- 7 weeks ago
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00:31Well, good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown Studio.
00:35The Russians are at it again.
00:38They were the first people to put up the satellite Sputnik.
00:41I remember that, Rachel, in 1957.
00:44And now they're up to something else.
00:47This is a Russian start-up, you understand.
00:50I'm amazed and slightly concerned about this.
00:53I don't know what you think.
00:54It's the ability to project logos in the night sky.
01:00Advertising, effectively, in the night sky.
01:03And these advertisements, apparently they're beginning to say that maybe by 2021,
01:12everybody in the world will be able to see advertisements which will be projected from an array of satellites.
01:20I think it's incredible.
01:22Mind you, what is also incredible is the amount they can charge.
01:26Half a million bucks for ten days.
01:28I mean, on a lovely balmy summer's evening, there's nothing better than to lie on your back and gaze at
01:34the night sky.
01:35And imagine the horror if suddenly you're confronted with a sort of a fizzy drink advertisement that would be seen
01:42by everybody in the world.
01:44I mean, that's reach, isn't it?
01:45Let's hope it doesn't happen, Rachel.
01:47Yeah, I'm with you.
01:48I'd rather see the stars.
01:49Absolutely.
01:50Now, we've got a bit of a star with us here.
01:52David Law's a bit of a star.
01:54Cheer up, David.
01:56You're going to be an Octo Champ with some luck.
01:59Look at you.
02:00Seven great wins.
02:01Well done.
02:01You're joined by Roy Anderson, a community networker from Scotland, from Forres in Moray.
02:09Now, tell us about this community networking.
02:12Okay.
02:12It's with a project with a very strange-sounding name.
02:15The project is called Legowit.
02:17Nothing to do with building bricks, I hasten to add.
02:20It actually stands for Let's Get On With It Together.
02:24And it supports people living with any kind of long-term condition to self-manage their health and well-being.
02:32And hopefully by doing that, lead a better quality of life.
02:35And it's a national programme?
02:37No, it's only in Highland.
02:39We are unique.
02:40It's only run in Highland, so.
02:42And is it likely to spread?
02:43Sounds like a great deal to me.
02:45Hopefully will.
02:45Hopefully will.
02:46But we're watching the copyright very carefully.
02:49Well, thanks for coming.
02:50Both of you have a lot of fun.
02:51Big round of applause for David and Roy.
02:59And there's Susie looking after.
03:01Well, he doesn't need looking after.
03:02He's been with us for, I don't know, four days now, isn't it?
03:06Yep.
03:07And it's Raj, the wonderful Raj Bishram, antiques expert and broadcaster.
03:12Welcome back.
03:15Now it's time for David to kick off on his quest for that up there, Champton.
03:22Afternoon, Rachel.
03:23Afternoon, David.
03:24Start with a consonant, please.
03:25Start today with G.
03:27And another.
03:29S.
03:30And a third.
03:32B.
03:33And a vowel, please.
03:35U.
03:37And another.
03:39E.
03:40And a third.
03:42O.
03:44And a consonant, please.
03:47And a consonant, please.
03:48And another.
03:50R.
03:51And a vowel, please.
03:53And lastly, E.
03:55And here's the countdown clock.
03:57And a vowel, please.
04:01And a vowel, please.
04:02And a vowel, please.
04:08And a vowel, please.
04:10And a vowel, please.
04:12And a vowel, please.
04:13And a vowel, please.
04:13And a vowel, please.
04:15And a vowel, please.
04:15And a vowel, please.
04:16And a vowel, please.
04:16And a vowel, please.
04:16And a vowel, please.
04:16And a vowel, please.
04:18And a vowel, please.
04:19And a vowel, please.
04:27David.
04:28Seven, not written down.
04:30Roy? Seven.
04:32So, David.
04:33Rubles.
04:35Roy, burgles.
04:37And burgles.
04:39Both good.
04:40And in the corner?
