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00:30Hello, everybody. Welcome to Countdown, the soundtrack to many an afternoon across Great Britain.
00:36You write down the words, you work out the numbers, we will keep the score.
00:40Thanks for tuning in. Hi, Rachel.
00:42Hi, Cole.
00:42Love how high-pitched that was. It's enthusiasm to me.
00:46Two things coming together on this day connected to the same thing, which is film scores.
00:50Because it was the release of A Fistful of Dollars, which gave birth to the Spaghetti Westerns,
00:56Sergio Leone, and of course the soundtracks were Ennio Morricone, and they're unbelievable.
01:01And the other thing, it's Hans Zimmer's birthday today.
01:04La Samurai and Gladiator and No Time to Die and all these amazing, amazing movies.
01:10You know, soundtracks we love.
01:12You know, like, where you get a track that already exists, I've Had the Time of My Life, Dirty Dancing.
01:16But scores are entirely different. This is the original music.
01:19And when it's right, the score is bigger than the actual movie itself.
01:25Two notes.
01:26Da-da.
01:27Yeah.
01:28Da-da.
01:28The classic.
01:29Right? John Williams, the master of it, right?
01:31Star Wars, Jaws, Jurassic Park.
01:34But it's also TV.
01:36Yeah.
01:36Like, if you say Game of Thrones to me, I think of the theme tune before anything else.
01:41Yeah. Where's Harry Potter without the little jingle?
01:43Oh, Hedwig's theme. Great example.
01:46And that, believe it or not, is John Williams, Star Wars.
01:50Oh, of course it is.
01:50Exactly the same guy. I mean, how prolific is he?
01:53Disney as well. All the animated movies, actually, they just, it's about the score, isn't it?
01:57You can think of, you know, The Lion King.
01:58Yeah.
01:59And it's all about that every little note that's created, every little sound that's artificial and just put in there
02:04to bring the story to life.
02:05Well, that's the beautiful blurring of the lines, isn't it?
02:08Well, you get an actual pop song created by, like, say, Tim Rice and Elton John just for The Lion
02:14King.
02:14And that's when it's at its absolute best.
02:17Yeah.
02:17You wouldn't know Psycho without the score.
02:20Yeah, true.
02:20The Sharsi.
02:21It's immediately what you think of straight away.
02:23It's unbelievable.
02:24But let's not forget the TV-themed tunes as well, because I think that's really important.
02:28I know. Should we slag any off, or should we?
02:31No, let's not.
02:33Let's be nice.
02:34Let's be nice.
02:35Let's go over to Dictionary Corner.
02:37She's often gone with the wind and turning up the thermostat.
02:40It's our Susie Dent.
02:42And whether this week is the godfather of impressions, John Colshaw.
02:46APPLAUSE
02:48All right.
02:49Alex Cole is one of the best, isn't he?
02:51Really good scores.
02:52Five wins could be enough in Series 90.
02:54Could be enough to get you through to the final eight at the end of the series just before Christmas.
02:59Because, John, we've only had two octal champs so far.
03:03Could be our third.
03:04We will see.
03:05Well, listen.
03:07Awkward.
03:07This is awkward.
03:09Bird's Books in Swindon.
03:11Let's introduce Claire Harris, who's from Swindon.
03:14How are you, Claire?
03:15Good, thank you.
03:16Now, what's your favourite thing about Alex's bookstore?
03:20I don't know yet.
03:22LAUGHTER
03:24But I'm going to find out.
03:26It's too late now.
03:27The offence has been caused, Claire.
03:29We had a lot of fun before the credits rolled, before our score started today.
03:33Just talking to Claire about not going in.
03:35But this is how friends are made.
03:36You'll be nipping in there, won't you, and having a look?
03:37If he lets me in.
03:40You've got ten guinea pigs.
03:42I have.
03:43I love doing this.
03:44I love doing this.
03:45Because it will calm you down.
03:46If you get this right, you won't be nervous for the first round.
03:48Name them.
03:49OK.
03:50Flossie, cotton, candy, peachy, cocoa, sparkle, wilf, maple, Snoopy and Charlie.
03:58APPLAUSE
04:00Well done.
04:02Do they breed?
04:04Some of them are homegrown, but some of them have come in as extras to keep others company.
04:10But I think it's a bit of a midlife crisis.
