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01:00He was alerted on social media, of course, that the trays can be altered the height, and actually, had he lowered or raised the top one, he could have squeezed in the big dinner plates onto the bottom one.
01:11And thousands of people, apparently, Rachel, on social media, put their hands up and said, me too. I have suffered. And when I say me too, I mean me too. I had no idea.
01:27First world problems, Nick.
01:30I suppose so.
01:32Have you ever missed anything that was patently obvious?
01:35I don't know. I'm sure plenty of things, especially on Countdown. But I guess I do have to have tutorials on things like Twitter and Instagram.
01:44Do you?
01:44Well, I didn't know you could, you know, in different apps, sometimes you can label people's faces. I always wondered how people were labelling me in photos, and then my friend just went, oh, you can just do it here.
01:54OK. OK. Well, that, yeah. I mean, it's not immediately obvious, is it?
01:59It wasn't to me. It was to them. Probably is to all the kids out there.
02:02I'll tell you something. Toby MacDonald doesn't miss much, does he?
02:06Not a lot.
02:06Ah, Toby, how are you?
02:08Fine, thanks.
02:09Five wins on the bounce, as we say here in the studio. It's fantastic. Great performance. Everyone over 100. Sixth-form student from Chard. Your fellow six-formers are going to be cheering you on, I'm sure.
02:22Yeah.
02:22Yeah, you've done really well. Really well. You're joined now by Nilesh Pandya, a school business manager from Redbridge. Welcome.
02:31Nice to meet you, Nick.
02:32Welcome to the Lions. Dan, you love cricket and your nippers playing in the garden. You go to the Oval.
02:38Yeah, we went a couple of times last year. Yeah, we really enjoyed it.
02:41How old are your children?
02:43My daughter, Sia, is nine and Dosh, my son, he's six.
02:47And has he picked up a bat yet?
02:49Yeah, yeah.
02:50You're going to help him a lot.
02:50He's smashing all over the place.
02:51Yeah?
02:52Yeah.
02:52It's better than me.
02:53Excellent. I can't believe that. Listen, good luck to you both. Nilesh, Toby, good luck. Have a lot of fun this afternoon. Big round of applause for our contestants.
03:06And over in the corner, Susie.
03:08How are you?
03:09Fine, thank you.
03:10Excellent. You're sitting, getting treatment from doctor and journalist, Dr. Phil Hammond. He gives us treatment every time we come to you.
03:16I do. I've cured you, haven't I, Susie?
03:18Yes, actually.
03:19Yes.
03:19Dr. Phil's magical healing love tablets. They're available on prescription.
03:24Selected stores only.
03:26All right.
03:27Toby, off we go.
03:30Good afternoon, Rachel.
03:31Afternoon again, Toby.
03:32Can I start with a consonant, please?
03:34Thank you. Start today with T.
03:36And another.
03:39B.
03:40And another.
03:42M.
03:43And a vowel.
03:44A.
03:46And another.
03:48E.
03:48And another.
03:50U.
03:51A consonant.
03:53S.
03:54A vowel.
03:57I.
03:58And a final consonant, please.
03:59And a final R.
04:03And here comes the countdown clock.
04:05A vowel.
04:05A vowel.
04:06A vowel.
04:06A vowel.
04:07A vowel.
04:07A vowel.
04:08A vowel.
04:08A vowel.
04:08A vowel.
04:08A vowel.
04:09A vowel.
04:09A vowel.
04:10A vowel.
04:10A vowel.
04:10A vowel.
04:10A vowel.
04:11A vowel.
04:11A vowel.
04:11A vowel.
04:11A vowel.
04:12A vowel.
04:12A vowel.
04:12A vowel.
04:13A vowel.
04:14A vowel.
04:14A vowel.
04:15A vowel.
04:16A vowel.
04:16A vowel.
04:17A vowel.
04:18A vowel.
04:18A vowel.
04:19A vowel.
04:19A vowel.
04:20A vowel.
04:20A vowel.
04:21A vowel.
04:22A vowel.
04:22A vowel.
04:23A vowel.
04:24A vowel.
04:24A vowel.
04:25A vowel.
04:26A vowel.
04:26Toby?
04:36Eight.
04:38Nillish?
04:38Eight.
04:39Thank you, Toby.
04:41Barmiest.
04:42Nillish?
04:43Also Barmiest.
04:45Yeah.
04:51And over in the corner now, Dr Phil, Susie.
04:54Couldn't beat Barmiest, but we got bustier.
