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00:00This programme contains strong language and adult humour.
00:04APPLAUSE
00:31Hello and welcome to Curb Town.
00:33On this day in 1900,
00:35the wonderful Wizard of Oz was first published
00:39and, of course, Judy Garland brought Dorothy to life.
00:43Rachel, it's amazing and very odd,
00:46but I went to Judy Garland's last wedding.
00:49Oh, really? How many has she had?
00:51I think four or five, but it was 1969
00:55and it was quite sad because they'd...
00:59The publicist had put out a notice about her getting married
01:04and when it came to the celebration after the wedding,
01:08there were only journalists there.
01:10Really? Yeah. It was very near the end of her life.
01:14Oh, and did you have a boogie on the dance floor
01:16with all the other journos?
01:18No, I don't think... Cos I can't dance, unlike you.
01:21Sure. Very polite.
01:23Let's meet our contestants.
01:25Ryan is here for the fifth game.
01:28He's a big-time banker from Glasgow
01:31and you've got Alex to compete against today.
01:35What do you do, Alex?
01:37I work for a technology firm in the education sector.
01:40So what does that firm do?
01:42We are in the process of building an app
01:45to engage schools and teachers,
01:48basically so schools can do their staffing of the day.
01:51So you're selling the headteachers an app
01:55that you haven't got yet?
01:57It's that type of thing.
01:58It's more actually getting schools on our books
02:01and teachers on our books,
02:02but there is an amount of selling to headteachers, yeah.
02:05Yeah, but selling something you haven't finished.
02:07Yeah, I mean, it's a skilful process, Anne, what can I say?
02:11I think you just agree with me.
02:13Round of applause for our contestants.
02:16APPLAUSE
02:19Hi, Susie. Hi, Anne.
02:21And hi again, Nicky Chapman. Hello.
02:23A long career in the music business
02:26and a long career on television.
02:28I'll be talking to her later.
02:30OK, Ryan, your letters.
02:33Hi, Rachel. Hi, Ryan.
02:35Can I start with a consonant, please?
02:37Can indeed start with R.
02:39And another one?
02:41C.
02:42And another?
02:44F.
02:45And one more?
02:47S.
02:48A vowel?
02:50A.
02:51And another?
02:53I.
02:54And another one?
02:56E.
02:57A consonant?
02:59M.
03:00And another consonant, please?
03:03Lastly, G.
03:05Let's play Countdown.
03:15RHYTHMIC TAPPING
03:37Ryan.
03:38Eight.
03:39Alex.
03:40Eight, too.
03:41Ryan.
03:42Grimaces.
03:44In the corner?
03:46Susie has got another one.
03:48Yeah, another eight there with chimeras.
03:50So, C-H-I-M-E-R-A-S.
03:52So, in Greek mythology, there were these fire-breathing female monsters,
03:56but we use it for something illusory and not really achievable.
03:59Thank you, Susie.
04:01Alex, your letters.
04:03Hi, Rachel. Hi, Alex.
04:04Could I start with a consonant, please?
04:06You can indeed. S.
04:08And another?
04:10P.
04:11And a vowel?
04:12I.
04:13And another vowel?
04:15E.
04:16And a consonant?
04:18N.
04:19And another consonant?
04:20S.
04:21And a vowel?
04:23O.
04:24And a consonant?
04:26T.
04:28And I'll have another vowel, please.
04:31Lastly, I.
04:33Time starts now.
04:35RHYTHMIC TAPPING
04:42RHYTHMIC TAPPING
05:05Alex?
05:06Pretty dodgy seven.
05:08Ryan?
05:09Eight.
05:10What's your seven?
05:11Poniest.
05:13Ryan?
05:14Spaniest.
05:15Spaniest is there, not poniest, unfortunately.
05:17Phoniest, but not poniest. Sorry about that.
05:19And in the corner?
05:21We had stepson for seven and noisiest for eight.
05:25Yeah. Very good.
05:26Ryan, your numbers.
05:28I'll have six small, please, Rachel.
05:30Starting with six little ones again, we do like a challenge.
05:33Thank you, Ryan.
05:34And today they are...
05:36..two, nine, six, four, three and ten.
05:42And the target to reach...
05:44Oh, no, not much of a challenge.
05:46..180.
05:481-8-0.
05:50RHYTHMIC TAPPING
06:07RHYTHMIC TAPPING
06:19Ryan?
06:20180.
06:21Good. Alex?