04:13Just so you know, Alex operates a no guinea pigs policy at the bookstore, so you're going to have to
04:18leave them at home.
04:18And no books in my guinea pigs' cages.
04:22Right, best of luck to most of you, Claire and Alex.
04:26Off you go, Alex.
04:27Hi, Rachel.
04:28Hi, Alex.
04:29Can I have a consonant, please?
04:30You can indeed start today with S.
04:33And a vowel, please.
04:35I.
04:36And a consonant.
04:38D.
04:39A vowel, please.
04:41E.
04:42And a consonant.
04:44N.
04:46And another vowel.
04:48O.
04:49And a consonant, please.
04:51T.
04:53And a vowel, please.
04:54Come on!
04:56Oh!
04:57A.
04:58And a consonant, please.
05:00And lastly, P.
05:02I can't take the excitement.
05:04I need 30 seconds.
05:05BELL RINGS
05:06BELL RINGS
05:10BELL RINGS
05:11BELL RINGS
05:12BELL RINGS
05:13BELL RINGS
05:14BELL RINGS
05:15BELL RINGS
05:15BELL RINGS
05:18BELL RINGS
05:18BELL RINGS
05:35OK, let's do the important bit first.
05:37Alex, how many?
05:38Seven.
05:38And for you, Clare?
05:39Six.
05:40Excellent.
05:41The six is?
05:42Paints.
05:43And the seven?
05:44Panties.
05:45Hanties, yes.
05:46That'll be in there.
05:46Without a shadow of a doubt, gets you seven.
05:48Now, never before has an eight-letter word been spelt out in order in the history of Countdown.
05:56Series 90.
05:57It hasn't happened in over four decades.
05:59So I was excited, because with an E, we'd have side note.
06:03Three seconds into the clock, producer Damien goes, side note is two words.
06:07So there's no excitement at all, Suze.
06:09All of that for nothing.
06:11I'm gutted.
06:12So much wasted energy.
06:14I feel alive, though.
06:15Adrenaline is pumping still.
06:17So four for me.
06:18What about you, John?
06:19A couple of extra sevens to offer.
06:23Adipose for seven.
06:24All that storage of fat.
06:26Yeah.
06:26Yeah.
06:28And pandits.
06:29Pandits, which is the same as...
06:30Pandits, in a way, as a pundit began with a Sanskrit word for a learned scholar.
06:35But there is a nine as well.
06:38Yeah.
06:39So we know about the antipodes, Australia and New Zealand.
06:43But you can have, with a small a, antipodes, the direct opposites of something.
06:47And that will give you a nine.
06:48And there it is.
06:527-0.
06:53Claire, let's go again.
06:54Hi, Rachel.
06:55Hi, Claire.
06:56Hi.
06:56Can I have a consonant, please?
06:58Start with W.
06:59And another, please.
07:02D.
07:03Another.
07:05R.
07:07A vowel, please.
07:08E.
07:10Another vowel.
07:11U.
07:13Another vowel.
07:15A.
07:17Consonant.
07:18B.
07:21Consonant, please.
07:23S.
07:24And a vowel.
07:26And lastly, E.
07:28And 30 seconds.
07:57We'll be right back for this.
07:58We'll be right back for this episode.
