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00:00This programme contains strong language and adult humour.
00:04APPLAUSE
00:31Hello. Welcome to Countdown.
00:33On this day in 1962,
00:35Marilyn Monroe famously sang
00:38Happy Birthday, Mr President to JFK
00:42and we all know what happened next.
00:44Do we? Can you tell us, Anne?
00:47No, I don't... It's a programme in the afternoon.
00:50Is it not daytime what happened next?
00:52Well, I think they had a relationship.
00:54Ah, OK. They were courting.
00:56Yeah, if you like. Yeah.
00:58Walking out. Lovely.
01:00Or probably not walking out, staying in.
01:02Without a chaperone, I presume.
01:04Yeah. Let's meet our contestants.
01:06Amazingly, Ryan is still with us.
01:09Seventh programme.
01:11Are you hopeful of this one?
01:13You're nearly an OctoChamp.
01:15I've achieved everything I came down to do,
01:18so I'm quite happy just to be here.
01:20Oh, well, you haven't done everything, have you?
01:22You haven't become an OctoChamp.
01:24It was beyond what I was hoping.
01:26Oh, good. OK.
01:28We've got Paul here to give you a run for your money.
01:32Paul is 53. He's from Bath.
01:35Tell me what you do.
01:37I work in information technology in the cyber security sector.
01:41Right. What's your job?
01:44My job at the moment is to procure the systems and services
01:48for IT companies to provide security.
01:50How do you know all about that?
01:53I got into it when...
01:55I think it was Sinclair who invented the computer in 1980-something,
01:59and I never really stopped, so it's always been a fascination of mine.
02:03And have you been doing your job for a long time, this job?
02:07This job only about a year.
02:09Prior to that, about 25 years working with the MOD.
02:12So you know everything about security, don't you?
02:15No-one knows everything, but I do my best.
02:18Thank you very much.
02:23Hi to Susie. Hi, Anne.
02:25And hi to Nicky Chapman, who's got so many programmes on telly.
02:30Right, let's get on with the game.
02:32Ryan, your letters.
02:34Hi, Rachel. Hi again, Ryan.
02:36Can I start with a consonant, please? You can.
02:38Let's start today with M.
02:40And another one.
02:42N. And another.
02:45T. And one more.
02:48R.
02:50We'll go for a vowel.
02:52O. And another.
02:54A. And another.
02:56I.
02:58Take another vowel.
03:00E.
03:02And a final vowel, please.
03:05A final O.
03:07Let's play Countdown.
03:20CLOCK TICKS
03:38Ryan. I'll try an eight.
03:41Only a six. What's your six?
03:43Motion.
03:45Ryan. Motioner.
03:47Um...
03:49Oh, it's not there, I'm afraid, Ryan.
03:51Sorry.
03:53In the corner.
03:55We've actually got anti-room, haven't we, Susie?
03:57Yes, an anti-chamber, like a waiting room, in a way.
04:01Yes, that would give you eight.
04:03Thank you. Paul, you're in the lead already.
04:05It doesn't often happen with Ryan.
04:07Your letters.
04:09Thank you, Rachel. Can I start with a consonant, please?
04:11You can indeed. Start with S.
04:13And a vowel.
04:15O.
04:17And a consonant.
04:19R.
04:21And a consonant.
04:23T.
04:25And a consonant.
04:27H.
04:29And a vowel.
04:31E.
04:33And a vowel.
04:35I.
04:37And a consonant.
04:39L.
04:41And a final consonant.
04:43A final G.
04:45ELECTRONIC MUSIC PLAYS
04:47ELECTRONIC MUSIC PLAYS
05:11Paul.
05:13Seven.
05:15Paul.
05:17Glories.
05:19Ryan.
05:21Ghostlyer.
05:23Yes, very well spotted. Excellent.
05:25APPLAUSE
05:27I don't suppose you can do any better than that, can we, Susie?
05:29No, no better than that.
05:31We did have a couple of eights, didn't we?
05:33Yeah.
05:35Slicer and lighters.
05:37But, no, it's brilliant. Well done.
05:39Excellent. Ryan, your numbers.