06:22180.
06:23Ryan?
06:24I did six times three times ten.
06:27Not as impressive as it would have been in the dance.
06:29Alex?
06:30I did two times nine times ten.
06:32Yeah, that'll do as well.
06:34Oh, that's the end of that.
06:36I don't think we're even going to give you a round of applause.
06:39First teaser coming up.
06:41Shy mince, shy mince and the clue.
06:45No puppets but definitely sooty and sweet.
06:48No puppets but definitely sooty and sweet.
06:51See you in a minute.
06:59APPLAUSE
07:05I left you with the clue.
07:07No puppets but definitely sooty and sweet.
07:11And the answer, chimneys.
07:13Scores 26-18.
07:16Not bad, Alex.
07:18And it's your letters.
07:20Thank you.
07:21Start with a consonant, please.
07:23Thank you, Alex. V.
07:25And another.
07:27D.
07:28And a vowel.
07:30I.
07:31And another vowel.
07:33O.
07:34And a consonant, please.
07:36R.
07:37And another.
07:39S.
07:40And a vowel.
07:42E.
07:44And a consonant.
07:46F.
07:48And let's have another vowel, please.
07:51Final E.
07:5330 seconds.
08:03ELECTRONIC MUSIC PLAYS
08:25Alex. Seven.
08:27Ron. Seven.
08:29Alex. Visored.
08:31Ryan. Voiders.
08:33Visored is absolutely fine.
08:35Not sure about voider, Ryan.
08:37No, a voider would be there, but not voider.
08:39Sorry about that.
08:41In the corner. Videos.
08:43So that would be close to my heart, wouldn't it,
08:45with the music industry? Yeah.
08:47But, of course, Susie can do better than that.
08:49Well, there is an alternative to overboard
08:52when you're talking about ships, and that's overside,
08:55as in tipped or overside.
08:57That will give you an eight. Thank you.
08:59Ryan, your letters.
09:01I'll have a vowel, please, Rachel.
09:03Thank you, Ryan. A.
09:05And another one.
09:07I. And another.
09:09O.
09:11A consonant. S.
09:13Another consonant.
09:15G. And another.
09:17N.
09:19And one more.
09:21D.
09:23A vowel.
09:25O.
09:27And another vowel, please.
09:29And lastly, I.
09:31Good luck.
09:58MUSIC STOPS
10:02Ryan. Six.
10:04Alex. Six, too.
10:06Ryan. Gournads.
10:08Alex. Dingoes.
10:10Absolutely fine, yes.
10:12In the corner. Also, you could have indigos for seven.
10:15Yes, not so much the colour, cos you can't put an S on that,
10:18but these are tropical plants from which you could extract the dye,
10:22the indigo dye. Thank you.
10:24Alex, when you're not selling an app that isn't finished yet
10:28to teachers, what do you do?
10:31I am a DJ in my spare time.
10:33I have a radio show and do a few gigs here and there.
10:36Oh, great. So you're used to talking off the top of your head?
10:39On occasions, and I try to let the music do the talking,
10:42but I have been known. OK.
10:44It's your numbers. Thank you.
10:46I'll have one big one and five little ones, please, Rachel.
10:49Thank you, Alex. You let the music do the talking,
10:51I'll let the numbers do the talking. Kindred spirits.
10:54Right, this round, we have two, five, three, one,
11:00eight and the large one, 100.
11:02And your target...
11:04973.
11:06973.
11:21MUSIC PLAYS
11:37Alex? 972, but I've written it down.
11:40OK. Ryan? 973, but not written down.
11:44Ryan, off you go.
11:46OK, so five times two...
11:49Times 100.
11:511,000.
11:53Eight plus one... Is nine.
11:55Times three...
11:57Is 27. Take that away.
11:59Well done. 973.
12:01APPLAUSE
12:05Nicky, I wanted to talk to you about your life and death experience
12:09because it absolutely fascinated me.
12:12So can you tell us about your brain tumour?
12:15Yeah, I mean, a lot of people have brain tumours.
12:18I didn't realise quite how common it was, sadly.
12:21And I was diagnosed in 2019 and it came up pretty quickly.
12:26I'd had it for quite a few years, but I wasn't aware of it
12:29and then I suddenly couldn't speak
12:31and I didn't really know where I was and I got lost.
12:34And if people since then have a brain tumour,
12:39would they know much earlier what the signs were?
12:42It depends. There's about 130 different types of brain tumour.
