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00:30APPLAUSE
00:32Good afternoon and welcome to Countdown on this Monday.
00:36And luckily I'm not bandaged, I don't have any throbbing appendages.
00:40Why do I say this?
00:42Because Friday was the start of National Maintenance Week
00:45and that stretches on to Friday the 28th.
00:48It's a SPAB incentive.
00:50That's the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings.
00:53That was kicked off all those years ago by William Morris,
00:56the wonderful textile designer.
00:58It'll help really protect, well, in a practical way,
01:03to maintain old buildings.
01:05And that's very valuable because in the words of Morris himself,
01:08and I'll just read this to you because I think it rings true with me,
01:11certainly,
01:12put protection in place of restoration.
01:14Stave off decay by daily care.
01:17Now, I've always lived in old buildings and I just like them
01:20but they're a bit of a problem.
01:22And very recently the walls began to bow out
01:25and we had to have those tie bars put in.
01:28So we've got, you know, bars going right across
01:31from one end of the house to the other
01:33to hold the walls from sort of, you know, I suppose collapsing, basically.
01:36Ah. Good luck with that.
01:38I hope they hold.
01:40So do I. What about you? Have you ever maintained an old building?
01:43Not maintained but it's interesting, isn't it,
01:45the rules for what you're allowed to do to old buildings.
01:47So the college I was at at Oxford was founded in 1326.
01:51So one of my first student rooms, the fire escape,
01:53was actually a rope that was attached to a box
01:56that you're supposed to throw out the window to get out.
01:58And then go down? Apparently so.
02:00Luckily I never had to test it.
02:02How wonderful. How wonderful.
02:04I don't know. I might prefer a proper fire escape, actually.
02:06Anyway, Rachel, who have we got with us today?
02:09We've got Andrew Avery back again,
02:11a bank manager from Devon in Bampton, indeed.
02:14Fantastic first win on Friday
02:16where he clinched it on the crucial conundrum.
02:18So see how he can get on today.
02:20You're joined today by Rachel Evans.
02:22Hello, Rachel. Hi there.
02:24A hydrologist from Wetherby in Yorkshire,
02:26loves hill walking and has challenged herself to walk coast to coast.
02:30That's 190 miles, is it?
02:32It is, yes, from St B's in Cumbria
02:35across to Robin Hood's Bay in Yorkshire.
02:38Good for you. Good for you.
02:40All right, let's have a big round of applause
02:42for Rachel Evans and Andrew Avery.
02:44APPLAUSE
02:47And back with us again after, I trust, a peaceful weekend,
02:50the wonderful Susie Dent.
02:52And talking of national maintenance,
02:54we've got a chap that's always well-maintained,
02:56former producer and talent agent,
02:58now author and TV personality, Michael Whitehall.
03:01Welcome back, Michael.
03:03Now, then, Andrew Avery.
03:05How about a letters game? Thank you.
03:07Can I start with a consonant, please, Rachel?
03:09Thank you, Andrew. Start the week with R.
03:13And another.
03:15M.
03:17And a vowel, please.
03:19I.
03:21And a consonant.
03:23F.
03:25And a vowel.
03:27E.
03:29Another vowel.
03:31A.
03:33A consonant.
03:35H.
03:37Another consonant.
03:39N.
03:41And a final U.
03:43And here's the Countdown Clock.
04:12Now, then, Andrew.
04:14Seven.
04:16A seven. Rachel?
04:18Six.
04:20And your six?
04:22Famine.
04:24Famine. Thank you.
04:26Very good. And the corner, Michael and Susie?
04:29Mureen.
04:31Never heard of it.
04:33Do you ever meet anyone called Maureen?
04:35Maureen, maybe, but Mureen, never.
04:37It is simply the adjective relating to mice.
04:40Now, then. So, seven points for Andrew.
04:42Let's turn to Rachel now for a letters game. Rachel.
04:45Hi, Rachel. Hi, Rachel.
04:47Could I have a consonant, please?
04:49Thank you. Start with T.
04:52And another one, please.
04:54G.
04:56And another.
04:58D.
05:00And one more consonant.
05:02F.
05:04And a vowel, please.
05:06A.
05:09And another vowel.
05:11O.
05:13And another one.
05:15U.
05:18And a consonant, please.
05:21T.
05:23And another vowel.
05:25And the last one, A.