04:41I've got a seven.
04:42Brogues?
04:43Yes.
04:44Yep, the shoes or the Marx accent.
04:46Like, Roy has a great brogue.
04:48And buglers are there for seven as well.
04:51All right.
04:52So, seven apiece.
04:54Now, Roy.
04:54Your letters go.
04:56Good afternoon, Rachel.
04:57Afternoon, Roy.
04:58Could I have a consonant, please?
05:00Start with P.
05:02And a vowel.
05:04I.
05:05A consonant.
05:07M.
05:09And a vowel.
05:11A.
05:12A consonant, please.
05:14D.
05:15And another.
05:17V.
05:19And a vowel, please.
05:21O.
05:22A consonant, please.
05:25R.
05:27And a final consonant, please.
05:31A final T.
05:32Stand by.
05:33The怕.
05:43Music.
05:44Music.
05:44Music.
06:04Roy?
06:05I have got a five, not written down.
06:08David?
06:09Six.
06:10And a six.
06:11So, Roy?
06:12Divot, D-I-V-O-T.
06:14Mm-hm.
06:15David?
06:16Pardon.
06:17And pardon?
06:18Yes.
06:19Can we match that, Raj?
06:20I can't better that, I'm afraid.
06:22Pardon.
06:22Susie?
06:23Well, if you know your French, you might know about a poignard, which is a dagger.
06:28And it came over into English as a poignard, so P-O-N-I-A-R-D, and it's a
06:33small, slim dagger
06:34all night.
06:3513 plays seven.
06:37David on 13.
06:38David, your numbers game?
06:39All right, Rachel.
06:40I think you know one large five small, please.
06:42Oh, you might say that.
06:43Thank you, David.
06:43One large five little.
06:44First one of the day.
06:45I is 10, 9, 3, 5, 7, and the big one, 75.
06:55And the target, 142.
06:58One, four, two.
06:59One, four, three, three, four, three.
07:30David?
07:31Yeah, one for two.
07:32Roy?
07:33One for two.
07:35Take it away, David.
07:36Nine minus seven equals two.
07:38Yep.
07:39Times 75.
07:41150.
07:41150.
07:42And take away the five and the three.
07:44Lovely, one for two.
07:46And Roy?
07:47In fact, all the same.
07:49There we go.
07:50OK.
07:55So, 23 plays 17.
07:57David in the lead.
07:58As we turn to our first tea-tongue teaser, which is uni lovers.
08:02And the clue, there were lovers while they were at uni together, but over time their feelings altered drastically.
08:09They were lovers while they were at uni together, but over time their feelings altered drastically.
08:34And the answer to that is revulsion.
08:41Revulsion.
08:43Oh, dear.
08:4323 plays 17.
08:45David in the lead.
08:46Roy, it's your letters game.
08:49I could have a consonant, please, Rachel.
08:51Thank you, Roy.
08:52X.
08:53And a vowel.
08:54A.
08:56And a consonant.
08:58C.
08:59And a vowel.
09:01E.
09:02And a consonant.
09:05D.
09:06And another, please.
09:08M.
09:09A vowel, please.
09:11I.
09:12And a consonant.
09:15T.
09:16And a final consonant.
09:19A final S.
09:21Standby.
09:21A vowel.
09:23A vowel.
09:25A vowel.
09:29A vowel.
09:37A vowel.
09:39A vowel.
09:39A vowel.
09:39A vowel.
09:39A vowel.
09:52Roy?
09:54Seven.
09:55Seven, David?
09:56Seven as well.
09:57Roy?
09:59Decants.
10:00David?
10:01Miss Date.
10:03Miss Date is there, but there's no N for decants there, Roy, I'm afraid.
10:08Sorry, I've copied down the wrong.
10:09Sorry about that.
10:11That's bad luck, OK.
10:12And in the corner?
10:13Exact.
10:14This is there for six.
10:16Yeah.
