just blissful, blissful.
15:15And I finally thought, well, I've escaped from Russia,
15:17we're whole, we're on our way back,
15:19we've reached this period of just absolute bliss
15:21and now we can relax.
15:23And Bob, who was with me, sort of said,
15:25look over there, look. I said, what?
15:27He said, in the twilight I can see some lights over there.
15:29Just over there, some red lights and some sort of lights over there.
15:32We can go off and we can find a bar
15:34and we can have a real old hoolie here in Finland.
15:36So I said, Bob, look, we're in absolute state of bliss,
15:38let's just stay here. But he prevailed.
15:40I didn't want to be the daddy.
15:42So we pulled up our anchor and we motored very gently in
15:44and after half an hour we found ourselves parked
15:46outside a cement factory.
15:49Perfect.
15:51So, you know, be careful.
15:53Just sometimes stick to your guns and just ride an anchor
15:56and put the light up and cook yourself something out of a tin.
15:59What a lovely story.
16:07That's very funny. That's very funny.
16:1027 plays Steve's.
16:1231, Steve, your letters game.
16:14Can we start with a consonant, please?
16:16Steve. Q.
16:18And another.
16:20T. And another.
16:23L. And another.
16:26N. And a vowel, please.
16:28E. And another vowel.
16:30O. And another vowel.
16:33A. And a...
16:35Another consonant.
16:37W. And a final vowel, please.
16:40And a final E.
16:42Dumbo.
16:46ELECTRONIC MUSIC PLAYS
16:48ELECTRONIC MUSIC CONTINUES
17:13Well, Steve?
17:15Only a four.
17:17Just a four as well. Now then, Steve.
17:19Want.
17:21And neat.
17:23Did you find it so difficult also?
17:25Yeah, it was a tricky one. Yes.
17:27Yes. Griff?
17:29Well, I... No, went.
17:31You know, want.
17:33It was complicated, wasn't it?
17:35Lone, you know, it's difficult to get beyond four.
17:37Well, there are a couple of fives, tonal and talon.
17:40And a six, so with lonely.
17:42Somebody to whom something is lent.
17:44Well done. 35 plays 31.
17:46And it's James. Now then, James.
17:48Can I have a consonant, please?
17:50Thank you, James. C.
17:52And a vowel.
17:54O.
17:56And a consonant.
17:58K.
18:00And a vowel.
18:02E.
18:05And a consonant, please.
18:07S.
18:09And a consonant.
18:11R.
18:13And a vowel.
18:15A.
18:17And a consonant.
18:19S.
18:21And a vowel. And the last one.
18:23B.
18:25Stand by.
18:45MUSIC PLAYS
18:57James?
18:59Seven. Steve?
19:01I'll go with a seven as well.
19:03No, James. Sunkers.
19:05Steve? I've got sackers.
19:07Happy, Susie?
19:09Well, I looked up both sacker and socker,
19:11and neither is in the dictionary, I'm afraid, Steve, sorry.
19:13I'll have to soak up the water from the blades.
19:15Those are soakers.
19:17Thanks so much. 38 plays 35.
19:19James in the lead, and it's Steve.
19:21Steve, we turn to you for a numbers game.
19:23Yes, Steve?
19:25Can I have two large and any other four, please?
19:27You can indeed, thank you, Steve.
19:29Two from the top. And four little ones.
19:31And this time,
19:33the little ones are six,
19:35four, one,
19:37and seven. And the large ones,
19:39150.
19:41And the target, 836.
19:43836.
19:45MUSIC PLAYS
20:11MUSIC STOPS
20:15Well, Steve?
20:17838. And James?
20:19840.
20:21So let's go with Steve then, first of all.
20:23Steve?
20:25I said seven plus one is eight.
20:27Seven plus one is eight.
20:29And then 100 plus the four,
20:31104.
20:33100 plus 404.
20:35And we times those two together,
20:37832. Yep.
20:39Plus the six.
20:41Yep, 838. Two away.
20:43There we go.
20:45But 836, Rachel?
20:47I did find a way.
20:49If you say 50 times four
20:51is 200.
20:53And then 100
20:55plus seven minus one is 106.
20:57Times that by six
20:59for 636.
21:01And then add on that 200.
21:03Well done. Very neat.
21:05APPLAUSE
21:09Time for Tea Time Teaser.
21:11Second of the day, it's Tim's debut.
21:13And the clue.
21:15Tim's debut as a wrestler didn't go well.
21:17He did this after two minutes.
21:19Tim's debut as a wrestler
21:21didn't go well.
21:23He did this after two minutes.
21:27MUSIC PLAYS
21:33APPLAUSE
21:39Welcome back.
21:41Welcome back. I left you with the clue.
21:43Tim's debut as a wrestler didn't go well.
21:45He did this after two minutes.
21:47He submitted.