05:27Stand by.
05:39CLOCK TICKS
06:00Yes, Rachel.
06:02Just a four.
06:04A four. How about Andrew? Four as well.
06:06Two fours, Rachel.
06:08And goat.
06:10And goat. Did we do any better in the corner, Michael?
06:13Well, we got tartog.
06:15Very good. And anything else?
06:17Er, no. Shall I tell you what a tartog is?
06:19Please.
06:21It's a greyish olive edible fish.
06:23It occurs off the Atlantic coast of North America
06:25and apparently it's an important sport fish in Rhode Island.
06:28Well, there you go. Well done, Michael. Brilliant.
06:3111 points to Andrew. Rachel on four.
06:34And we'll turn back to Andrew for a numbers game. Andrew?
06:37Can I have one from the top and five small ones, please, Rachel?
06:40You can indeed. Thank you, Andrew.
06:42One large, five little ones for the first numbers game this week.
06:45And they are nine, two, another two, another nine, five and 75.
06:52And the target, 583.
06:55583.
07:07MUSIC PLAYS
07:27Andrew?
07:29583.
07:31Said with emphasis. How about Rachel?
07:33586.
07:35586. So, Andrew?
07:37I should have declared 584, sorry.
07:39Oh, dear. Oh, horrors. 584.
07:41So, Rachel?
07:43Two over two is one. Yep.
07:45Take that away from the nine to give eight.
07:47Yes.
07:48And eight times 75 is 600.
07:50It is.
07:52And then the other nine plus five is 14.
07:56Yep. And take that away, 586.
07:58586. Lovely. Three away. Well done.
08:00Well done. Three away. But three away is three away.
08:03Yes, if you say nine plus two is 11.
08:0775 minus 11 is 64.
08:1064 times the other nine for 576.
08:14And then you've got another two and a five to add on for 583.
08:18Terrific. Thank you, Rachel.
08:20Wonderful.
08:22As always.
08:24So, Andrew, the slip cost you a bit.
08:2611 points apiece now as we turn to a tea time teaser,
08:31which is simplest.
08:33And the clue, even the simplest words can be this sometimes.
08:37Even the simplest words can be this sometimes.
08:55Welcome back. I left you with the clue,
08:57even the simplest words can be this sometimes.
08:59What can be misspelt? Misspelt.
09:0211 points apiece.
09:04Now, then, Rachel, your letters game.
09:07I'll start with a consonant, please. Thank you, Rachel.
09:10R
09:11And another.
09:13M
09:15And another.
09:17T
09:19And one more.
09:21D
09:23And a vowel, please.
09:26I
09:28Another.
09:30A
09:32And another.
09:34E
09:36And another consonant.
09:39M
09:42And a final vowel.
09:45And the last one, O.
09:47Stand by.
09:58O
10:20Rachel.
10:22I've got a six.
10:24A six. Andrew?
10:25An eight.
10:26An orated.
10:28Orated. Andrew?
10:29Mediator.
10:30Oh, mediator.
10:32Yeah, very well spotted.
10:34Well spotted, indeed.
10:37Very good.
10:39And the corner, Michael and Susie?
10:41Marmite.
10:43Marmite?
10:44But maybe marmite doesn't count.
10:46I don't know, Susie.
10:47It does, yes, it does.
10:48Why?
10:49Not as the spread, but because it has always been
10:52a lidded earthenware cooking pot.
10:54It sits on the jars of marmite.
10:56And so you can have it, in that sense, with a small M.
10:59All right, very good.
11:0119 points to Andrew.
11:03Rachel on 11.
11:04Andrew, you're back.
11:06Consonant, please, Rachel.
11:07Thank you, Andrew.
11:08R
11:10And a vowel.
11:12E
11:13And a consonant.
11:15C
11:17And another.
11:19T
11:20And a vowel.
11:22A
11:23Oh, dear.
11:24A consonant.
11:26B
11:29A vowel.
11:31E
11:33A consonant.
11:35C
11:37And a final consonant, please.
11:39And the last one, N.
11:41Stand by.
11:53MUSIC
12:13Andrew?
12:14Six.
12:15Six. And Rachel?
12:16Six.
12:17Thank you, Andrew.
12:18Canter.
12:19Rachel?
12:20Recent.
12:21Yes, it's a tough one, this one.
12:23Oh, you'll have something, surely.