10:1730 to 17.
10:19David, your letters came.
10:20Consonant, please, Rachel.
10:22Thank you, David.
10:23C.
10:24And another.
10:26M.
10:27And a third.
10:29T.
10:30And a vowel.
10:32A.
10:33And another.
10:34O.
10:35And another.
10:37E.
10:39And a consonant, please.
10:42R.
10:43And another.
10:45L.
10:46And a vowel, please.
10:48And lastly, I.
10:51Stand by.
11:11And another.
11:20L.
11:22David?
11:23Seven.
11:24Roy?
11:25Just a five, I'm afraid.
11:27And your five is?
11:29Trial.
11:30David?
11:31Climate.
11:32Yes, very nice.
11:33Climate.
11:34Can we match or improve that?
11:36Raj?
11:37Got a seven.
11:37Erotica.
11:39Ah, erotica, indeed.
11:41Susie, anything else?
11:42There's lector for a reader, especially one in the church service, but erotica was our best.
11:48Erotica.
11:4837 to 17.
11:50Roy, how about a numbers game for you?
11:54Two large and four small, Rachel, please.
11:56You can indeed.
11:57Two from the top row this time.
11:59Thank you, Roy.
12:00And these four little ones are five, seven, one, and two, and the big one's one hundred
12:06and twenty-five.
12:08And the target, nine hundred and eighty-five.
12:11Nine, eight, five.
12:43Well, Roy?
12:44Er, nine, nine, five, not written down.
12:46David?
12:48I think I've got nine, eight, five.
12:50Let's try.
12:51Seven plus one plus two is ten.
12:53Seven plus one plus two, ten.
12:56Times a hundred.
12:57Times one hundred, a thousand.
13:00Minus twenty-five and add five.
13:03That gets you to nine hundred and eighty, so that's five away, I'm afraid.
13:06I think that's what I said, didn't I?
13:07You said nine, eight, five.
13:08Did I?
13:08Oh, I'm sorry.
13:09I've got nine eighty written on me.
13:11Oh, dear.
13:13Oh, dear.
13:14Roy.
13:15OK.
13:16One hundred.
13:17Sorry.
13:17Seven plus one plus two is ten.
13:19Seven plus one plus two, ten.
13:21Times one hundred.
13:23One thousand.
13:23Is a thousand.
13:25And minus a five.
13:26Yes.
13:26Ten away.
13:28Well done, Rachel.
13:31Rachel, nine, eight, five.
13:33Yes, it was there.
13:34You say one hundred plus one, one hundred and one.
13:38Two times five is ten.
13:40Times those together for one thousand and ten.
13:43And take the twenty-five.
13:44Oh, well done.
13:45Well done.
13:47That was bad luck to you, David.
13:50But you're still ahead.
13:51Thirty-seven to Roy's twenty-two as we switch to Raj.
13:56And Raj, you know this teapot is priceless.
13:59But you've got a story about a fairly expensive teapot, haven't you?
14:02I have.
14:03Well, this is this is a fairly recent story.
14:05This only happened literally, you know, not that many months ago.
14:09And Salisbury's had a little bit of Brad Press.
14:11But this is this is good for Salisbury.
14:14And also it's good for people who are interested in collecting because everyone thinks that it's just the experts that
14:22have this feeling.
14:23But this guy who has actually remained anonymous for 30 years, he'd been collecting ceramics and studying ceramics.
14:31And this really did pay off for him because he went to an auction in Lincolnshire and he spotted a
14:39broken teapot.
14:40And it was pretty broken.
14:42But he had a feeling he picked it up, felt it, just had a real feeling about it.
14:47And so he decided to bid on it.
14:49He paid 15 pounds for it and he took it home and he started to do as much research as
14:55he could.
14:55But he couldn't find out who the maker was.
14:57He just had there was no markings on it, but he knew that it was an early piece.
15:01So he decided to take it to an auction house in Salisbury and they had a ceramics expert.