07:59that's time Claire only five five for you and Alex six six for Alex just that
08:07one extra letter will get in the points Claire wards and what we got over there
08:11beards and beards very nice you go to dictionary corner rather a lovely seven
08:18that always reminds me of Brian Sewell and he used to describe paintings that
08:24he didn't enjoy as daubing so they would be done by daubers that's a great seven a
08:33great way to tell us about it numbers for the first time today Alex one from the
08:38top and five from anywhere else please thank you Alex one large five not and the
08:43first numbers of today's contest are three eight eight two six and a large one
08:50one hundred and the target one hundred and sixty eight one six eight numbers up
09:25a load target one six eight Alex oh yeah one six eight and Claire one six seven
09:30oh early show no yeah Alex 100 minus eight minus eight 92 minus eight is 84 and then
09:41times that by two well done one six eight
09:46another surprise to see our champion jump into an early lead as we get our
09:50first Thursday afternoon tea time teaser not in vine not in vine is it fabricated
09:57that this word has a mother called necessity is it fabricated that this word
10:02has a mother called necessity
10:21a little bit convoluted but obviously necessity is the mother of all invention so invention was the
10:32tea time teaser as we get back to our letters let's go I'm consonant please thank you Claire ah
10:39consonant M vowel a vowel I consonant T vowel oh consonant N another consonant are and
11:02a vowel please lastly I thanks rich
11:40and for you Alex six six six Claire let's get you in the board Russian yes and Alex pass it
11:46over
11:46Russian no I don't have to ask excellent Russian jumped out nice easy six points John
11:52uh matron matron there for a six you see matron you can't say it any other way can you no
11:59and uh one we sadly can't have yes martini capital M capital M on that of course it is well
12:07there you go
12:07Claire was shaken but now stirred and you've got your first points on the board and Alex you're choosing
12:12these letters consonant please Rachel thank you Alex H and a vowel please e and a consonant please d and
12:23a vowel please a consonant please y vowel e and a consonant please n and another consonant
12:39and a consonant please lastly h and a consonant please and a consonant please and a consonant please and a
12:45consonant please and a consonant please and a consonant please and a consonant please and a consonant please and a
12:45consonant please and a consonant please and a consonant please and a consonant please and a consonant please and a
12:45consonant please and a consonant please and a consonant please and a consonant please and a consonant please and a
12:45consonant please and a consonant please and a consonant please and a consonant please and a consonant please and a
12:45consonant please and a consonant please and a consonant please and a consonant please and a consonant please and a
12:45consonant please and a consonant please and a consonant please and a consonant please and a consonant please and a
12:45consonant please and a consonant please and a consonant
13:06MUSIC
13:17Alex, five. Claire?
13:19Dodgy six. A dodgy six. Come on, Alex.
13:22Heady. We love a dodgy six. What is it?
13:26Mandem? Er...
13:29Come on! You need two emmers.
13:31And we've only got one, but it is in the dictionary.
13:33I don't know what makes it learn. Sorry, sorry.
13:36Let's see what dictionary corner have with the luxury of checking them.
13:40Yes. Well, in that zone, Colin, actually,
13:42there's a seven there. Headmen.
13:45I'm thinking football, but I'm sure it's not.
13:46Yeah, no, it's just leaders of groups and communities, essentially.
13:50Right, and that's absolutely it. Yeah. Right.
13:53Excellent. Fun round. Fun round.
13:55Well, don't keep taking risks. Fun, Claire. And it's your numbers.
13:59Can I have two large and four small, please? You can.
14:02Two large and four small coming up.
14:05And for the second time today, the number selection is three, ten,
14:09eight, nine, 75 and 50.
14:13And you need to reach 167.
14:16Another little one. 167. Numbers up.
14:18New.
14:19ужас.
14:21New.
14:49All right, Claire, how'd you get on?
14:51167.
14:52And how'd you get on, Alex?
14:53167.
14:54167.
14:55Claire, for ten more points, what a roll you're on.
14:5850 times three is 150.
15:00Yeah.
15:00Nine plus eight is 17.
15:02Add them together.
15:03167.
15:04Easy.
15:04And for you, Alex?
15:05Anyway.
15:06Pass it over.
15:10John Colshaw.
15:11What I love about you is on the Monday, John's never like,
15:14I'm on tour, I've got a book out.
15:17You always have to kind of drag it out of him when he's in.
15:19And you seem to always have something.
15:22Naming tours, if you're an impressionist, is great, right?
15:25Because he's just got so many.
15:26Is this one Impostor Syndrome, which is sensational?
15:29Yes, Impostor Syndrome.
15:30Yeah.
15:31They're quite tricky to come up with titles for in impression shows.
15:35Rory Bremner, Who Else?, is a great one.
15:37Yeah.
15:38Lewis McLeod is not himself.
15:40Brilliant one.
15:41Yeah.
15:42I noticed Impostor Syndrome hadn't been used before,
15:45so I've nabbed that for now.
15:46If you're a band, you write a new album because you want to go up on there
15:49and play your new songs, and that moment when they sing it back
15:52for the first time, if you're a comedian with a set,
15:55it's those work in progress and that fear comes back.
15:58So, for you, is it about finding a new voice and thinking,
16:01they may not laugh at this?
16:03Do you need that buzz still?
16:05Yes, it's...
16:06The experimental time is very interesting
16:10and just thrashing out some new ideas.
16:13I'm putting together a bit of music for the show now.
16:16Oh.
16:16It's surprising, certain kids' TV themes and certain adverts
16:21do seem to suit certain singers.