12:25Not really.
12:26No? Susie?
12:27Well, there's centre for six.
12:29And if you accumulate something, you accrete it.
12:33That's there for seven.
12:34A-double-C or E.
12:35Oh, yeah.
12:36You can have an accretion, if you're not careful.
12:38Yes.
12:39Yeah, very good.
12:40Right.
12:4125 plays.
12:42Rachel, 17.
12:43Let's go into a numbers game, shall we?
12:45Rachel?
12:46Can I have two large ones and four small, please?
12:49OK, Rachel, two big, four little coming up.
12:52And this time, the little ones are ten, two, ten and nine.
12:58And the large two, 25 and 50.
13:01Could be tricky.
13:02Target, 302.
13:04302.
13:06MUSIC
13:19MUSIC
13:35Rachel?
13:36Um, 302 but not written down.
13:39All right, and how about Andrew?
13:41Yeah, 302.
13:42So, Rachel?
13:43Um, I've gone wrong, actually.
13:45Um...
13:4725 times ten.
13:49Yeah, 25 times ten, 250.
13:51Um, plus the 50.
13:53300.
13:54Plus the two.
13:55Yep, you haven't gone wrong, 302.
13:56Well done.
13:57Ooh, quickly recovered there.
13:59A beating heart, I think.
14:01Andrew?
14:02Yeah, exactly the same way.
14:03Same way?
14:04Just check it out there.
14:05All right, well done.
14:06APPLAUSE
14:08Well done.
14:09So, we stand at 35 points to Rachel's 27.
14:13We now turn to Michael.
14:15And for many years, Michael, you were a talent agent
14:18and represented some of the big stars.
14:20In fact, most of the big stars.
14:22What was it like?
14:24Um, well, the bit I was going to tell you about
14:27was this man called Mr Lewis.
14:29Yes.
14:30I never knew his Christian name.
14:32He was a painter and decorator.
14:34And one day, I asked him to come up to my office
14:37and do a little bit of painting.
14:40And when he arrived at sort of ten o'clock in the morning,
14:43he said to me,
14:44I've been so excited about coming up here
14:46because, you know, I've only ever been to your house
14:49and I know it's going to be full of stars and everything.
14:53And I said, Oh, Mr Lewis, I'm sorry to have to disappoint you
14:56because all I do is sit behind this desk
15:00and sign contracts and make boring phone calls
15:04and make deals and nothing ever happens here
15:08and you'll be very bored.
15:10And Mr Lewis said, Oh, I'm sure I won't.
15:12As he climbed up his ladder.
15:14At which point, the doors burst open
15:17and in rushed this policewoman
15:20and she sang to me,
15:22I'm here to thank you for being the best agent in London
15:27and to thank you for to the man I'm born.
15:30And as she did that, all her clothes fell off.
15:33And she was a strippergram dressed as a policewoman
15:38and behind her was Peter Bowles in a white suit and a white hat.
15:44And he had come to thank me for doing his deal
15:48for to the man I'm born and getting in the park and all that.
15:52And the strippergram was sort of part of the thank you bit.
15:56So I introduced Mr Lewis,
15:58who by then was up the top of the ladder sort of wobbling
16:01because he'd had the strippergram
16:03and now Peter Bowles, who was very famous.
16:05And I said, Do you know Peter Bowles, Mr Lewis?
16:08He said, No, I don't know.
16:10And then Peter said goodbye and lovely to see you.
16:13And as he went out, he bumped into Sir Lawrence Olivier,
16:17who was a meeting my partner in the other room.
16:21And Lawrence Olivier came into my office
16:24and I said, Oh, hello, Larry, how are you?
16:27And he said, Oh, Michael, darling, how are you?
16:29And gave me a big hug.
16:31And I said, Do you know Mr Lewis?
16:34And Mr Lewis said, No, no, I don't think we've met.
16:37He said, Mr Lewis, this is Sir Lawrence Olivier.
16:40And Lawrence Olivier said, Hello, darling, how are you?
16:43And then he went out and then Mr Lewis came down
16:47because now it was sort of late in the afternoon.
16:50And Mr Lewis said, Oh, Michael, I just wanted to say,
16:54I mean, it's been one of the most exciting days in my entire life.
16:58Oh, I love it. I don't know how to thank you.
17:00So I was very pleased to have given him an exciting day.