15:07And she had a look at it and she said, I think this could be by John Bartlam.
15:13And he was a very famous potter in Britain in the mid 18th century.
15:19But what used to happen was in Britain, we used to make all the pottery and the potteries and then
15:25send it to America.
15:26So he decided that he would go to America and open up a factory.
15:31And he opened it up in 1763.
15:36And his surviving pieces are very, very few and far between.
15:40I think there's only six pieces known to survive.
15:43But they weren't sure exactly how much this teapot was going to make because it was very, very damaged.
15:49Anyway, they put it in the auction with an estimate of 10 to 20,000 pounds.
15:56And the way they could recognize his pottery was because he actually did.
16:00He was quite unique.
16:01His decoration was palm trees, but it was a specific palm that he put on his decoration.
16:07So it was quite easy for them to have a look at.
16:09Anyway, the bidding reached 20,000 pounds.
16:13It went up to 100,000 pounds.
16:16And then the auctioneer decided to put it up in 20,000 pound lots.
16:19It got to a quarter of a million.
16:21And so he decided to turn the bidding into 50,000 lots.
16:26Anyway, to cut a long story short, it made 575,000 pounds.
16:33An incredible amount.
16:34And it's absolutely unique.
16:37And they are saying now it was bought by the Metropolitan Museum in America.
16:41And they're saying that it's the first piece of American pottery ever known.
16:47575,000 pounds.
16:49And he was an amateur collector.
16:51Fantastic.
16:51I love stories like that.
16:53No, it's a great story.
16:54That's a great story.
16:59That's lovely.
17:0037 plays 22.
17:02David in the lead.
17:04David, it's your letters game now.
17:05Yeah, constant, please, Rachel.
17:07Thank you, David.
17:08D.
17:09And another.
17:11G.
17:12And a third.
17:14N.
17:15And a vowel.
17:16A.
17:17And another.
17:19O.
17:20And another.
17:22U.
17:24A consonant.
17:26J.
17:27And another.
17:29R.
17:31And a vowel, please.
17:32And the last one.
17:33E.
17:35Stand by.
17:35B.
17:36For now.
17:58Bye.
18:01Bye.
18:07David?
18:08Seven.
18:09And Roy?
18:10Seven.
18:11David?
18:12Undergo.
18:13Undergo. Roy?
18:15Adjourn.
18:17Adjourn.
18:17Yeah, that's very good.
18:19Now, what do you think, Raj?
18:21I've got adjourn, that's it.
18:22Can't be that.
18:23Susie?
18:24I had undergo, so we matched both.
18:26That's it?
18:26Yes.
18:27Moving on, 44 to 29.
18:29Roy, your letters came.
18:32Consonant, please, Rachel.
18:33Thank you, Roy.
18:34S.
18:35And a vowel.
18:38I.
18:39And a consonant.
18:41R.
18:42And a vowel.
18:43O.
18:44And a consonant.
18:47C.
18:48And another one.
18:50P.
18:51And a vowel.
18:53A.
18:55A consonant.
18:57T.
18:59And a final consonant.
19:02Final F.
19:03Standby.
19:04was büy growth.
19:13All right.
19:17Bye.
19:18Bye.
19:20Bye.
19:24Bye.
19:30Bye.
19:31Bye.
19:32Bye.
19:34Well, Roy?
19:36Seven.
19:37David?
19:38Seven.
19:39Roy, seven.
19:40Factors.
19:41And?
19:42Captors.
19:43And Captors.
19:45Yes, both good.
19:46Two good sevens.
19:47Raj?
19:48Gone eight.
19:49Apricots.
19:51Oh, well done.
19:52Very good.
19:57Susie, anything else?
19:58Can't bet to that.
19:59No, excellent.
20:0051 to 36.
20:02And it's a numbers game for David Law.
20:05David?
20:05Well, for the last time, Rachel, one large five small, please.
