Countdown | Wednesday 22nd January 2014 | Episode 5852

  • 2 days ago
Transcript
00:00This programme contains strong language and adult humour.
00:05APPLAUSE
00:31Good afternoon, good afternoon. Welcome to the Countdown Studio.
00:35We've all heard about the big cheese, the big cheese, the boss,
00:38the chap that makes all the big decisions.
00:41But on this day, way back in, I think, 1964,
00:45the biggest cheese was rolled out.
00:48Let me tell you a little bit about this.
00:50It was in Wisconsin and it was made to promote the state's cheese industry.
00:56It was made at Steve's Cheese Factory.
00:58Imagine cheese coming out of a factory.
01:00And here are some statistics.
01:02It measured 6.5 feet wide, 5.5 feet tall, 14.5 feet long
01:08and weighed over 17 tonnes.
01:10When will the Americans understand the concept that less is more?
01:14So there we are. What a grotesque thing.
01:17Imagine cheese coming out of a factory.
01:20I bet it tasted like nothing on Earth.
01:23My favourite cheese, and I love cheese, is Vacheron.
01:26Have you ever come across Vacheron? No, what's that like?
01:28It's wonderful because it's so soft and so smelly and so wonderful.
01:34It's a French cheese, and I think I'm probably wrong,
01:37but I get the impression it's only available at certain times of the year
01:40and it's very runny and it's just brilliant.
01:43Brilliant. Are you a cheesy person?
01:45You're making me hungry. Yeah, I like most cheese.
01:47The only ones I don't like is the American-style cheese.
01:49It's not real cheese, is it? It's processed.
01:51It's plastic and then you get cheese in a tube and then cheese in a can and then...
01:55Quite right. ...cheese in all varieties that shouldn't be cheese.
01:58You also get them actually in lorries weighing 17 tonnes.
02:02I bet that tasted like nothing on Earth.
02:04Wisconsin, wake up! That's not the way to promote yourselves.
02:07I don't know. Put it under the grill, a bit of ketchup, I'm sure it'll be fine.
02:10Maybe. Maybe you're right.
02:11Now, Priscilla Munday is back this Wednesday,
02:14a retired pharmacist from Redhill in Surrey,
02:16three rescue cats, Harry, Polly and Grace,
02:19and you're joined by Ian Williams, a psych supervisor from Nottingham,
02:24keen football man, matchday reporter.
02:26But what fascinates me, Ian Williams,
02:29is that you previously worked as a Royal Navy helicopter air crewman
02:33and you were telling me that you used to hover out in the Atlantic
02:38lowering sonar equipment to listen for Russian subs.
02:42Yep. And you heard a few? A few.
02:45Yeah? Yeah. And this was, of course, Cold War time. Yes.
02:49Back in, what, the 70s and 80s, I guess? 70s, yeah.
02:52Brilliant. And what were you flying, a Sea King?
02:55Sea Kings. Yeah.
02:56I started off at Wessex, the aircraft, and then up to the Sea Kings.
03:00And you'd be out there for a few hours, I guess?
03:02Yes. A couple of hours on task in the theatre, yeah.
03:05Brilliant. Let's have a big round of applause for Ian and Priscilla Munday.
03:10APPLAUSE
03:12Well done. And over in the corner, Susie, of course,
03:15and our great Matt Allwright TV presenter, journalist,
03:18and, as I said at the beginning of the week, friend of the people,
03:21and chum of the week, welcome back. Welcome back. Good to be here.
03:25Now, then, we'll hear more stories about cowboys and all sorts of things from you later,
03:29but I think we're under a little bit of pressure to kick off with Priscilla on a letters game.
03:34Priscilla.
03:35Hello, Rachel. Afternoon, Priscilla.
03:37May I have a consonant, please? You may, thank you. Start today with V.
03:41Oh, dear. And another one, please.
03:44C.
03:46And a vowel?
03:48O.
03:50And another vowel?
03:52I.
03:53And another vowel?
03:55A.
03:57And a consonant?
03:59T.
04:00And another?
04:02R.
04:04And another consonant, please?
04:07G.
04:08And another consonant, please?
04:10And lastly, S.
04:12And here's the Countdown Clock.
04:20CLOCK TICKS
04:43Priscilla.
04:44Seven.
04:45A seven. Ian.
04:46A six.
04:47And a six?
04:48Gators.
04:49Gators. G-A-T-O-R-S.
04:51Thank you. And Priscilla?
04:53Cavorts.
04:54Cavorts?