21:49Submitted.
21:5138 plays 42.
21:53Steve on 42.
21:55James, your letters game.
21:57Can I have a consonant, please?
21:59Thank you, James. M.
22:01And a vowel?
22:03A.
22:05And a consonant?
22:07N.
22:09And a vowel?
22:11I.
22:13And a consonant?
22:15S.
22:17And a consonant?
22:19H.
22:21And a vowel?
22:23E.
22:27And a consonant, please?
22:29D.
22:31And a final vowel, please?
22:33And a final A.
22:35MUSIC PLAYS
23:05James? Six. Steve?
23:07I'll try a seven.
23:09So, James, shamed.
23:11Now, Steve. Handies?
23:13Um, yes.
23:15Handies are mobile phones
23:17in Europe.
23:19Griff, any news?
23:21Well, a heads man,
23:23but I'm not sure what a heads man is.
23:25Except for being
23:27a head man with...
23:29Yes, it's not that.
23:31It's got two very specific sentences.
23:33Um, one is a man who
23:35was responsible for beheading
23:37prisoners, um, and
23:39the other is very different.
23:41A person in command of a whaling boat.
23:43Wow, dear, dear, dear.
23:4549 plays 38. Steve in the lead.
23:47Steve, it's your letters game.
23:49I'll start with a consonant, please.
23:51Thank you, Steve. T. And another?
23:53S.
23:55And another?
23:57T. And another?
23:59L.
24:01And one more?
24:03F. And a vowel?
24:05U. And another vowel?
24:07I.
24:09And another vowel?
24:11E.
24:13And a final consonant, please?
24:15And a final D.
24:17Stand by.
24:31MUSIC PLAYS
24:49Well, Steve?
24:51A seven. James?
24:53Seven also. Steve?
24:55Flitted. James?
24:57And stifled. Yeah.
24:59Griff? Well, I got stifled
25:01as well, but there's also
25:03dilutes there, which is another
25:05seven. Susie, anything else?
25:07Nothing on the seven. Stifled.
25:09Stifled cry.
25:1156 to 45. Susie, we turn to you
25:13now. It's time for your wonderful
25:15Origins of Words. Such
25:17joy. Thank you. Well, I'm
25:19going to try to answer both an email
25:21and a tweet. Um, and the email
25:23is from Joan Law, and
25:25she wonders where figment comes from when we
25:27talk about a figment of her imagination,
25:29because it sounds slightly strange as a word.
25:31Um, you have to go back to
25:331500s for this, and
25:35a figment was something moulded or
25:37fashioned. It was an image,
25:39a figure, or a model.
25:41So it could have been a piece of art, a figment.
25:43But it was always something that
25:45was invented that came from the imagination,
25:47imagination which holds image in it
25:49as well. And the sort of
25:51fictitious side of it began
25:53to take precedence. And that's only
25:55right and proper, because it goes back to the Latin
25:57findere, meaning to pretend, which also
25:59gave us fiction and faint in
26:01both spellings. Faint, the deceptive blow
26:03in boxing, and also to faint, because
26:05women were often thought to faint
26:07out of pretense in order to
26:09gain attention. Um, so
26:11that's the first one. I hope, Joan, that I've answered your
26:13questions a little bit. But there was
26:15a linked one here, a tweet that came
26:17from Sienna Haynes, who asked
26:19about not giving a fig. Where does
26:21that come from? I don't give a fig.
26:23It's a slightly old-fashioned expression now.
26:25To not give a fig means you don't really care. It's obviously
26:27euphemism for something else as well.
26:29But a fig has always meant a small
26:31valueless thing, right
26:33almost from the start, as well as the fruit
26:35of course. That goes back to the Latin ficus
26:37and also the Greek for that,
26:39sicon. And giving the
26:41fig was a really indecent gesture
26:43many, many centuries
26:45ago, very ancient. And
26:47it was made by putting the thumb between two fingers
26:49or into the mouth. So it was the same
26:51effect as today's
26:53gesture of flipping the bird, albeit
26:55with a single finger.
26:57And showing the fig finally lies behind
26:59the word sycophant, because that
27:01Greek word sycon, the fig,
27:03was
27:05a sycophant, was a fig shower,
27:07if you like, in ancient Greece. And the idea is that
27:09prominent politicians in ancient
27:11Greece held aloof
27:13from being rude directly to their
27:15opponents, but would suck up to other people
27:17in order to get them to deliver
27:19insults. So they were the people that showed the fig,
27:21they showed contempt. So fig
27:23has always had a slightly double
27:25life. Well done.
27:27How interesting.
27:29Big.
27:31Yeah.
27:33Terrific,
27:35Susie.
27:37So 56 to 45, James.
27:39On we go.
27:41Consonant, please. Thank you, James.
27:43Y.
27:45And a vowel.
27:47A.