20:08Should have stopped asking by now.
20:10Thank you, David.
20:10One large five little, then you get a rest.
20:13And these numbers are three, nine, one, eight.
20:19Another nine and 50.
20:22And this target, 597.
20:25Five, nine, seven.
20:57Five, nine, eight.
20:59And Roy?
21:00No, three, I've lost it.
21:02Let's rely on David.
21:0350 plus nine is 59.
21:0650 plus nine, 59.
21:08Nine plus one is 10.
21:10And multiply.
21:11Five hundred and ninety.
21:12And add the eight.
21:13One away, lovely.
21:14One away, though, Rachel.
21:15Can you find it?
21:16I found one way.
21:18If you say nine plus eight minus one is 16, plus 50 for 66, times the other nine for 594,
21:28and add on the three for five, nine, seven.
21:29Fabulous.
21:35Thank you, Rachel.
21:37As we turn to our second Tea Time teaser, which is Lend It Sag.
21:42And the clue, a certain area of his anatomy would lend itself to sagging.
21:46A certain area of his anatomy would lend itself to sagging.
22:07Welcome back.
22:09I left you with a clue.
22:11A certain area of his anatomy would lend itself to sagging.
22:16And the answer to that is the dangliest area of his anatomy would lend itself to sagging.
22:23Now, 58 plays 36, David on 58, and it's Roy's letters game.
22:30A consonant, please, Rachel.
22:32Thank you, Roy.
22:33M.
22:34And a vowel.
22:36E.
22:37And a consonant.
22:38N.
22:40A vowel, please.
22:42U.
22:43And a consonant.
22:45T.
22:46And another.
22:48L.
22:49And a vowel, please.
22:52I.
22:53And a consonant.
22:55F.
22:57And a final consonant, please.
23:00Final S.
23:03Countdown.
23:04And a vowel, please.
23:08And a vowel, please.
23:09And a vowel, please.
23:13And a vowel, please.
23:17And a vowel, please.
23:18And a vowel, please.
23:19And a vowel, please.
23:19And a vowel, please.
23:19And a vowel, please.
23:19And a vowel, please.
23:19And a vowel, please.
23:20And a vowel, please.
23:21And a vowel, please.
23:22And a vowel, please.
23:23And a vowel, please.
23:34Roy?
23:35Seven.
23:36David?
23:37Just six.
23:38Your six is?
23:39Flints.
23:41Now, Roy?
23:42Minuets.
23:43Yes, very nice.
23:45Minuets, indeed.
23:46Raj?
23:48Utensil?
23:49Seven.
23:50Minuets, just turn it round a little bit for minutes.
23:52So a few sevens there.
23:54Thanks for that.
23:55And it's 58 to 43.
23:57It's time.
23:58It's time, Roy.
23:59David, try this letters again.
24:00Consonant, please, Rachel.
24:02Thank you, David.
24:03M.
24:04And another.
24:06D.
24:07And a third.
24:09H.
24:10And a vowel, please.
24:12O.
24:13And another.
24:14E.
24:16And another.
24:18I.
24:19And a consonant.
24:21S.
24:23And another.
24:25P.
24:26And a vowel, please.
24:27And the last one.
24:29U.
24:29And here's the countdown clock.
24:31Bye-bye.
24:47Bye-bye.
24:55History,
24:56Bye-bye.
24:56Bye-bye.
24:57Bye-bye.
25:00Bye-bye.
25:02Well, David?
25:04Six.
25:05Six and?
25:06Six.
25:07David?
25:08Pushed.
25:09Roy?
25:10Pushed, yes.
25:10It's not actually written down, but I pushed.
25:12We've got to disallow that,
25:14because you've got to tell us whether you've written it down or not.
25:16Yes, indeed.
25:16There we are.
25:17What a shame.
25:17What about the corner?
25:19We've got the seven imposed.
25:21Yes, Susie?