04:55Yes.
04:56Very good.
04:57My cavorting days are long gone.
04:59What have we got over there?
05:01Matt.
05:02Yep.
05:04For other sevens, we've got victors and viragos.
05:08Yes.
05:09And if you'd like an eight, which I'm sure you would, orgastic.
05:12Orgastic?
05:14Yes.
05:15Orgastic. Orgiastic, I can sort of understand.
05:18It just means the same as orgasmic.
05:21Orgastic.
05:22Right.
05:23It can just mean very enjoyable.
05:25Very good. Very enjoyable.
05:27Seven points to Priscilla.
05:29And we turn now to Ian. Ian.
05:31Hello, Rachel.
05:32Hi, Ian.
05:33A consonant, please?
05:34Thank you. Starts with R.
05:36And another?
05:39F.
05:40And a third?
05:42N.
05:43And a vowel, please?
05:45E.
05:46Another vowel?
05:48I.
05:50Consonant?
05:52S.
05:54A consonant?
05:56R.
05:58A vowel?
06:00U.
06:02And a last consonant, please?
06:04And the last one? D.
06:06Countdown.
06:13MUSIC PLAYS
06:38Ian?
06:39Seven.
06:40A seven, Priscilla?
06:41Seven.
06:42Finders?
06:44Priscilla?
06:45Refunds.
06:46Refunds.
06:47Yeah.
06:48Happy?
06:49Very happy.
06:50What about Matt?
06:51Yeah, all very good.
06:52North sevens.
06:53Infused?
06:54Insured?
06:55I think he's there as well.
06:56Very good.
06:57Great spate of them.
06:58Well done.
06:59So, 14 to Priscilla.
07:00Ian on seven.
07:01And Priscilla's first numbers game.
07:03Priscilla?
07:04One large and five small, please.
07:06Thank you, Priscilla.
07:07One from the top row, five little ones for the first numbers game today.
07:10And this round is seven, two, five, ten, nine.
07:16And the large one, 100.
07:18And the target, 459.
07:21Four, five, nine.
07:23MUSIC PLAYS
07:41MUSIC STOPS
07:54Priscilla?
07:55462.
07:56462.
07:57Ian?
07:58459.
07:59459.
08:00So, Ian?
08:01Nine times five.
08:03Nine times 545.
08:05Times ten.
08:06Times ten, 450.
08:08Plus seven, plus two.
08:09And seven and two, lovely. 459.
08:11Yes, indeed. All right, well done, Ian.
08:13APPLAUSE
08:15So, in the lead now, Ian, 17 points.
08:18Priscilla's 14 as we turn to a teatime teaser, which is Chip Idea.
08:23And the clue,
08:24this is likely to upset the Green Party in more ways than one.
08:27This is likely to upset the Green Party in more ways than one.
08:33MUSIC PLAYS
08:40APPLAUSE
08:48Welcome back. I left with the clue,
08:50this is likely to upset the Green Party in more ways than one.
08:53Why? Because the answer is aphicide.
08:56Aphicide. Killing aphids, presumably.
08:58Yeah, exactly. Tricky one, that one.
09:00Insecticides used against aphids, those plant-eating bugs.
09:03Poor little aphids.
09:05There we go.
09:0717 points to Priscilla's 14.
09:09Ian, you're back on. Letters game.
09:11Consonant, please.
09:12Thank you, Ian.
09:14G
09:16Another, please.
09:18N
09:19Another.
09:21C
09:23And a vowel, please.
09:25E
09:26Another vowel.
09:27O
09:29Another vowel.
09:30E
09:31A consonant.
09:33Z
09:36A consonant.
09:38M
09:40And a vowel, please.
09:42And the last one.
09:44A
09:45Countdown.
09:47MUSIC PLAYS
10:07MUSIC STOPS
10:17Ian?
10:18Five.
10:19Five. Priscilla?
10:20Six.
10:21So, Ian?
10:22Omega.
10:23And Priscilla?
10:24Congee.
10:25Congee.
10:26Congee, yes, like a sort of broth or a soup. Very nice.
10:29Mm-hm.
10:30Yes.
10:31Well done. Well done, Priscilla.
10:32Back in the lead by three points.
10:34You could have eczema.
10:36E-C-Z-E-M-A for six.
10:38And I think genome.
10:40Genome.
10:42Yeah, very good. Excellent.
10:44It's also for six.
10:45Well done. Thank you very much, Matt.
10:47So, 20 plays, Ian. 17.
10:49Priscilla, we're back with you.