17:04Such a day. What a lovely story.
17:06APPLAUSE
17:08Lovely.
17:11Now then, Andrew, letters.
17:14A consonant, please, Rachel.
17:16Thank you, Andrew. R
17:18And another?
17:21Y
17:22And a third?
17:24S
17:25And a vowel?
17:27I
17:29And another vowel?
17:31E
17:32And a third?
17:34O
17:36And a consonant?
17:38D
17:40Another consonant?
17:42N
17:45And a final vowel, please.
17:48And a final A.
17:50Stand by.
17:59CLOCK TICKS
18:21Andrew?
18:22Five.
18:23Sounding disappointed. Rachel?
18:25I think I've got an eight.
18:27My word, Andrew. Your five?
18:29Daisy.
18:30Daisy. Rachel?
18:32Anaeroids. Yep. Anaeroid barometers.
18:35Of course.
18:37It's absolutely fine. Very, very well done. That's exactly what they are.
18:40Well spotted. Well done.
18:42APPLAUSE
18:44Draws you level with Andrew. Two 35 points apiece.
18:48But before we carry on, what news from the corner?
18:51Susie, Michael?
18:52Sardine.
18:54Yes, that's nice. Very good.
18:56And one more eight is an anodiser,
18:58which is something that coats metal with a protective oxide layer.
19:02Yeah, indeed.
19:04All right, 35 points apiece. Rachel, your letters game.
19:08I'll start with a consonant, please.
19:10Thank you, Rachel. W
19:12And another one?
19:14P
19:16And another?
19:18G
19:20And another?
19:22R
19:24And another vowel, please?
19:26E
19:28And another?
19:30I
19:32And another?
19:34E
19:36And another vowel?
19:38O
19:40And a final consonant, please?
19:42And a final T.
19:44Stand by.
19:54CLOCK TICKS
20:14Yes.
20:16Rachel?
20:18Six. A six, Andrew?
20:20And a six not written down there.
20:22Pewter. Pewter.
20:24I've got the same word. Well done.
20:26Very good. All right.
20:28Now, then, the corner, what have we got over there?
20:31Pee-wit?
20:33A pee-wit? A little bird? A lapwing?
20:35Sweet. It's a northern lapwing, yeah.
20:37It's named after its call,
20:39which apparently sounds like a pee-wit,
20:41though I never think it quite does,
20:43whenever I hear one.
20:45Goiter is there for six, so quite a few sixes.
20:47Very good. Now, what's Rachel been up to?
20:49Prodigy.
20:51In Susie's honour, of course.
20:53Prodigy.
20:55Yeah, fantastic.
20:57Very good. Very good indeed.
20:5941 points apiece, and we're with the numbers, Andrew.
21:01Thanks, Nick.
21:03Can I have one from the top and five small ones, please?
21:05You can. Thank you, Andrew.
21:07One large, five little coming up,
21:09and this round is...
21:11nine, seven, another nine,
21:13ten, five,
21:15and the large one, 25.
21:17Your target, 370.
21:193-7-0.
21:48Well, Andrew...
21:50370.
21:52370. Rachel?
21:54369.
21:56369. So, Andrew, let's try you first.
21:5825 plus the five plus the seven...
22:0025 plus the five plus the seven is 37.
22:03And then times it by the ten.
22:05Yeah, 370.
22:07Slickly done. Well done.
22:09APPLAUSE
22:11Well done. So, ten-point lead there for Andrew.
22:1351 to Rachel's 41,
22:15and now we're going to a teatime teaser,
22:17which is a lunatic.
22:19And the clue...
22:21He's not a lunatic, but things are all at sea.
22:23He's not a lunatic, but things are all at sea.
22:26BELL
22:40Welcome back.
22:42I left you with the clue,
22:44things are all at sea, and the answer is...
22:46nautical.
22:48Nautical.
22:50Very good. 51 to Andrew.
22:52Rachel just ten points behind.
22:54And Rachel, now's your chance to catch up.
22:57I'll start with a consonant, please.
22:59Thank you, Rachel.
23:01N.
23:02And a vowel, please.
23:04I.
23:06And a consonant.
23:08N.
23:10And a vowel, please.
23:12A.
23:14Consonant.
23:16S.
23:18Another consonant.
23:20L.
23:22A vowel.
23:24E.