04:56Bustier for seven.
04:57You got bustier.
04:58We got bustier.
04:59We also got Barmiest, but we couldn't get any more than that.
05:04Eight apiece.
05:05Now Nillish.
05:06Let us go.
05:08Hi, Rachel.
05:08Hi, Nillish.
05:09Can I have a vowel, please?
05:11You can indeed.
05:12O.
05:13And a consonant.
05:15M.
05:17And another consonant.
05:19K.
05:21And a vowel.
05:23A.
05:25Consonant.
05:26D.
05:28Consonant.
05:30C.
05:32Vowel.
05:33I.
05:36Consonant.
05:38T.
05:38And a final vowel, please.
05:42And a final A.
05:45Stand by.
05:45I.
05:47electrocon intel.
05:49I've got the sponsor.
05:49I've got to be a space.
05:56I've got to be a moment.
06:00Vowel.
06:00I'll see you next time.
06:01I've got to be a projektiva.
06:04We're going down.
06:05It's a Vowel.
06:05I've got to be a mystery.
06:07But a Türkiye.
06:07I'm going down.
06:11I've got to be aýs.
06:11I've got to be a mystery.
06:14Nilesh?
06:18Six.
06:19Toby?
06:20Six.
06:22Atomic?
06:23Atomic.
06:23And Toby?
06:25Diatom.
06:26Yes.
06:27Very good.
06:28Your old friend, Diatom?
06:30Yep.
06:30Dr Phil.
06:32Well, actually, Susie got this one.
06:33Mikado.
06:34Mikado is there for six as well.
06:36But we couldn't beat six, could we?
06:37No.
06:38Remind us what a Mikado is.
06:40Yes, Susie.
06:41It is a title given to the Emperor of Japan.
06:44And it comes from the Japanese for Auguste Gate, referring to the gate of the Imperial Palace, where the Emperor held his audiences.
06:52Very good.
06:53Mikado, 14 apiece.
06:55And Toby, numbers go.
06:59One from the top and five small, please.
07:01The usual.
07:02Thank you, Toby.
07:02One large five, little.
07:04And for the first time today, your numbers are nine.
07:07One, six, five, seven, and 25.
07:13And the target, 604.
07:16Six, zero, four.
07:17One
07:37two, three, and four.
07:38Toby?
07:49604.
07:50Illish?
07:51Only 600, I'm afraid.
07:52Let's stick with Toby for the minute.
07:54Toby?
07:5525 times 6 is 150.
07:57Yep.
07:58Plus 1 is 151.
08:00It is indeed.
08:019 minus 5 is 4, and times them together.
08:04Perfect again, 604.
08:05Well done.
08:09Well done there, Toby.
08:11Sprung a 10 point lead.
08:1224 to 0.
08:14It's 14 as we turn to our first tea time teaser, which is anti-nomad.
08:18And the clue, to some, it's the ultimate punishment for living a sinful life.
08:25For some, it's the ultimate punishment for living a sinful life.
08:29Welcome back.
08:47I left you with the clue.
08:47To some, it's the ultimate punishment for living a sinful life.
08:51What is?
08:54Why?
08:54Damnation is.
08:56Damnation.
08:5724 to 14, Toby in the lead.
09:00Illish?
09:01Letters game.
09:02Could I have a vowel, please?
09:04Thank you, Illish.
09:05I.
09:06And a consonant.
09:07G.
09:09Another consonant, please.
09:11T.
09:13A vowel.
09:15U.
09:15Consonant.
09:18N.
09:21A consonant.
09:22R.
09:24A vowel.
09:26E.
09:28Consonant.
09:30P.
09:32And a consonant, please.
09:33And lastly, V.
09:36Stand by.
09:37OK.
09:53MUSIC CONTINUES
10:10Hmm.
10:12Lelish?
10:14Dodgy six.
10:15Dodgy six. Toby?
10:17I think I've got an eight.
10:19Right. Lelish?
10:21Pinger.
10:21A pinger?
10:23A pinger?
10:24How about Toby?
10:25Reputing?
10:27Yes, reputing certainly in, as is a pinger,
10:31a device that transmits short high-pitched signals at brief intervals
10:33for purposes of detection or identification.
10:37A pinger?
10:37Yes.
10:40Now, Dr Phil?
10:42We got reputing, and that was it.
10:45Couldn't get any more than that, so that was our top one too.
10:48Susie, that's it?
10:49That's it, yes.
10:5032 plays 14.
10:51Toby on the 32, where else?