10:51Have a consonant, please.
10:52Thank you, Priscilla.
10:54T
10:55And a vowel.
10:57E
10:58And a consonant.
11:00N
11:01And a vowel.
11:03I
11:04And a consonant.
11:06B
11:07And a consonant.
11:09L
11:11And a vowel, please.
11:14O
11:16And another vowel.
11:18E
11:19And a last consonant, please.
11:21And the last one. R.
11:23Stand by.
11:33MUSIC PLAYS
11:55Priscilla?
11:56Six.
11:57And Ian?
11:58Five.
11:59Ian?
12:00Toner.
12:02Nobler.
12:03Nobler.
12:04It is nobler.
12:05Anything else? Matt?
12:07Yeah, another six. Treble.
12:10Very good. Anything else?
12:12No. Looks like there should be much more there, but we couldn't find it.
12:15All right. So, nobler.
12:1726 plays 17, and we're in a numbers game situation.
12:21Ian?
12:22One, two, one, two, please, Rachel.
12:24Thank you, Ian. One, two, one, two.
12:27And for this round, the five little ones are...
12:29..nine, six, three, two, six,
12:34and the large one, 75.
12:36And the target...
12:38524.
12:39524.
12:41MUSIC PLAYS
13:00MUSIC STOPS
13:13Priscilla?
13:14524.
13:15524. And Ian?
13:17524.
13:18All right. So, Priscilla?
13:19Nine minus two is seven.
13:21Yep.
13:22Times 75.
13:23525.
13:24And six over six is one.
13:26Lovely. Take it away. 524. Well done.
13:28Exactly the same.
13:29All right. Priscilla, just have a little glance.
13:31Sorry.
13:33Yeah, I'm sure it's here.
13:35Very good. Well done.
13:39Very good.
13:40So, 36 plays Ian's 27,
13:43as we turn to Matt.
13:45Now, then, Matt, more cowboys?
13:47More cowboys. A bit of a gruesome one.
13:49Oh.
13:50Yeah. We're going to talk about George Parrott,
13:52a.k.a. George Francis Warden,
13:54a.k.a. George Manuse,
13:56a.k.a. George Curry,
13:58a.k.a. what he was most commonly known as,
14:01Big Nose George.
14:03And the disturbing thing is I bear a striking resemblance to him.
14:07He was a really, really terrible character,
14:10part of the Sin Jan gang,
14:12which worked the Powder River basin
14:16between Wyoming and Montana.
14:18And what they specialised in was trains.
14:21They were very good at derailing trains
14:23and then going through, taking the gold
14:26and also stripping the passengers of everything they had.
14:29And they did this on one occasion
14:31and were chased by a posse who worked out where they were,
14:35and the two lawmen that found them
14:37were then shot and killed by Big Nose George.
14:41And he would have got away with it
14:43if he hadn't then gone back to a bar in Montana
14:46and boasted, got drunk and boasted about the feats,
14:50what he'd done, to everyone in the bar.
14:52Straight away, a telegram found its way back to Wyoming.
14:56The sheriff came out, apprehended him
14:59and took him back to Wyoming
15:02where he was tried and found guilty.
15:06But he tried to escape
15:08and the townsfolk decided they couldn't let it lie any longer,
15:12so they lynched him themselves.
15:14He was such a public enemy and such a huge threat
15:18that rather than let justice take its course,
15:20they did away with him themselves.
15:22And the worst part of the whole story is
15:24the two doctors who were presiding over the whole affair
15:28afterwards turned him into a pair of shoes.
15:31No.
15:32They did.
15:33They decided they wanted a trophy to take away from this whole thing.
15:36So poor old Big Nose George,
15:38for whom no-one had any sympathy up to that point,
15:41they turned him into a doctor's bag
15:43and a pair of shoes as a trophy.
15:45The only man in American history ever to be turned into a pair of shoes
15:49and you wouldn't expect that from your GP.
15:51You certainly might not.
15:53That's amazing stuff.
15:55A doctor's bag, a pair of shoes, a pair of boots, my word.
15:59Thank you very much, Matt.
16:0136 plays, Ian's 27, and Priscilla, it's your letters game now.
16:05May I have a consonant, please, Rachel?
16:07Thank you, Priscilla.
16:08L
16:09And a vowel.
16:11I
16:12And a consonant.
16:14R
16:15And another vowel.
16:17E
16:18And a consonant.
16:20M
16:22And another consonant.
16:25T
16:26And a vowel.
16:28I
16:30And another vowel.