12:47So everyone's different.
12:49And sadly, more people die from brain tumours under the age of 40,
12:53and that includes children, than any other cancer.
12:56So it can be really serious.
12:58I was very lucky. My brain tumour was benign.
13:01I had a meningioma.
13:03So the way it presented itself was to me,
13:05so I didn't know really what was going on.
13:07They thought I'd had a stroke.
13:09In actual fact, it was the tumour.
13:11And again, I was so fortunate
13:13that the NHS managed to get most of it out at the time.
13:16When you're looking back,
13:18before the very dramatic stage where you couldn't speak,
13:22looking back, were there other signs if you'd known about it?
13:26Only about three weeks beforehand.
13:29It was obviously growing, it was quite large,
13:31and it was affecting my sight and my speech.
13:34But some people have headaches,
13:36they have different symptoms for years
13:38and they don't realise that they've got it.
13:40So I would always say, if you have any suspicion,
13:43go and see somebody, go and see your doctor straight away.
13:46So my symptoms were quite stroke-like and very, very quick.
13:50So the first time that they looked at you in hospital,
13:55having thought it was a stroke, what happened then?
13:58They did a scan and I could tell something was going on
14:01because everybody was coming in and out of the room.
14:04And I have to say, the casualty department,
14:06which I went to, were brilliant.
14:08They got me in very, very quickly.
14:10I didn't have to wait for hours at all.
14:12And then the consultant took me to a side room with my husband
14:15and we were expecting them to say,
14:17I've had a stroke, and what was I, in my early 50s?
14:20And then he said, no, you've actually got a brain tumour.
14:23And it does take a second because, you know,
14:26you wake up in the morning feeling relatively fine
14:29and then suddenly you get hit with this bombshell
14:32and your mind goes over and over and all I could think of was,
14:35well, am I going to survive? I mean, that was it.
14:37My initial reaction was, how serious is it?
14:40And until they operate, they really don't know.
14:42But when you went into surgery,
14:45it could have been the end of your life, couldn't it?
14:48Yes. Yeah.
14:50So what, in the space between knowing you had a brain tumour
14:55and that surgery, what else did you think about?
14:58Well, for me, and everybody's different,
15:00there's two ways of looking at it
15:02when you have a life-threatening condition.
15:05And I have had an amazing life and I thought,
15:08I'm going to fight this tooth and nail or let me go.
15:12I don't want to be in between.
15:14And that's a weird thing, sitting here now saying that,
15:16but that is exactly how I felt.
15:18I have had an incredible life, you know, much loved by my family,
15:22but equally I was going to be really positive
15:25and I was going to do everything I could
15:27to get myself in the best position to fight it.
15:30And I was really fortunate, really fortunate.
15:34I was back at work after six weeks
15:36after the amazing job that the NHS did
15:39and everything went in my favour.
15:41And you never know, do you, but everything went in my favour,
15:44so I am extremely grateful.
15:46And after six weeks, were you back to normal
15:49or were you still having to take time?
15:52I was allowed to go back to work.
15:54I checked with my consultant, I said,
15:56please don't think I'm mad, but I really would love to go back to work.
15:59I was filming Escape To The Country and he said, I get it,
16:02I understand, you love working.
16:04I thought I was going to be off for three or four months and so did he.
16:08So I was back, but they still look after me.
16:11And then a few months ago I had to have my check-up, as you do,
16:14and I would always advise everybody to have their check-up
16:17because I still had a bit of tumour left.
16:19Oh, wow.
16:20And the surgeon said to me, it's gone.
16:23Oh, amazing.
16:25So that was just before Christmas last year.
16:27And I was standing in a field filming with a load of pigs
16:30when I took the call, because we don't do face-to-face anymore often,
16:33we have to do these things over the phone,
16:35and he said, the tumour has actually disappeared.
16:38So at the moment I am tumour-free.
16:40Fantastic story. Thank you so much.
16:42Thank you.
16:4642-31.
16:48Ryan's ahead at the moment and it's your letters.
16:51I'll have a consonant, please, Rachel.
16:53Thank you, Ryan. M
16:55And another one.
16:57T
16:58And one more.
17:00P
17:01Make a vowel.
17:02E
17:03Another one.
17:04I
17:05And another.
17:06E
17:07And one more.
17:09A
17:10A consonant.
17:12N
17:13And a final consonant, please.
17:15And a final F.
17:17Start the clock.