25:23I have an Australian mushroom,
25:25otherwise known as a mushy.
25:27But imposed is our best, yes.
25:3064 to 43.
25:32Bad luck there.
25:33Bad luck, Roy.
25:34Susie?
25:35What have you got for us,
25:36by way of your origins of words?
25:39Well, I have a bit of a shout-out,
25:40but a shout-out with a sting in the tail,
25:43because you have to love tour guides.
25:46They do a really brilliant job,
25:47and they also have to inject as much colour into their stories
25:51as they're leading people around historic buildings, etc., as possible.
25:55But sometimes they just go a little bit too far,
25:58and linguists and etymologists tend to poke a bit of fun at some of the stories that come out.
26:03And I have to say that one of our lovely viewers,
26:05it's written in with one of the most ridiculous ones I've ever heard,
26:08but I thought I'd tell you what it is.
26:10It's Graham Offord, who says that during a tour to the Isle of Man,
26:14his wife and he were shown round Castle Russian in Castletown.
26:18I hope that's, I'm not sure if it's Castleton or Castletown,
26:21but in the Bankrupting Hall, the guide informed us that a former lord of the castle
26:25used to throw lavish parties for his guests
26:27and instructed his chefs to decorate cakes and pastries with gold leaf.
26:31As this proved expensive, he ordered his servants to collect the chamber pots
26:35from beneath the guests' beds the following morning and retrieve the gold,
26:39thus giving rise to the expression,
26:40going through the motions.
26:43Which just tickles me, it just makes me laugh.
26:47It is very, very far-fetched.
26:49And to go through the motions is much more boring than that.
26:51It's to act mechanically or without sincerity, that's the meaning.
26:54And it was originally to make quite literal motions or movements,
26:58but not the kind Graham was thinking of.
27:01It was to make gestures or hand movements
27:03that kind of mimicked another person's action
27:05without really sort of getting stuck in.
27:06And from there, it went on to describe anything that was half-hearted.
27:11But tour guides have given us many more stories
27:14that to kind of hang around, I have to say.
27:17I'll just relate one other one.
27:18It's the upper crust.
27:19Many a guide will tell you that in a medieval kitchen,
27:22ovens were heated by the burning of dry twigs
27:24and ashes were raked out, bread dough put in to bake,
27:28and the bottom half would then be covered in ashes
27:30and not much were good to anyone,
27:32apart from the sort of peasants, if you like.
27:34And the sort of the royalty and the elite and the aristocrats
27:38would have the upper crust, because it was properly baked
27:40and not covered in ashes.
27:43In fact, history shows upper crust was always mocking slang,
27:46really, for someone who just saw themselves
27:47as a cut above the rest.
27:49It's as simple as that.
27:50Very clever.
27:51Ah, well done.
27:52Thank you, Susie.
27:57Indeed.
27:57Now, Roy, we're on the run-in.
27:59It's your letters game.
28:00OK, consonant, please, Rachel.
28:02Thank you, Roy.
28:04Thank you, Roy.
28:04N.
28:04And a vowel.
28:06E.
28:07And a consonant.
28:09T.
28:10And a vowel.
28:12A.
28:14A consonant, please.
28:16H.
28:17And another.
28:20N.
28:21And a vowel, please.
28:24I.
28:25And a consonant.
28:27L.
28:29And a final consonant.
28:31And a final K.
28:33Stand by.
28:34And a vowel.
28:37And a vowel.
28:51And a vowel.
28:52And a vowel.
28:52And a vowel.
28:52And a vowel.
28:53And a vowel.
28:53And a vowel.
28:53And a vowel.
28:53And a vowel.
28:55And a vowel.
29:04Roy. Six. A six, David? Yeah, six. Roy? Tinkle. Tinkle. Two tinkles. Any more tinkles over there, Raj? No, I've
29:16got entail. Yeah. Six. And Susie?