16:23Yeah.
16:24For Liam Gallagher, do you remember the shaken back advert?
16:28Put the freshness back.
16:30Do the shaken back and put the freshness back.
16:34Do the shaken back and put the freshness back.
16:37It just sort of suits him.
16:38Yeah.
16:39For David Bowie, who I like to do from time to time,
16:44the theme tune to The Record Breakers.
16:47You want to be the best if you want to beat the fresh dedication.
16:50If you're the tallest, the smallest,
16:52if you always win then you're a record breaker.
16:56You're a record maker.
16:58You're a record breaker.
17:00And then you can have Liam Gallagher back.
17:03Dedication.
17:05Dedication.
17:06Dedication.
17:07That's what you need.
17:09So, experimenting with this line.
17:12Thank you, John.
17:13APPLAUSE
17:16Wonderful, Alex.
17:17Good week to be here and be champ because you get to listen to John every day.
17:20Let's get more letters.
17:21Consonant, please, Rachel.
17:22Thank you, Alex.
17:23T.
17:24And a vowel, please.
17:27O.
17:27And another vowel.
17:30E.
17:31And a consonant, please.
17:34C.
17:35And another consonant, please.
17:37S.
17:38A vowel, please.
17:41O.
17:42And a consonant, please.
17:45T.
17:46Another consonant.
17:48V.
17:49G.
17:50And a final consonant, please.
17:53A final G.
17:55And here we go again.
17:56T.
17:57T.
17:58T.
17:59T.
18:01T.
18:02T.
18:04T.
18:05T.
18:06T.
18:07T.
18:08T.
18:09T.
18:14T.
18:15T.
18:15T.
18:16T.
18:17T.
18:17T.
18:18T.
18:18T.
18:19T.
18:19T.
18:20T.
18:20T.
18:21MUSIC
18:27Alex. Six. And for you, Clare? Five.
18:30It's frustrating, isn't it? It is. What's your five?
18:33Votes. And for six? Covets.
18:36Beautiful word. Well spotted. John.
18:38Yeah, nothing beyond six. You see a stooge you could have for six.
18:43Yeah. Nothing else? Nothing.
18:45This thing is a toll cost, so we'll move on.
18:47And we'll get more letters from Clare Harris.
18:50Can I have a consonant, please? Thank you, Clare.
18:53S. And a vowel.
18:55E. And a consonant, please.
18:58K. And another consonant.
19:01P. And a vowel, please.
19:04I. Another vowel.
19:07A. A consonant.
19:10C. And a consonant, please.
19:14T. And another consonant, please.
19:18Lastly, M.
19:21And start the clock.
19:22Bye-bye.
19:23Tch.
19:24Tch. Tch. Tch. Tch.
19:53Clare, give me a number.
19:55Seven. And for you, Alex? Seven.
19:57Seven as well. What have you got, Clare?
19:59Impacts. Impacts. And Alex? Packets.
20:01And that will impact the score to both of your advantage.
20:04Seven points each. John?
20:06Now, there are a few eights to offer up here.
20:09Campsite was there for an eight.
20:11Campiest, another eight. Campiest!
20:14I thought I was the paciest and you got there. Oh, well.
20:18Right, numbers. Ten points up for grabs.
20:20We've had 168, we've had 167.
20:23Alex, you're choosing here.
20:25One large five, small, please.
20:27One large five, little, coming up.
20:30And for the third time today, the numbers.
20:32Ten, two, five, nine, seven.
20:37And the large 175.
20:38And the target, 650.
20:41650, all well.
21:15And for you, Clare?
21:19649, not properly written down.
21:21I just missed it. You'll kick yourself a bit here, Alex.
21:2475 minus ten.
21:2565.
21:27And then two times five is ten.
21:28Yeah.
21:29Multiply them together.
21:30650, well done.
21:31Excellent, well done.
21:32APPLAUSE
21:35Key time teaser is Gary Allen.
21:38Gary Allen.
21:39Shout out to anyone who is called Gary Allen watching.
21:41Gary was having trouble speaking due to this type of infection.
21:45Gary was having trouble speaking due to this type of infection.
22:08Laryngeal.
22:09Laryngeal.
22:10Well, Alex and Clare cannot be lost for words,
22:12because that's the point of countdown.
22:14And let's go again.
22:15Clare.
22:16Uh, consonant, please.