17:32CLOCK TICKS
17:49Ryan?
17:50Have a dodgy seven.
17:52OK, Alex?
17:53Six.
17:54What's your six?
17:55Thumb in.
17:56Ryan?
17:57Penmate.
17:58Penmate.
18:00It is in the dictionary but it's hyphenated.
18:03I'm so sorry.
18:05It's not actually the same as a penpal,
18:07it is each of two or more shearers who shear sheep in the same pen.
18:11And in the corner?
18:13Sort of keeping to the showbiz theme, we have matinee for seven.
18:17Is that it?
18:18Well, there's a pie man as well for a six if you would like one.
18:21OK.
18:22So, Alex, the DJ, your letters.
18:26Consonant, please.
18:27Thank you, Alex.
18:29L
18:30And another.
18:32B
18:33And a vowel.
18:35A
18:36And a vowel.
18:37U
18:38And a consonant, please.
18:41G
18:43And a vowel.
18:45E
18:46Consonant.
18:48D
18:50And another consonant.
18:52M
18:53And another vowel, please.
18:55Lastly, E.
18:57Good luck.
19:28Alex?
19:30A seven, I think I've spelt it right.
19:32Ryan?
19:33Seven.
19:34Alex?
19:35Gleamed.
19:36Ryan?
19:37Gambled.
19:38Yeah, both absolutely fine.
19:39Sevens, eights over there?
19:41We could have leagued for seven to join in association with.
19:46And there's also beldame, B-E-L-D-A-M-E,
19:50a malicious or loathsome old woman.
19:52Oh, right.
19:54None of those around here.
19:57Ryan, your numbers.
19:59OK, I'll have three from the top, Rachel.
20:01Three from the top and three little.
20:03Bit of a close game today.
20:05Let's see if this makes any difference.
20:07The three small ones are five, nine and ten.
20:10And the big three, 25, 100 and 75.
20:14And the target to reach, 803.
20:178-0-3.
20:19BELL RINGS
20:26BELL CONTINUES
20:50Ryan?
20:518-0-2. Not quite written down.
20:53Alex?
20:548-0-5. Again, not written down.
20:57Ryan?
20:58OK, 100 minus ten.
21:00100 minus ten, 90.
21:02Multiply it by nine.
21:048-10.
21:0575 over 25.
21:07Is three.
21:08Plus five.
21:09Eight.
21:10And take that away.
21:11Yep, one below. Well done.
21:13Rachel?
21:14You'll have to leave this one with me. A little bit tricky.
21:16Let's have our second teaser.
21:19Rash belt. Rash belt and the clue.
21:22You wouldn't want to be belted with these, said the prince.
21:25You wouldn't want to be belted with these, said the prince.
21:28See you in a minute.
21:36APPLAUSE
21:43I left you with the clue.
21:45You wouldn't want to be belted with these, said the prince.
21:48And the answer is halberds.
21:51Susie?
21:52Yeah, I think you would recognise one of these if you saw it,
21:55but you might not want to see it,
21:57because it's a combined spear and battleaxe.
21:59So when you see these reconstructions of historical battles,
22:03it looks like a dagger and it's got a sort of battleaxe,
22:06or pickaxe almost, accessory to it.
22:09So pretty lethal.
22:10OK, thank you.
22:12The scores are 56-44.
22:14Alex, Ryan has been on the show before, a few years ago,
22:20and he lasted one show.
22:23What about you?
22:25Yeah, I was on it as well a few more years ago, I would say,
22:28I think just over 20 years ago, and I lasted two episodes.
22:32Did you?
22:33What have you done to improve yourself since then?
22:36I would say I've got a lot worse, to be perfectly honest, Anne.
22:39OK.
22:40My brain has deteriorated somewhat,
22:42and I'm just about holding it together right now.
22:45Would you have worn that shirt 20 years ago?
22:47Absolutely not.
22:48I had a skinhead and an eyebrow piercing.
22:52Did you? Yeah.
22:53Well, you've grown up a bit, haven't you?
22:56It may look like it.
22:59Your letters.
23:00Consonant, please.
23:02Thank you, Alex.
23:03P.
23:04And another.
23:06B.
23:07And one more.
23:09T.
23:10And a vowel, please.
23:11O.
23:12And another.
23:13A.
23:14And another.
23:15A.
23:16And another.
23:18E.
23:19And a consonant.
23:21R.
23:22And another consonant, please.