16:33O
16:34And a final consonant, please.
16:36And a final V.
16:38Stand by.
16:49CLOCK TICKS
17:11Yes, Priscilla?
17:12Six.
17:13A six, Ian?
17:14A six.
17:15So, Priscilla?
17:16Violet.
17:17Violet, and Ian?
17:18Revolt.
17:20Revolt, yes.
17:22Happy?
17:23Yes, very happy.
17:24What have we got over there?
17:25We could have limiter, which is a seven, and vitriol.
17:29Vitriol.
17:30Is that the old name for sulfuric acid?
17:32It is, hence the biting caustic.
17:35Mmm.
17:36Very good.
17:37Vitriolic abuse.
17:38Very good.
17:3942 to 33, and now we lurch towards Ian.
17:43Your letters game, Ian.
17:45A consonant, please.
17:46Thank you, Ian.
17:47F
17:49And another, please.
17:51R
17:52And a third.
17:54H
17:56Vowel.
17:58E
17:59Another vowel.
18:00A
18:01Consonant.
18:03S
18:05A consonant.
18:07B
18:08A consonant.
18:10F
18:11And a final vowel, please.
18:12And a final O.
18:14Countdown.
18:45Ian?
18:46I'll try a seven.
18:47Priscilla?
18:48A seven.
18:49Thank you. Ian?
18:50Bashers.
18:51Bashers. Look, you're both bashers, I think.
18:53I've got the same word.
18:54It's fine.
18:55Two bashers here. Any more bashers?
18:57Yes.
18:58Yeah.
18:59Four bashers.
19:00Anything else?
19:01Er, no.
19:02No?
19:03Just bashers.
19:04Just bashers.
19:05Three of them, bashers.
19:06All right, so, numbers game.
19:09Priscilla?
19:10I have one large and four small. Five small, please.
19:13Same again, thank you, Priscilla.
19:14One large, five little ones coming up.
19:16And this time they are eight, ten, six, three, nine and a large one, 75.
19:24And the target to reach, 473.
19:27473.
19:43BELL RINGS
20:01Well, Priscilla?
20:02475.
20:03Two away. And Ian?
20:05Um...
20:0724, 47...
20:09468.
20:11Let's turn to Priscilla first. Priscilla?
20:148 minus 3 is 5.
20:168 minus 3 is 5.
20:18Times 75.
20:20375.
20:22Oh, I've gone wrong. Sorry.
20:24Sorry, Priscilla.
20:26All right, Ian, your chance.
20:2975 multiplied by 6.
20:3275 by 6 is 450.
20:35Plus 8 plus 10.
20:37And then 10 and 8, 468, five away.
20:40All right, well done, Ian.
20:42That does you the world of good, actually.
20:44Only two points adrift now.
20:46But Rachel, 473?
20:48Not the easiest one, but you could have said 75 over 3 is 25.
20:5410 plus 9, 19.
20:57Times the two together for 475.
21:00And then 8 minus 6 is 2, to take away from 473.
21:04Super stuff, well done.
21:06Well done.
21:09Priscilla holding on to a narrow lead there, 49 points to 47,
21:13as we turn to a teatime teaser, which is awe, doubt.
21:17And the clue, there's doubt about needing an awe
21:20if you've got this motor.
21:22There's doubt about needing an awe if you've got this motor.
21:26There's doubt about needing an awe if you've got this motor.
21:45Welcome back. I left you with the clue,
21:47there's doubt about needing an awe if you've got this motor.
21:50And the answer is if you've got an outboard motor.
21:53Rachel wins 47, and Ian, you're back on with the letters game.
21:57Consonant, please.
21:59Thank you, Ian. M
22:01Second one, please.
22:03H
22:05Consonant.
22:07S
22:09A vowel.
22:11E
22:13Consonant.
22:15T
22:17A vowel.
22:19E
22:21I
22:23Consonant.
22:25D
22:27And a final consonant, please.
22:29And a final S.
22:31Stand by.
22:51MUSIC PLAYS
23:01Ian?
23:03A seven.
23:05Priscilla? Six.
23:07And you're six?
23:09Themes.
23:11Thank you. Ian?
23:13Demists.
23:15Very good.
23:17And in the corner?
23:19Priscilla's 49. Look at this, Priscilla.
23:21He's overtaken you.
23:23But now it's your letters game. Time to come back.
23:25Consonant, please, Rachel.
23:27Thank you, Priscilla. T
23:29And another one.
23:31P
23:33And a vowel.