10:54And it's Toby's letters game.
10:56Consonant, please, Rachel.
10:57Thank you, Toby.
10:58G.
10:59And another.
11:01T.
11:02And another.
11:04S.
11:05A vowel.
11:07O.
11:08And another.
11:09E.
11:10And another.
11:12U.
11:13Consonant.
11:14D.
11:16A vowel.
11:18A.
11:20And a consonant, please.
11:22And the last one, N.
11:24Stand by.
11:26On N.
11:26D.
11:37And a consonant, please.
11:38TOBY
11:577
11:58Nilesh
11:597
12:002 7s
12:01And Toby 7?
12:02Outages
12:03And Nilesh?
12:04Tongues
12:05Tongues, yeah
12:06And our old friend, outages
12:09And over in the corner
12:10We have the sutan that comes up quite a lot
12:13The Roman Catholic's priest's cassock
12:15Very good
12:16But we couldn't get any more than that
12:18Thank you
12:1939 to 21
12:20Nilesh
12:21Numbers game
12:23One from the top and any other five please
12:26Thank you Nilesh
12:27Same again, one big, five small
12:30And this time they are
12:322
12:338
12:341
12:356
12:36Another 2
12:37And 75
12:39And the target 947
12:41947
12:429
12:529
12:537
12:55Well, Nilesh?
13:15Erm, I...
13:16Sorry, I've lost it.
13:18What's Toby done?
13:19947.
13:22Off we go.
13:22Er, 75 times 2 is 150.
13:26Yep.
13:27Plus 8.
13:28On 5, 8.
13:29Times 6 is 948.
13:31It is indeed.
13:32And takeaway 1.
13:33Lovely again.
13:34947.
13:35Well done.
13:39Excellent.
13:4049 plays 21 as we turn to Dr Phil Hammond.
13:44Yes, sir.
13:45Hello.
13:46I've been touring the country with a show called Happy Birthday NHS?
13:50Question mark.
13:51To celebrate 70 years of the NHS.
13:54And we've been talking about the genesis of it.
13:55How it had quite a difficult birth.
13:58Nye Bevan, as I explained previously, had this very passionate view.
14:00He was going to push it through in six months.
14:02And yet 85% of doctors, mainly GPs in the BMA, opposed it.
14:07And the Conservative newspaper said, oh, if we have a socialist government, they'll have
14:11their own Gestapo.
14:12It'll be like Stalin.
14:13And they were worried about being controlled by the state.
14:16But actually, the BMA had a second vote after the Royal Colleges supported Bevan.
14:21And in the second vote, only 60% of doctors were against it.
14:24And when you talk to the doctors about why they were coming round to the idea, they said,
14:27our patients are frightened.
14:29And that was the main thing that Bevan was saying.
14:31We were saying, we're going to introduce this in place of fear.
14:33Because before the NHS, people were too frightened to go to the doctor.
14:36People would die of a burst appendix because they couldn't afford the medical bills.
14:40And they'd feed their child castor oil.
14:42And there were lots of instances of this happening.
14:44And also, there was a general public mood that this is what we fought the war for.
14:48There was the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1947.
14:50This idea that we should have a war on want, the welfare state.
14:54And we should share the spoils of war with the poor.
14:56So Bevan knew he had the public on his side.
14:58And this was his absolute masterstroke.
15:00Almost like the war.
15:00He started putting out these propaganda films.
15:03Saying to the doctors, look, this is going to start on July the 5th, whatever you do.
15:07And there were these wonderful films in the cinema that said, they were quite scary.
15:10They said 80,000 people die a year of diphtheria.
15:14That's one every 50 minutes.
15:16But that's preventable if you register with a GP practice now on the NHS and have your vaccination.
15:22And all of a sudden, people started registering with the 40% of doctors who were in favour of the NHS.
15:26And the doctors who were left out were thinking, golly, I'm not going to have any patients.
15:29I won't have any money.
15:30So very cleverly, he used the public support of this to win the doctors' round.
15:36It opened its doors on July the 5th.
15:38Unsurprisingly, the NHS vastly exceeded its budget because there was so much poverty and unmet need.
15:43And the government decided to introduce prescription charges.
15:46And Nye Bevan resigned three years afterwards.
15:48But his legacy is extraordinary.
15:50Ten years after the introduction of the NHS, 80% reduction in infectious diseases.
15:55We started vaccinating young people.
15:56Mortality rates had soared.
15:59And there had been big reduction in childhood mortality as well.
16:02So just within ten years.