05:41Can I have four large, please, Rachel?
05:43Keep everybody guessing. Thank you, Ryan.
05:45This time, the two little ones are four and nine.
05:48And then we have 25, 50, 75 and 100.
05:53And the target, 473.
05:56473.
05:58ELECTRONIC MUSIC PLAYS
06:13ELECTRONIC MUSIC PLAYS
06:27Ryan.
06:29473, not written down.
06:31OK. Paul.
06:33475.
06:35Ryan.
06:37Four times 100.
06:39400.
06:41475 for the two to take away.
06:43Lovely. That'll do. 473.
06:45Well done.
06:47APPLAUSE
06:49Gosh, Peter.
06:51Be so rich, be so rich,
06:53and the clue,
06:55you don't need to be rich to get this,
06:57but you'll need a bit of dough.
06:59You don't need to be rich to get this,
07:01but you'll need a bit of dough.
07:03See you in a minute.
07:05ELECTRONIC MUSIC PLAYS
07:11APPLAUSE
07:18I left you with the clue,
07:20you don't need to be rich to get this,
07:22but you'll need a bit of dough,
07:24and the answer is brioche.
07:27OK, scores 28-6.
07:30Paul, your letters.
07:32Start with a consonant, please, Rachel.
07:34Thank you, Paul. P.
07:36And a consonant.
07:38R.
07:40And a vowel.
07:42A.
07:44A consonant.
07:46T.
07:48Consonant.
07:50M.
07:52A vowel.
07:54I.
07:56Another vowel.
07:58O.
08:00And a consonant.
08:02V.
08:04And a final vowel.
08:06A final O.
08:08ELECTRONIC MUSIC PLAYS
08:34Paul.
08:36Ryan.
08:38Paul.
08:40Ryan.
08:42In vitro, you need two I's,
08:44but I think, anyway,
08:46it is two words.
08:48Anything else you've got?
08:50We had ovation for seven as well.
08:53Yep.
08:54And oration as well.
08:56Oh, good. OK.
08:58Ryan, your letters.
09:00OK, I'll have a consonant, please, Rachel.
09:02Thank you, Ryan. W.
09:04W.
09:06L.
09:08And another.
09:10N.
09:12And one more.
09:14D.
09:16A vowel.
09:18U.
09:20Another one.
09:22I.
09:24And another.
09:26E.
09:28And a consonant.
09:30Y.
09:32About the clock.
09:34ELECTRONIC MUSIC PLAYS
10:03Ryan.
10:04Eight.
10:05Paul.
10:06Only a six.
10:07What's your six?
10:08I had windly, but I didn't have the word.
10:10Ryan.
10:11Unwieldy.
10:12Windly.
10:14Erm...
10:15It's not windily, but not windly.
10:17What have we got over there?
10:19We had a seven.
10:20Dye line.
10:21Yep, which is a copying or colouring process.
10:24And that was it, I think, for us.
10:26Thank you.
10:27Ryan, your numbers.
10:29I'll have two from the top, please, Rachel.
10:31Thank you, Paul.
10:32Two large and four little.
10:34Coming up for you, and for this round,
10:36the little ones are two, one, four,
10:41another one, and the large ones, 25 and 100.
10:44Let's see if this is a possible one.
10:46618.
10:48618.
10:49ELECTRONIC MUSIC PLAYS
11:01ELECTRONIC MUSIC CONTINUES
11:19Paul.
11:20518... Sorry, 618.
11:21Good. Ryan.
11:23619.
11:24Paul.
11:254 plus 2 is 6.
11:264 plus 2 is 6.
11:28100 minus the 1 is 99.
11:30Yes.
11:31Multiplied together is 592.
11:33It's actually 594.
11:35Ah.
11:37Plus the 25, plus the 1. Nearly.
11:40Ryan.
11:41So I had 100 take away 1.
11:43100 take away 1, 99.
11:45Then 4 plus 2 is 6.
11:474 plus 2 is 6.
11:49Multiply those together.
11:50594.
11:52And I added the 25.
11:53And you had the 25, yeah.
11:55I forgot that I had a 1.
11:56619.
11:58Rachel.