23:35E
23:37And another one.
23:39I
23:41And a vowel.
23:43O
23:45And a consonant.
23:48And another vowel.
23:50E
23:52And another consonant, please.
23:54And the last one, S.
23:56Stand by.
23:58MUSIC PLAYS
24:18MUSIC STOPS
24:28Yes, Priscilla?
24:30Eight.
24:32Ian? Seven.
24:34Yes, Ian? Dopiest. Dopiest.
24:36Priscilla? Estopped.
24:38Estopped.
24:40OK. Isn't that an estoppel?
24:42Is that a legal phrase? Yeah.
24:44Let me find the N there, Priscilla. Hang on a second.
24:47Erm...
24:50Fantastic.
24:52Yes, it means to bar or preclude by estoppel,
24:56which is quite complicated, the definition of estoppel,
24:59but as you say, it's a legal term.
25:01Well done. Thank you very much.
25:07Very good. Hope you haven't been estopped, Priscilla.
25:10But anyway, you're back in charge.
25:12Ian's 54 as we turn to Susie.
25:14Oh, Susie, speak to us of your origin of words.
25:18Well, we're just going to start with the big cheese.
25:21We were talking about cheese and Matt asked me,
25:23why do we talk about someone being the big cheese?
25:25And it goes back to the days of the Raj,
25:28and chizz, C-H-I-Z, was an Urdu term meaning thing.
25:33So the big chizz was the big thing.
25:36And because that wasn't so familiar to British ears,
25:39we brought it back as the big cheese.
25:41So nothing to do with the yellow stuff at all.
25:44I was going to talk about words
25:46which once had startlingly different meanings
25:49to the ones that we know today,
25:51and I mention that a lot on Countdown
25:53because, obviously, the word histories
25:55are often very, very long ones.
25:57They go back centuries and they twist and turn along the way.
26:00So if you take the word stink,
26:02which is not considered particularly polite these days,
26:04there was a time when it was the highest of compliments
26:07to say to somebody, your perfume really stinks.
26:10And that meant it had a beautiful odour,
26:12and eventually smell and odour
26:14took over the sort of fragrant side of things.
26:16But, of course, today you have to put a nice adjective in front of those
26:19even to mean something pleasant rather than unpleasant.
26:22And sly is another word that's changed quite significantly
26:25because long ago a man would have been very flattered
26:28if you'd called him a sly and crafty knave.
26:31Sly simply meant cunning. It's related to sleight of hand.
26:34And crafty meant he was very good at his craft.
26:37It has nothing to do with duplicitousness at all.
26:40But as the centuries passed, they slipped into something far less positive.
26:44All of which seems a little bit peculiar.
26:46And that word, too, has an unexpected history
26:48because in the very early days of Rome,
26:50before money was even minted,
26:52cattle were traded as money.
26:54And the Latin for cattle was pecus.
26:56And every time the term broadened to mean one's private property,
27:00so something that belonged to one person and to nobody else.
27:03And this idea of being like nothing else
27:07led to the modern idea of being peculiar, as in strange,
27:10sort of unexpected and not run-of-the-mill.
27:12And later, the Anglo-Saxons who traded their cows were called fellows.
27:16And that's an Old English word that meant a cattle partner.
27:19Well done. That was wonderful.
27:23Brilliant.
27:25Very good.
27:2757 to 54.
27:29Now, where shall we go? Ian, let us go.
27:32Consonant, please.
27:34Thank you, Ian. R
27:36And another.
27:38N
27:40And a third.
27:42G
27:44Vowel, please.
27:46U
27:48Another vowel.
27:50I
27:52A consonant.
27:54Q
27:56A consonant.
27:58L
28:00M
28:02And a vowel, please.
28:04And the last one. O
28:06Countdown.
28:31MUSIC STOPS
28:37Ian?
28:38Four. Four.
28:40Priscilla?
28:41Five.
28:42So, Ian?
28:43Er, no, I've lost it.
28:45No? All right, so we turn to you, Priscilla.
28:47Mogul.
28:48A mogul.
28:49A mogul.
28:50In the corner?
28:51Er, yes.
28:52Er, liquor.
28:53L-I-Q-U-O-R.
28:55That's a good one, yeah.
28:56For six.
28:57For six or seven, there's a verb to lour, which is L-O-U-R.
29:01It's a bit like glower, actually.
29:03It means to look angry or sullen or to scowl.
29:06So, louring is there for seven.
29:08Louring. Really? Thank you.