16:04And I still think this is an extraordinary legacy.
16:06And we look at it today, partly it's a victim of its own success.
16:09When the NHS was founded, half of us died before the age of 65.
16:12Now one in three people will live to 100.
16:14So when we think about the NHS, yes, it has its troubles.
16:17But we should remember what an extraordinary thing it is.
16:19And we should feel proud that we invented universal health care in this country.
16:24Hear, hear.
16:26Hear, hear.
16:28Yeah.
16:31Now we've had some experiences recently.
16:33We think it's great in our family.
16:35It is extraordinary.
16:36It's a great thing.
16:3849 plays 21.
16:39Toby on 49.
16:40And it's Toby's letters game.
16:43Consonant, please, Rachel.
16:45Thank you, Toby.
16:46C.
16:47And another.
16:50W.
16:51And another.
16:53T.
16:54A vowel.
16:55I.
16:56And another.
16:58E.
16:58And another.
17:00U.
17:01A consonant.
17:03T.
17:04A vowel.
17:06E.
17:08And a final consonant, please.
17:10And a final T.
17:13Countdown.
17:17T.
17:19MUSIC CONTINUES
17:49MUSIC CONTINUES
18:19MUSIC CONTINUES
18:49And the clock starts right now.
18:51MUSIC CONTINUES
19:24Uh, seven.
19:25And Toby?
19:26Seven.
19:28Nillish?
19:28Primary.
19:29Primary and?
19:30Mariner.
19:32Yes.
19:33And Mariner.
19:34Yep.
19:35Can we match that?
19:36No, we've got primary.
19:38Yep.
19:38We're slipping off the pace a bit.
19:40How are we, Susie?
19:40I don't know what's happened.
19:42But we're matching, but we're not exceeding at the moment.
19:44I blame Susie.
19:45I'll try harder.
19:46Always blame me, yeah.
19:46All right.
19:4962 to 34.
19:51Toby, numbers time for you.
19:54And inverted T, please, Rachel.
19:56Back to your favourite inverted T.
19:58One large, five little.
20:00And for this round, they are eight, five, three, six, two, and 25.
20:07And the target, 363.
20:11Three, six, three.
20:12Two, three, six, three.
20:43Yes, Toby?
20:45Three, six, three.
20:46Three, six, three, Nillish?
20:48Um, yes, three, six, three.
20:51Toby?
20:5225 times five.
20:54One, two, five.
20:56Six minus two is four.
20:58Six minus two, four.
20:59Take it away for 121.
21:01Yep.
21:02And times by three.
21:03That'll do it.
21:05Well done, Nillish.
21:06I think I've got it wrong.
21:08Sorry.
21:08Thank you for that.
21:09Sorry.
21:09OK.
21:1172 to 34, as we turn to our second Tea Time Teaser, which is Bold Mania.
21:17And the clue, it wasn't a pain in the neck.
21:20It was somewhere else.
21:21It wasn't a pain in the neck.
21:23It was somewhere else.
21:25Welcome back.
21:42I left with the clue.
21:43It wasn't a pain in the neck.
21:45It was somewhere else.
21:47Where was it?
21:48Why, it was an abdominal pain.
21:51Abdominal.
21:5272 to 34, and it's Nillish we turn to.
21:56Yes, sir.
21:57Could I have a vowel, please?
21:58Thank you, Nillish.
21:59U.
22:00And a consonant.
22:03D.
22:04Another consonant, please.
22:06S.
22:08A vowel.
22:08A.
22:11Consonant.
22:13M.
22:14Consonant.
22:16R.
22:18Vowel.
22:19I.
22:21Consonant.
22:23D.
22:24And a final vowel, please.
22:27And a final O.
22:30Stand by.
22:31For more information, visit our website.
22:32See you next time.
22:32Bye.
22:33Bye.
22:34Bye.
22:35Bye.
22:35Bye.
22:36Bye.
22:37Bye.
22:37Bye.
22:57Bye.
22:59Bye.
22:59Bye.
23:00Bye.
23:00Bye.
23:01Nilesh.
23:03Just six.
23:04A six, Toby?
23:05Eight.
23:06Eight, Nilesh.
23:08Radios.
23:09Yes, Toby.
23:11Marudis.
23:13Ooh.
23:15Erm, yes, and you can put the S on too.
23:19It's spelled in many different ways.
23:20This is one of them.
23:21In Guyana, any of several large tree-dwelling birds resembling pheasants.
23:25Excellent.
23:25Right.