27:49And a consonant.
27:51P.
27:53And a consonant, please.
27:55L.
27:57And a vowel.
27:59I.
28:01And a consonant.
28:03D.
28:05And a vowel.
28:07O.
28:09And a consonant.
28:11G.
28:13And a final
28:15consonant, please.
28:17And a final B.
28:19Well done.
28:45Well, James?
28:47Just five there.
28:49A five, Steve?
28:51I think I've got a five.
28:53James?
28:55Plaid.
28:57And Steve?
28:59Plaid. P-L-A-I-D.
29:01Yes, absolutely.
29:03Can we do better there, Griff?
29:05Well, you know, I put
29:07play dog,
29:09but actually, of course,
29:11it's lap dog, isn't it?
29:13Which is also there, funny enough.
29:15So, you know,
29:17I've intimated that there's a dog there
29:19in some strange way,
29:21but it's not the one I wrote down.
29:23Good. And the S, Susie?
29:25Yeah, there's also a genetic term
29:27ploidy, P-L-O-I-D-Y,
29:29which is the number of chromosomes in a cell.
29:3361, please. 50, Steve, on 61.
29:35Steve, final letters game of the day.
29:37Start with a consonant, please.
29:39Thank you, Steve. J.
29:41And another.
29:43N.
29:45And another.
29:47H.
29:49And another.
29:51T.
29:53And another.
29:55R.
29:57And a vowel, please.
29:59E.
30:01And another.
30:03A.
30:05And another.
30:07E.
30:09E.
30:11E.
30:13E.
30:15E.
30:17E.
30:19E.
30:21E.
30:23E.
30:25E.
30:27E.
30:29E.
30:31E.
30:33E.
30:35E.
30:37E.
30:39Steve?
30:41I'll stick with a safe seven.
30:43And James?
30:45Six. And your six is?
30:47Heater. Steve?
30:49Harton. Very nice.
30:51Good man.
30:53Any more sevens there, Griff?
30:55No, nothing. I couldn't get close to that.
30:57That was the only seven I could find as well.
30:59Harton. All right.
31:01So, Steve on 68, James on 50.
31:03And, James, it's the last numbers game for you.
31:07I'll have one large one and five small, please.
31:09You not want to gamble? 18 points behind, 20 remaining.
31:13Four large, two small, please.
31:15Come on, you're used to blagging. Let's have a go at this.
31:17Let's make a competition of it.
31:19Four large, two small. Let's see if that's a good decision.
31:21Good luck. The last one of the week.
31:23We have six and eight.
31:25And then the big one. 75, 25, 50 and 100.
31:30And the target is 651.
31:32651.
31:55James?
32:05650.
32:07Steve?
32:09650 as well.
32:11No, James. 100 x 6 is 600.
32:13100 x 6, 600.
32:15And add the 50.
32:17Yep, for one away. Well done.
32:19And Steve?
32:21I said 8 x 75 for the 600 and add the 50.
32:23Yeah, same result.
32:25Now then, is it possible?
32:27It is possible.
32:29If you say 25 x 8 is 200.
32:33Divided by 50 is 4.
32:36And then 100 minus 4 is 96.
32:40Times that by 6 for 576 and add on the 75.
32:46APPLAUSE
32:48Lovely.
32:52Masterful. Absolutely superb.
32:5475 to 57.
32:56Steve on 75 as we go into the final round.
32:59Gentlemen, things on buzzers already there.
33:01Let's roll today's Countdown Conundrum.
33:22MUSIC
33:35Wow, foxed up here.
33:37Two good players.
33:39Oh, a lot of her.
33:41Madam, sleepwalk.
33:43Sleepwalk. Let's see whether you're right.
33:45There it is. Well done.
33:47APPLAUSE
33:51Steve, you're through again.
33:53You won your teapot yesterday and you've consolidated it today.
33:56So we shall see you on Monday. Congratulations.
33:59James, you put up a good old fight there.
34:01You really did.
34:02So you take this goodbye back to Nottingham.
34:05Thanks very much.
34:06Well done. Well played.
34:08Well played. Thanks for coming.
34:10Excellent.
34:11Now we're going to say goodbye to you.
34:13Please come back soon because your stories are the best.
34:16Well, that's very kind of you.
34:18Thank you so much by being here.
34:20It's a real education. It's fantastic.
34:22Listen, you come and see us again soon, Griff.
34:24All right. Thank you.
34:26Susie, Monday?
34:27Yeah, see you then.
34:28See you on Monday.
34:29See you then.
34:30Join us then, same time, same place, you'll be sure of it,
34:32a very good afternoon.
34:34Contact us by email at countdown at channel4.com,
34:38by Twitter at c4countdown,
34:40or write to us at countdown, leeds, ls3, 1js.
34:44You can also find our web page at channel4.com forward slash countdown.

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