23:28Another vowel.
23:30U.
23:32And a final consonant.
23:34And a final V.
23:36Countdown.
23:42BELL
24:08Rachel.
24:10A seven.
24:12A six.
24:13A six. Your six?
24:14Say line.
24:15Say line. Rachel.
24:16Unveils.
24:18Unveils.
24:19Yes, very nice.
24:21What else have we got over in the corner?
24:23I've got a very strange seven, if you'll forgive me for it.
24:26It is unalive.
24:28You're dead.
24:30LAUGHTER
24:32Lacking in vitality, not lively,
24:34sort of lacking in vigour.
24:36You could actually say unalive to the fact of such and such,
24:39being unaware of.
24:41Yeah, unaware of.
24:43Thank you very much.
24:4551-48. Now then, Andrew.
24:47Slim lead now, Andrew.
24:49Letters.
24:50Consonant, please.
24:51Thank you, Andrew.
24:53S.
24:55And a vowel.
24:57E.
24:58A consonant.
25:00J.
25:01Consonant.
25:03L.
25:04A vowel.
25:06I.
25:08S.
25:09A vowel.
25:11O.
25:13Consonant.
25:15R.
25:16And a final consonant, please.
25:18And a final T.
25:20Countdown.
25:37CLOCK TICKS
25:53Now then, Andrew.
25:55Seven.
25:56A seven. And Rachel?
25:57Seven.
25:58Andrew?
25:59Stories.
26:00And Rachel?
26:01I had sorties.
26:02Sorties?
26:03Yes.
26:04Very good.
26:05Absolutely.
26:06I don't know whether your mother did,
26:08but my mother used to make a lovely rissole.
26:11Oh, I remember the rissoles.
26:13They had breadcrumbs over them, apparently.
26:15Oh, did they?
26:16Yes.
26:17Compressed mixture of meat and spices coated in breadcrumbs and fried.
26:20Mine wouldn't have had spices.
26:22My mother wouldn't have known what a spice was.
26:24Spices.
26:25Very good.
26:26All right.
26:2758 to Rachel's 55.
26:29Andrew, slim lead.
26:30But now we turn to the wonderful Susie Dent.
26:32Susie, what have you?
26:33Regale us with your origins of words.
26:36Well, Dewey Jones tweeted at C4 Countdown,
26:41for anyone who wants to send in a query, because we love to get them.
26:44He tweeted to ask if there is a link between peasant and pheasant.
26:49And the short answer is no.
26:51Peasant goes back to the French peasant,
26:53which was itself borrowed from a Latin word, pagus,
26:56that's where we get pagan from,
26:58meaning a country labourer, a rustic, in other words.
27:01But pheasant goes back to ancient Greek,
27:04and that meant relating to the river Phasis,
27:06which was a river east of the Black Sea.
27:09And that's because the bird was thought to have originated there.
27:12It might well have done, but that was where pheasant came from.
27:15And it got me thinking about other words that are rooted in ancient Greek culture.
27:21And forgive me if I've done some of these already,
27:23but they are some of my favourite.
27:25There's barbaros, which is the root of our word barbarian,
27:28and it literally means not Greek.
27:30Rhubarb is the same thing.
27:32For the Greeks, it was a very foreign, strange-looking plant.
27:35And that's got the same root in it.
27:37Electron was a word used in ancient Greek to mean amber or pale gold.
27:42And amber, if you rub it, creates static electricity,
27:47and we get electricity from that old Greek word.
27:50And finally, Letha.
27:52Letha meant forgetfulness, and she was a goddess.
27:55Letha was a goddess. She was a daughter of Eris.
27:58And we get lethargy from her because of her story.
28:02But there's just so many words in English that go back to all their beliefs,
28:05their sort of amazing belief system, and also their very colourful ideas.
28:09Fantastic. Lovely stuff. Lovely.
28:11APPLAUSE
28:14Well done.
28:1658 to Rachel's 55 as we race towards the finishing line.
28:21Rachel, let us game.
28:23Thank you, Rachel.
28:54And a final consonant.
28:56And the last one, P.
28:58Stand by.
29:23MUSIC
29:31Yes, Rachel?
29:33Just a four.
29:34A four. Andrew?
29:35Likewise, a four.
29:36My word. Rachel?
29:37A ship.
29:38Ship and...
29:39Same word, ship.