29:20Um, well, if you had an aerial view, I guess, of commuters kind of swarming in, um, or off a
29:26train in the morning, they might look a bit ant-like. Thank you. 70 to 49. David, final letters game
29:32for you. A consonant, please, Rachel. Thank you, David. S. And another. N. And a vowel. E. And another. I.
29:46And a third. O.
29:48And a consonant. S. And another. T. And another. G. And another consonant, please. And lastly, S. Stand by.
30:36David? Seven. And Roy? Just six, I think. And your six? Tennis. Thank you, Roy. David?
30:45Tossing. Yes, tossing is great. Tennis, unfortunately, not there, because you need two Ns, Roy. Sorry.
30:51Now, what can we have there? Raj? Susie? I've got egoists. Yes? Yes, and I have nosiest. Thank you.
31:00So, here we are. 77 to 49. David's favour. It's Roy's numbers game. Yes, Roy?
31:06Two large and four small, Rachel, please. Thank you, Roy. Last one of the day.
31:10Two from the top four. Little. And they are 7, 2, 10, 4. And the large two, 75 and 100.
31:20And the target, 423.
31:234, 2, 3.
31:245, 2, 3.
31:55Well, Roy, 428.
31:59428, David?
32:01424.
32:03We'll turn to you first, David.
32:054 times 100.
32:074 times 100, 400.
32:097 times 2 is 14.
32:11Yeah.
32:12Another 10 as well.
32:13One away.
32:14424.
32:16424, but 423 just rounded off nicely, Rachel.
32:19Another one for me.
32:21If you say 100 plus 7, 107.
32:24Times that by 4, 428.
32:27And then 10 divided by 2 is 5 to take away for 423.
32:32Well done.
32:36Slam dunk.
32:38423 indeed.
32:39So 84 to 49, David.
32:43And Roy, fingers on buzzers.
32:45Let's roll today's Countdown Conundrum.
32:51Roy.
32:52Chubbiest.
32:54Chubbiest.
32:55Let's see whether you're right.
32:56Yes, you are.
32:57Oh, well done.
33:05Excellent.
33:06Well done, David.
33:06I'll come to you in a second.
33:08Our latest Octo Champ.
33:09Well done.
33:10But Roy, play well.
33:11Play strongly.
33:12And you've got the conundrum too, which is always the great thing.
33:14I love that.
33:15So thank you very much for coming.
33:18Fantastic.
33:19Well, look, take your goodie bag.
33:20Have a safe journey home.
33:23Thanks, Roy.
33:24Wow.
33:25Now, are you cheerful about all this?
33:27Of course.
33:27It's a smile.
33:28Well done.
33:29We'll see you around Christmas time.
33:30Okay.
33:31In the finals.
33:32Well done.
33:33No problem.
33:33Congratulations.
33:34Congratulations.
33:36We won't be seeing you for a little while, but you come back and see us soon again.
33:40You get down and...
33:42Find out some more stories.
33:43Get some more stories and have some good finds in the auction room.
33:47It's fun, isn't it?
33:48It's great fun.
33:49And thank you very much for having me.
33:50No, we love it.
33:51We love it.
33:52Thank you, Susie.
33:52Come and see you soon again.
33:53And we shall see Susie tomorrow?
33:55Yes, you will.
33:55See you tomorrow.
33:56All right.
33:57Who's coming tomorrow, Rach?
33:58Tomorrow we've got Martin Lewis, money-saving expert, in tomorrow.
34:01Oh, we need him.
34:03All right.
34:04We'll see you then.
34:05See you then.
34:05Thanks, Rachel.
34:06See you then.
34:08Join us at the same time tomorrow.
34:10You'll be sure of it.
34:10A very good afternoon.
34:13Contact us by email at countdown at channel4.com, by Twitter at C4Countdown, or write to us at
34:20Countdown, Leeds, LS3, 1JS.
34:23You can also find our webpage at channel4.com forward slash countdown.