23:26A flock of Marudis, well, I'm dashed.
23:33Dr Phil and Susie?
23:34No, I couldn't beat Marudis if I got nowhere near Marudis.
23:37Didn't even know Marudis existed until about five seconds ago.
23:41None of us did.
23:42Anything else, Susie?
23:43Radios is there as well, but that's excellent.
23:45Well done.
23:47Brilliant.
23:48Toby, you're back on.
23:50Letters again.
23:51Consonant, please, Rachel.
23:53Thank you, Toby.
23:54B.
23:55And another.
23:57R.
23:58And another.
24:00G.
24:02A vowel.
24:04E.
24:04And another.
24:06A.
24:07And another.
24:09I.
24:10A consonant.
24:11T.
24:13A vowel.
24:15E.
24:16And a consonant, please.
24:19And lastly, F.
24:21Stand by.
24:22OK.
24:26Well, Toby.
24:54Seven.
24:55Nilesh.
24:55Seven.
24:57And Toby.
24:58Frigate.
24:59Nilesh.
24:59The same.
25:02And over in the corner.
25:04We saw three frigates come sailing by, but that's all we've got.
25:07Can't beat frigate.
25:08Oh, four figures.
25:09There you go.
25:11Any more?
25:12No.
25:13Single seven.
25:14That'll do.
25:1587 to 41.
25:17Susie, what have you for us today, I wonder?
25:20I have an email from Robin A.
25:23Pounder, who's wondering about the word maroon, and he ponders whether it comes from the French
25:29for chestnut in terms of the colour, but he's wondering how there's a connection if
25:35there is one with the signal at sea, the maroon, that is a distress signal, and finally marooning
25:40someone on the desert island, so he's wondering about all the links between the three senses
25:43of maroon.
25:45And I'll start off with the colour, because Robin is right in thinking we did take the
25:49name of this brownish-red colour from the French maroon, which is a chestnut.
25:53Maroon glacé is a rather delicious sugared chestnut that you can buy.
25:58But strange as it seems, there is a link between that chestnut and the firework that
26:03is used, indeed, as a distress signal at sea.
26:06It makes a single loud bang, like the noise of a cannon.
26:09It was used as a distress signal and, in fact, an air raid warning as well during World War
26:14I, so maroons were very well known to people who lived through that war.
26:19And the connection between the two senses of the word maroon is quite sweet, because in
26:23the 19th century imagination, and it goes back to then, the firework or the cannon, the
26:28noise of the cannon, sounded like a chestnut bursting in a fire, which I think is quite
26:32cute.
26:33But there's the third maroon that Robin asked about as well, and that's the one that means
26:37abandoned or lost.
26:38That has a very different origin, so no connection there.
26:41And it goes back to the maroons, with a capital M, and these were descendants of runaway slaves
26:47who escaped from plantations, particularly in Jamaica, Spanish-owned plantations, when the
26:54British moved in to Jamaica, and they fled to the mountains and forests, and they were
26:59incredibly hard to find.
27:01So they lived up there and they established communities as free people.
27:05But they take their name from the Spanish Thimaron, which meant wild or feral, and that's where
27:10maroon came from.
27:11And slowly over time, so about 100 years later, to maroon someone was to abandon them, rather
27:17as they had fled to somewhere desolate.
27:19It was to abandon them somewhere very remote, and leave them there as a form of punishment.
27:24And this was particularly done on the high seas.
27:26If a crew member, for example, had committed mutiny, he would be given a container of water,
27:32a little bit of food, and a pistol, should he want to take his own life.
27:35So it was very, very rough and brutal.
27:37But as I say, that one has a very different origin, and one that's not connected at all
27:41to a chestnut.
27:43Well done.
27:43Well, 87 to 41.
27:53Nilesh.
27:55Let's escape.
27:56Vowel, please.
27:57Thank you, Nilesh.
27:58O.
28:00A consonant.
28:02L.
28:04And another consonant.
28:06T.
28:07Vowel.
28:09A.
28:10Consonant.
28:13L.
28:14Another consonant.
28:16R.
28:18A vowel.
28:20O.
28:22A consonant.
28:24S.
28:25And a final vowel, please.
28:27And a final U.
28:30Stand by.
28:31Here we go.
29:02Nillish.
29:03Just a five, I'm afraid.
29:04A five, Toby?
29:05Five as well.
29:06Nillish.
29:07Tours.
29:08And Toby?
29:09Roast.
29:11And in the corner?
29:12Susie's got a word I'd never heard of.