23:24Lastly, D.
23:26Good luck.
23:47MUSIC
23:58Alex?
23:59Seven.
24:01Ryan?
24:02Seven.
24:03Alex?
24:04Aborted.
24:05Ryan?
24:06Probate.
24:07Yes, both very good.
24:08And over there?
24:09I don't think we can beat eight, can we?
24:11Well, I think those were sevens,
24:13but actually, Ryan, you could put the D on, probate.
24:15If you were wondering about that.
24:17I was.
24:18Oh, OK.
24:19So, to probate a will is to test its validity.
24:22So, it's there as a verb.
24:23Ryan, your letters.
24:25I'll have a vowel, please, Rachel.
24:27Thank you, Ryan.
24:28U.
24:29And another.
24:31A.
24:32And another one.
24:34U.
24:35Let's have another one.
24:37I.
24:38OK.
24:39Consonant.
24:40Y.
24:41And another one.
24:42R.
24:43And another.
24:44T.
24:45And another.
24:46X.
24:49One more consonant, please.
24:50Not the best selection.
24:52A final L.
24:53Start the clock.
25:14MUSIC
25:25Ryan?
25:26Six.
25:27Alex?
25:28Five.
25:29What's your five?
25:30Ultra.
25:31Ryan?
25:32Luxury.
25:33Well spotted.
25:34Yes, very nice.
25:35Wasn't easy, was it?
25:36That was tough.
25:37Really tough.
25:38Could have had ritual for six.
25:40Yeah.
25:42But we couldn't get beyond that.
25:44OK.
25:45Anne, over to you, Susie.
25:47Well, if you are a nerd, like me,
25:49you might find yourself sometimes wondering questions like,
25:52are syllabus, syllable and syllabub related?
25:56So just kind of weird threads that start to unravel in my head.
26:00So I thought I would explore that one with you today.
26:03And I'm going to start with the word syllabus.
26:06And one of the things I love about English
26:08is the way that it evolves quite often through mistakes.
26:11So we make a mistake because we think something is right
26:14and that mistake stays with us forever, or pretty much forever.
26:17So famously, a sneeze, which was originally a sneeze,
26:21which sounds much more like a sneeze, I think,
26:24but somebody mistook the long F for the long S's
26:27that used to be in medieval manuscripts
26:29and so they thought it was sneeze instead of sneeze.
26:32And it turns out that syllabus is also down to a misprint.
26:35This is in the 15th century
26:37and it was a misreading of a work by Cicero, the Roman philosopher.
26:42And he used the word citibas,
26:45which actually meant a label for a book or a parchment.
26:50So he was using it for something that was like a title slip,
26:53much as we use in dictionaries today.
26:55But one printing, and it was just one of his work,
26:58mistakenly spelled it as syllabus
27:00and that is what has stayed with us ever since.
27:02And we've given it a Latin plural and everything,
27:04so we have entrenched it in the language.
27:07Syllable is definitely bona fide,
27:09so that goes back to the Greek for taking together.
27:12So a syllable is sounds taken together
27:14and then expressed with one effort.
27:16That is a syllable.
27:17The syllibub is a bit more of a mystery.
27:20Have you ever had a syllibub?
27:22Yes, sure.
27:23Yes, because they're not quite so fashionable these days.
27:26Up until, I suppose, the middle, late 20th century,
27:29they were sort of reasonably fashionable,
27:31but their heyday was in the 17th century.
27:33And originally it was milk sweetened with what was called cider sac,
27:38which was a little bit like cherry,
27:40and then left to curdle and served as a drink.
27:42So not very appetising.
27:44And then over time, cream was added and it was sweetened up and things
27:47and actually it became rather delicious.
27:49We think it may come from an area in the Champagne region of France
27:53called Sille, S-I-L-L-E.
27:56And a bub was an Elizabethan word for a kind of bubbling drink.
28:00So put feel and bub together and you have a bubbling drink from Sille
28:04because it was a kind of frothy cream.
28:06And in fact, the frothier the better.
28:09And it was said that...
28:10Sorry about this friend, he's a bit squeamish.
28:12But to achieve the froth in the best way possible
28:14was to take the milk straight from the udder as it was kind of collecting.
28:18And it was for a while called hatted kit.
28:22And Charles II apparently found it so delicious
28:25that he kept cows at the palace in case he got a hankering for some
28:29and he would walk up to one, squirt some milk into his wine, sack or cider
28:33and then he would have his Sille bub.