22:18Thank you, Clare.
22:20G.
22:21And another.
22:22N.
22:24And another, please.
22:27R.
22:28And a vowel.
22:29E.
22:31Another vowel.
22:32A.
22:33Another vowel.
22:34A.
22:35E.
22:37Consonant.
22:39J.
22:41Consonant.
22:43T.
22:45And another vowel, please.
22:48And...
22:49A final I.
22:51And welcome to the jungle.
22:52...
23:06...
23:07...
23:08...
23:23Clare?
23:24Seven.
23:24Yes, Alex?
23:26Seven.
23:26Always a party pooper, our champion.
23:28Clare, what have you got?
23:29Grayton.
23:30Yes, and for you, Alex?
23:32Granite.
23:33Granite and Grayton.
23:34Very good indeed.
23:36Seven's the best?
23:37Well, an eight over here, a rather delicate and rather beautiful gratiné.
23:43Yes.
23:43Gratiné.
23:44Gratiné.
23:45I have your onion soup gratiné.
23:47It's the same as au gratin, so with cheese.
23:49Just on it in the afternoon.
23:51A gratiné in the matinee.
23:53No.
23:54Any time.
23:56Any time you put your cheese on.
23:58Cool.
23:59Alex, let's get more letters.
24:01Have a consonant, please, Rachel.
24:03Thank you, Alex.
24:04R.
24:05And a vowel, please.
24:08O.
24:09And a consonant, please.
24:11F.
24:12And a consonant, please.
24:16G.
24:18A vowel, please.
24:20E.
24:21A consonant.
24:24Q.
24:25A vowel.
24:28O.
24:29And a consonant, please.
24:33N.
24:35And a vowel, please.
24:38And a final A.
24:41And a vowel, please.
25:05THEY CONFER
25:12Alex? Five. And Clare? Five.
25:15Yes, what have we got there, Alex? Grown.
25:17And for you, Clare? Forge.
25:20Forge and grown.
25:22All right, DC.
25:24A couple of other sevens to offer up here.
25:26Four gone. Yes. Was there for seven.
25:29And one that I once heard William Shatner say,
25:31uh, oregano, but it's oregano when spoken correctly.
25:37That's for seven.
25:38Thank you very much. 79.35.
25:41Four rounds left to pay.
25:44After we go on another word journey with Susie Dent.
25:46Well, do you, Colin, have a bit of an affectionate nickname for your tash?
25:52No! OK.
25:54Well, it's quite new, the beard. It is.
25:56Maybe I will in the end, but you name various things, but not my beard.
26:00Well, it's only because there have been so many slang terms and nicknames
26:04for, um, for moustaches and, uh, for beards.
26:09Um, you know, which have actually gone back over the centuries.
26:11So I'll give you some of them.
26:12I mean, some of them quite modern.
26:13Lip foliage, double hamsters, uh, nose bugs, uh, face lace, um, et cetera.
26:19I mean, lots and lots of them.
26:20Um, but the first recorded instance of moustache is from 1585.
26:25So that's probably not so surprising because we know moustache has been in fashion for,
26:29for a while.
26:30And in fact, that's only in English.
26:33We know that it goes back to other languages.
26:34And the first mention in English is from a travel journey by someone called Nicola de
26:39Nicolay, uh, who went to Turkey.
26:41And he noticed that people there suffered no hair to grow, but only the moustaches
26:46betwixt the nose and mouth.
26:48And, um, since then, quite quickly, actually, different words began to, um, proliferate.
26:53So in the 1600s, you might have called your moustache your umbrage.
26:57Um, then, um, three centuries later, in the 1800s, mouse tail.
27:02Um, and then, of course, we have Tash, and we have Taz, and we have Mo, we have Movember.
27:07But the reason I thought I'd mention it is, um, there are two words that may, may be connected
27:12to facial hair, and they may surprise you.
27:14Um, in 18th century France, an homme de bigot was, um, a man who was full of bravado, um,
27:22full of verve and swagger, but also had a moustache.
27:26And, um, the connection between that and bigot, which we have today, is still unknown.
27:31So we're not completely sure where bigot goes back to, but some do say that it kind of,
27:35it began with this sort of slightly hectoring, swaggering, um, man.
27:40And, uh, and the other one is bizarre, which, um, if you look in the dictionary,
27:44it will tell you it comes from an Italian word bizarro, which originally meant angry.