29:14Yes, quite a rare noun.
29:16Out rolls.
29:17You can put the S on the action or an act of rolling something out.
29:21Quite rare.
29:22Yes, it'll probably remain so.
29:2392 to 46.
29:25Toby on 92.
29:26Toby's letters game.
29:27Final one of the day.
29:29A consonant, please, Rachel.
29:31Thank you, Toby.
29:32L.
29:33And another.
29:35S.
29:36And another.
29:39N.
29:40A vowel.
29:42I.
29:43And another.
29:45O.
29:45And another.
29:47E.
29:49A consonant.
29:50H.
29:52A vowel.
29:54A.
29:56And a consonant, please.
29:57And lastly, F.
29:59Stand by.
30:31Toby?
30:32Six.
30:33Nilesh?
30:34Seven.
30:35Thank you, Toby.
30:36Lesion.
30:37Now then?
30:38Fashion.
30:40And fashion.
30:40Well done.
30:41Nice seven.
30:42Good man.
30:43And Dr. Phil, Susie?
30:45No, I only got as far as lesion, which is a good medical word.
30:48You have a lesion.
30:49Sounds quite sinister and sometimes is, but not always.
30:52Can be nasty.
30:53All right.
30:5453.
30:54Well done, Nilesh.
30:5592, however, for Toby as we go into the final numbers game.
30:59Nilesh?
31:01I'll stay with one from the top and any other five, please.
31:03Thank you, Nilesh.
31:04One large five, little to finish the day.
31:06And the last selection is ten, nine, six, eight, another eight, and 25.
31:16And the target, 943.
31:17Nine, four, three.
31:36Lillish.
31:52Nine in here, I'm afraid.
31:53How did Toby do?
31:559-4-2, not written down.
31:58Not bad.
31:58Let's give it a go.
32:018 times 6 is 48.
32:048 times 6, 48.
32:06Take away 10 is 38.
32:07Yep.
32:08Times 25 for 950.
32:10950.
32:11And take away the other 8.
32:12For one away, well done.
32:14Very good.
32:15Is it possible to actually get to 9-4-3, Rachel?
32:19Leave it with me, it's a tricky one.
32:21Certainly will.
32:22So well done, Toby.
32:23Look at this, Toby.
32:2499 points.
32:26Ooh.
32:27Final round.
32:28Fingers on buzzers.
32:30Let's roll today's Countdown Conundrum.
32:35Nillish.
32:39Prescriber.
32:40Prescriber.
32:41Let's have a look.
32:44Nope.
32:45Now down to you, Toby.
32:48Oh, Toby, there you are.
32:50Is it just prescribed?
32:52Let's see.
32:54Oh, well done.
32:55Good.
32:58Oh, no, it's bad luck.
33:00That's bad luck.
33:01Nillish.
33:02Well played.
33:03Take this goodie bag back to your children.
33:06And good luck with your, you know, tutoring your young son with the cricket bat.
33:11I think he's tutoring me, but, yeah.
33:13All right.
33:13Thanks for coming.
33:15Wow, Toby.
33:15109.
33:16Look at this.
33:17Six wins.
33:18Six wins.
33:19Brilliant.
33:20We'll see you next time.
33:21See you next time.
33:21Well done.
33:22And we shall see Dr. Phil and Susie next time, too, of course.
33:25Yes, indeed.
33:26And I'm going to use some audience suggestions on how to improve the NHS.
33:29I've been going around the country asking people, because nobody listens to me, so ask
33:33the audience.
33:33Got some cracking ones that you'll approve of.
33:35You have a think, too.
33:36Can you tell me how you'd save the NHS, Nick?
33:38Indeed.
33:38Man with your size brain shouldn't be too difficult.
33:40I think I would tend to differ.
33:44Now, Rachel has cracked this for you.
33:46Nine for three, Rachel.
33:47Yes, I found it eventually.
33:48If you say eight times ten is 80, plus 25 for 105, times it by nine for 945, and then
33:57you've got another eight minus six for two to take away.
34:02Thank you, Rachel.
34:06Never fox for more than a couple of seconds.
34:09See you next time.
34:10See you next time.
34:10Join us then.
34:11Same time, same place.
34:12You be sure of it.
34:13A very good afternoon.
34:15Contact us by email at countdown at channel4.com, by Twitter at C4Countdown, or write to us
34:22at Countdown, Leeds, LS3, 1JS.
34:25You can also find our webpage at channel4.com forward slash countdown.

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