28:35Thank you, Suzy.
28:4069-51.
28:42Come on, Alex, your letters.
28:44Consonant, please.
28:46Thank you, Alex.
28:47R
28:48And another.
28:50K
28:52And another one, please.
28:54D
28:55And a vowel.
28:56O
28:57And another vowel.
28:58E
28:59And a consonant, please.
29:01S
29:03And a vowel.
29:05E
29:07And a consonant, please.
29:08T
29:10And another consonant, please.
29:14Lastly, W.
29:16Off you go.
29:29BUZZER
29:48Alex?
29:49I'll go for an eight.
29:52Ryan?
29:53I'll stick with a seven.
29:55OK, what's your seven?
29:56Tarot.
29:58Restoked.
30:00Restoke the pyre.
30:02It's not there, I'm afraid, Alex.
30:04I understand why you went for it.
30:06Yeah, thank you for trying there.
30:08Over there?
30:09We've got stroked for seven.
30:11Yes, and rested for seven with a W.
30:14But seven was our best.
30:16Thank you.
30:17Ryan, your letters.
30:19I'll have a vowel, please, Rachel.
30:21Thank you, Ryan.
30:22A
30:23And another one.
30:24I
30:25And another.
30:27E
30:28A consonant.
30:30H
30:31And another one.
30:32N
30:33And another.
30:35L
30:36And another one.
30:38C
30:39A consonant.
30:41R
30:43And a last consonant as well.
30:45Last one, C.
30:4730 seconds.
30:55MUSIC
31:19Ryan?
31:20I'll try an eight.
31:22Alex?
31:23Just a five.
31:24What's your five?
31:25Chain.
31:26Ryan?
31:27Clincher.
31:28Clincher, absolutely fine.
31:30Yep, well done.
31:31To the corner.
31:32We also had chance here in the corner for eight.
31:35Thank you.
31:36Yeah.
31:37Penultimate round.
31:38Alex, your numbers.
31:40I'll stick with one big one and five little ones, please, Rachel.
31:43Why not? Thank you, Alex.
31:44One large, five little.
31:45To finish off the day, numbers-wise,
31:48and the last selection is
31:49nine,
31:50one,
31:52five,
31:53one,
31:54ten,
31:55and 25.
31:56And the target to reach, 586.
31:59586.
32:01MUSIC
32:23Alex?
32:32585.
32:34Ryan?
32:35585.
32:36Alex?
32:37One plus one is two,
32:39times 25 is 50.
32:41Yep.
32:42Plus the nine, 59.
32:4359.
32:44Times ten, 590.
32:46Uh-huh.
32:47Minus the five, 585.
32:49Which you haven't used and that gets you to one away, lovely.
32:51Ryan?
32:52Uh, exactly the same.
32:55Rachel?
32:56I found a way for this one.
32:57If you say five minus one is four,
32:59times that by ten for 40,
33:02add 25 for 65,
33:05times that by nine for 585,
33:08with a spare one for 586.
33:10Well done.
33:11APPLAUSE
33:1491 to 58.
33:17Fingers on buzzers.
33:19Fingers on buzzers.
33:20Please reveal today's Countdown Conundrum.
33:28Ryan?
33:29Hindering.
33:30Let's have a look.
33:33Well done.
33:34APPLAUSE
33:37Alex, I'm sorry, but he's exceptionally good at the conundrum.
33:41He's good at all of them, Anne.
33:43Well done, Ryan.
33:44Next, your sixth game.
33:46Hmm.
33:47Well done.
33:48Thank you, Susie.
33:49Thank you, Nicky.
33:50Thanks very much.
33:51Rachel?
33:52Happy birthday to the Wizard of Oz.
33:54I don't know about you, but I can very much relate to...
33:56Was it the Scarecrow who needed a brain?
33:58I've got baby brain.
33:59Everyone going through the menopause or who's had Covid fog
34:02can relate to me at the moment, I think.
34:04I don't know if you relate to any of the characters or...?
34:06Well, I think that when I see Judy Garland at that stage,
34:10I just think how sad that her life ended as it did, really.
34:15That's cheered everybody up.
34:17Thank you for watching. See you tomorrow. Bye.
34:48Custy and Phil are also back for a brand-new series
34:50to help navigate the fast-moving property market.
34:53They're kicking things off in the North East,
34:55location tomorrow night at 8.
34:57A Place in the Sun is next.