29:1062 points now to Ian's 54.
29:12Priscilla, your own last letters game.
29:15A consonant, please, Rachel.
29:17Thank you, Priscilla.
29:18N
29:19And another one.
29:21T
29:22And a vowel.
29:24A
29:25And another one.
29:26O
29:27And a consonant.
29:30D
29:32And another consonant.
29:34S
29:35And a vowel.
29:38E
29:39And another vowel.
29:41I
29:42And a final consonant, please.
29:44And the last one, P.
29:46Stand by.
29:57MUSIC
30:18Yes, Priscilla?
30:19Seven.
30:20A seven for Priscilla. Ian?
30:22Seven.
30:23Two sevens. Priscilla?
30:24Pointed.
30:25Ian?
30:26Pointed, same word.
30:28Very pointed over here.
30:29And in the corner, Matt?
30:31Lots of seven and eights.
30:33And also a nine.
30:35Oh, yes.
30:36Antipodes.
30:37Antipodes. Very good.
30:39The direct opposite of something.
30:41You can pronounce antipodes as well.
30:43But well done. Very good.
30:45So, 69 to 61.
30:47Here we go, chaps.
30:48Last numbers game of the day. Ian?
30:50Six small ones, please.
30:52Six small. It's gambling time.
30:54Go all guns blazing, thank you, Ian.
30:56Six little ones and we will see what we get.
30:58For the last time today, the numbers are ten, seven, three,
31:03another three, six and eight,
31:06and the target...
31:08845.
31:10845.
31:11MUSIC
31:24MUSIC
31:43Ian?
31:45818.
31:47Hmm.
31:49Too far away, I'm afraid. Priscilla?
31:51836.
31:54Let's see. Off you go.
31:56Eight times ten. Eight times ten is 80.
31:58Eight times ten, 80.
32:00Plus three is 83.
32:02Yes.
32:03Seven plus three is ten.
32:05It is.
32:06Multiply 830 plus the six.
32:09And snuck in there for five points. Well done.
32:11Well done indeed.
32:13But 845, how difficult is that, Rachel?
32:16It is possible. If you say three plus seven is ten,
32:20eight times ten is 100,
32:23plus the six, 106,
32:25times by eight for 848,
32:28and take away the three for 845.
32:30Yes, well done.
32:32APPLAUSE
32:34Well done. So, 74 plays at 61.
32:36Well done, Priscilla.
32:38And we go into the final round. That's conundrum time.
32:41Priscilla, Ian, fingers on buzzers, please.
32:43Let's reveal today's countdown conundrum.
32:46MUSIC
32:51MUSIC CONTINUES
32:54MUSIC CONTINUES
33:17Well, our contestants are completely flummoxed by this one.
33:21Anybody in the audience? Yes, sir?
33:23Forbidden.
33:25Forbidden. Let's see whether you're right.
33:27Said with confidence.
33:29Yes, sir. Well done. Well done.
33:32APPLAUSE
33:34Excellent stuff. So, Priscilla,
33:3774 points.
33:39We're going to see you tomorrow. Yes.
33:41Excellent. Well done indeed.
33:42Ian, sadly, we won't be seeing you tomorrow.
33:45You're back to Nottingham with your goodie bag, yeah?
33:49And our very best wishes to you and your local football team,
33:52and our programme editor.
33:54What's it called? Gedley Miners' Welfare.
33:57Oh, good. Excellent stuff.
33:59Well, thank you very much for coming to see us.
34:01I much enjoyed hearing about your Royal Navy work.
34:04What a fascinating story that was. Thank you.
34:06Brilliant stuff. We'll see you tomorrow. Yes.
34:09And I understand that the Dorking Scrabble Club
34:12is sort of run by you, is it?
34:14No, it's not run by me at all. I'm just a member.
34:16A member. But we're very short of members.
34:18I bet they're missing you down in Dorking today,
34:20but we shall see you tomorrow.
34:22See you tomorrow, Susie, Matt.
34:24More cowboy stories. Great fun.
34:26Can we make them less gruesome? Yes, we shall.
34:28Well done, Rachel. Thank you very much.
34:30See you tomorrow, and we look forward to seeing you tomorrow.
34:32Same time, same place. You'll be sure of it.
34:34Good afternoon.
34:46Compelling stuff tonight on four dispatches
34:48tells the story of five young children
34:50whose lives have been changed forever by the war in Syria.
34:53Children on the front line at ten.
34:56The chance to win life-changing money next this afternoon, though.
34:59In deal or no deal.

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