27:48But I didn't quite explain the, the sort of shift in meaning then.
27:52But there is another word, uh, from Basque, um, bizarra, which meant a beard.
27:56So it's quite possible to those who were completely unused to seeing men with facial hair
28:00that these people did seem a little bit eccentric.
28:04APPLAUSE
28:06I like that one. Still a lot of if, buts and maybes.
28:09Always. Yeah.
28:10Yeah.
28:11All right, Clare, keep your hair on and let's get more letters.
28:14Consonant, please.
28:15Angular.
28:16L.
28:17Another consonant.
28:19R.
28:21Another, please.
28:23S.
28:24Vowel.
28:26I.
28:27Vowel.
28:29A.
28:32Consonant.
28:34N.
28:36Consonant.
28:38R.
28:41And another vowel, please.
28:44And lastly, E.
28:46Let's play.
28:47A.
28:48Vowel.
28:49A.
28:50The Vowel.
28:50One.
29:04A.
29:16medicine.
29:18Clare? Only five. And Alex? Seven.
29:21The five, Clare? Ruins. And the seven? Urinals.
29:25Urinals. Yes.
29:27Anything else, Johan? No, no, I was frustrated
29:30that you couldn't get the planet Uranus one letter off.
29:34I would have done that as Patrick Moore.
29:36We don't have the opportunity to do that.
29:38The mind boggles what accent you'd use for urinals.
29:42Anything else? Snarlier. Snarlier.
29:45Who would be snarlier then, John? Yes.
29:48I don't know, I've got into Albert Steptoe for no reason.
29:50He's so snarlier. Snarlier.
29:52There's the epitome of snarlier, the great definition.
29:56Glad I asked. Brilliant.
29:5986, 35. Champions looking good for another century, isn't he?
30:04Here we go. Consonant, please, Rachel. Thank you, Alex.
30:08L. Vowel, please.
30:11U. Consonant, please.
30:12S. And another vowel.
30:17O. And another vowel.
30:20I. A consonant, please.
30:24G. And a consonant.
30:29L. And another consonant.
30:35Lastly, T. Last letters.
30:40We're counting.
30:43Meagan Irish.
30:49Toll dabei.
31:09We're counting.
31:10Moreival.
31:11Alex seven Claire six sixes Claire glints and our seven ousting oh stein very nice there you go
31:20John yes another seven tolling tolling was there for another seven choice yeah
31:28I'm not lied to you Claire the bell has told I don't worry about that but let's enjoy these
31:32last two rounds yeah let's do it for the guinea pigs last numbers can I have two large and four
31:38small please again you can indeed two large ones four little ones thank you the final numbers of
31:43the day two seven nine eight and a large two 25 and 50 and the target 277 277 last numbers
32:25277 the target Claire I lost it sorry don't worry Alex no not close enough goodness me off you go
32:33it's 277
32:34let's rub it in rub it in 25 times 9 225 add 50 add 2 277 goodness me wow
32:46hope you had blanks on that okay Alex and Claire let's put the icing on the cake here 10 more
32:53points
32:53up for grabs could get you another century Alex so it's still as important chance stop them Claire
32:58here's the countdown conundrum
33:00so
33:29time is up
33:31well Alex and Claire seem to have gone on strike the last two two rounds we've got enough you're not
33:36paying us enough we're finished thankfully Rachel hasn't she can have the last points well it's what
33:41Susie is particularly known to do misbehave ah there you go exactly that is Susie's words yes
33:51so 93 35 is the final score Claire's been an absolute delight to have you here but I
33:57won't say goodbye to you I will leave it to your hero who you once queued three hours to meet
34:02David
34:02Attenborough can say goodbye to you off you go well Claire farewell and thank you most of all for giving
34:08a
34:09wonderful home to those fantastic guinea pigs wonderful creatures you get absolutely nothing
34:18you've been here too long you do get a sex window we'll see you tomorrow thank you John and Susie
34:21goodbye
34:22thank you thank you have a good afternoon Rach see you tomorrow and thank you so so much for tuning
34:27in
34:27every day it is our honor to have you hopefully you can come back tomorrow we will be waiting you
34:32can
34:32be kind on us you can contact the program by email at countdown at channel 4.com you can also
34:40find our
34:40webpage at channel 4.com forward slash countdown
35:02you
35:06you
35:07you

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