29:40..two ships.
29:41Anything else?
29:42We got six.
29:44Hippus, which is a spasmodic contraction of the pupil of the eye,
29:49which causes neurological diseases or conditions.
29:52Conditions? Yes.
29:54I was always told, as a young man,
29:57if a girl's eyes dilated when you were talking to her,
30:01it showed a flicker of interest.
30:04Did you ever hear that?
30:05I did hear it. I never believed it, but I did hear it.
30:08You believed it, did you?
30:10I relied on it.
30:12Yeah.
30:13I had nothing else to go on.
30:15Nothing else to hang on to.
30:16Exactly.
30:17Thank you very much, Susie.
30:19All right, 62 plays 59,
30:21and we turn to Andrew for the last letters game.
30:24Andrew?
30:25Can I start with a consonant, please, Rachel?
30:27Thank you, Andrew. T.
30:28And another?
30:30S.
30:31And a third?
30:33D.
30:34And a vowel?
30:36E.
30:37Another vowel?
30:39O.
30:40A consonant?
30:42L.
30:44Another consonant?
30:46N.
30:47A vowel?
30:49I.
30:51And a final vowel, please?
30:54And a final E.
30:56Countdown.
31:17MUSIC CONTINUES
31:29Andrew?
31:30Six.
31:31A six. How about Rachel?
31:32Six.
31:33Andrew?
31:34Soiled.
31:35Soiled and...?
31:36Stolen.
31:37Soiled and stolen. And in the corner, Michael and Susie?
31:40Somebody's got a nine, I think.
31:42No.
31:43I think.
31:44Somebody near you?
31:45Very near.
31:46Susie?
31:47Deletions. You might talk about deletions if you were editing a document.
31:51Indeed you would.
31:52Number of deletions.
31:53What a wonderful word. Look at that. Nine.
31:56Fantastic. Deletions. Well done.
31:59So 68 plays 65, just three points in it.
32:03So, Rachel, numbers game, last of the day.
32:06I'll take a risk. I'll have four large and two small, please.
32:09Thank you, Rachel. Gambling time.
32:11Last numbers of the day, four large ones, two little ones.
32:14They are four and nine.
32:17And then the large four, 25, 100, 50 and 75.
32:22And the target for the gamble, 870.
32:258-7-0.
32:44MUSIC PLAYS
32:57Yes, Rachel?
32:588-7-1.
32:598-7-1. Andrew?
33:018-7-1 as well.
33:02My word. Rachel?
33:04Nine times 100.
33:06Nine times 100, 900.
33:0825 plus four is 29.
33:11Take that away.
33:12For one away, 8-7-1.
33:14And Andrew?
33:15Yeah, exactly the same way.
33:16Same way? Now then, Rachel, 870.
33:19Impossible.
33:20Impossible?
33:218-7-1's the best, yeah.
33:22Oh, right. OK, well, well done, you two, then.
33:24Both did very well.
33:25Thank you, Rachel, thank you. 75 plays 72.
33:28That takes us into crucial territory.
33:31So, things on buzzers, please.
33:33Let's reveal today's crucial countdown conundrum.
33:37BUZZER
33:40Rachel?
33:42Is it revelling?
33:44Revelling. Let's see whether it is.
33:46What have we got? Look at that.
33:48So fast. Well done.
33:50APPLAUSE
33:55Well done.
33:56Fantastically fast, too.
33:58Well done, Rachel. We shall see you tomorrow.
34:00Sadly, not you, Andrew.
34:02Indeed.
34:03A teapot and a goodie bag for you.
34:06And back to Bampton and Devon with our best wishes.
34:10See you tomorrow, Rachel.
34:12See you tomorrow.
34:13And tomorrow, too, for you two in the corner.
34:15We'll be here.
34:16See you tomorrow.
34:18Good stuff. A new champ.
34:20I know, we're going through them like water these days.
34:22Aren't we, though?
34:23Giving out too many teapots.
34:24I know.
34:25Got to be careful about this.
34:26See you tomorrow, same time, same place, you were sure of it.
34:29Good afternoon.
34:30Contact us by email at...
34:47A new series in one of Britain's most deprived areas,
34:50East Marsh in Grimby.
34:52Skint is tonight at nine.
34:54Next day, keep the quizzes coming.
34:56It's 15 to 1.
35:00APPLAUSE