11:59Well, each of them was so close because this was the right method.
12:03You just had to take the final one off for 618.
12:07Ah.
12:08There you go.
12:09Nicky, I realise, like everybody else,
12:13several of your programmes suffered during the pandemic.
12:18Yeah.
12:19Wanted Down Under,
12:20which was people who thought they might like to live in Australia.
12:24Yeah.
12:25What did you learn from that?
12:27Well, I love Australia.
12:29I went out when I was 19, so I'm probably slightly biased.
12:33I like their attitude.
12:34I love the country.
12:35It's very different from the UK.
12:37It's not just about sun and sea.
12:39It really has its own culture, its own sense of humour.
12:42And what we realised that, well, over the last few years,
12:45people haven't been able to travel there or New Zealand,
12:48where we film.
12:49And I think a lot of people want to go out there really to start again.
12:53And normally it's children that are driving it.
12:56They want to give their kids the best opportunity
12:59that they possibly can.
13:00And if work is difficult in the UK, life is difficult,
13:03they're looking for something else.
13:05I mean, have you... You've lived abroad, haven't you, Anne?
13:08Well, I have a small home in New York, yeah.
13:12But it's not my main home,
13:14so I don't think I've ever tried to transplant.
13:18You were never tempted to live abroad?
13:20No. No.
13:22I think if I was going to go somewhere, it would be Australia.
13:25Especially when I was younger, perhaps not so much now
13:28because I've got family here
13:29and I'd find it so difficult to leave them behind.
13:33But fingers crossed, the series will come back.
13:36But obviously travel's been so difficult in the last couple of years.
13:40It's very tough for grandparents, isn't it,
13:43when they say to you,
13:44I've got four grandchildren and one of them's in Australia.
13:47Yeah. Yeah.
13:48And also, if you're living in Australia,
13:50getting back to see family is so expensive.
13:53Yeah.
13:54It's not something that most people can do every single year.
13:57And also, you know, for any of us who've travelled a great journey,
14:01you know what jet lag's like.
14:03It's so difficult, especially with children.
14:05And it does seem to be grandparents' children.
14:07That's the problem.
14:08When people bounce back,
14:09it's normally because they're missing their family back home.
14:12And tell me, other programmes you've done,
14:15Chelsea Flusher, that's another one, pandemic, really.
14:19Yeah.
14:20Just around the corner,
14:21we're going to be celebrating Chelsea in May at last.
14:24Because last year, we had to do it in September.
14:27And the year before, Chelsea was very different.
14:31And we actually ended up filming in my back garden,
14:33which is, you know, the size of the circle there.
14:36But we managed to put a show out and the RHS did an incredible job.
14:40And I think what the last few years have shown us
14:43is how important our green spaces are for us, physically, mentally,
14:48and how we're embracing it.
14:50But this year promises to be all about colour.
14:54It's all about colour.
14:56Forget the greens, forget the browns.
14:58It's all about the oranges, the reds, the pinks.
15:01Lovely. Like the colour you're wearing today.
15:03We'll be seeing that at Chelsea.
15:04Yeah, but that's not the flowers I choose.
15:07I never like it to look as if God's made another rainbow.
15:11I mean, some people love a lot of colour.
15:14It's like colour roundabouts.
15:16Multicolour. Do you like colour?
15:18I love colour.
15:20And last year for Chelsea, what we saw were autumnal colours
15:23because the show went out in September.
15:25So very difficult for the plants men and women,
15:28you know, when they're designing gardens, etc, to come up with that.
15:31This year, being spring, I think there'll be blooms everywhere.
15:36And has it encouraged you in your own garden?
15:39Definitely.
15:40OK, what have you got there now?
15:42Definitely. Well, I used to have, like, a Mediterranean-looking garden.
15:45Now I've got more trees. It's really small.
15:47So I've got smaller trees in the garden
15:49because it's all about encouraging wildlife, isn't it,
15:52into our spaces as much as we can.
15:54And it's a low-maintenance garden, very low-maintenance.
15:57So high-impact, low-maintenance, perfect for me.
16:00Has it got any grass? No.
16:02Lots of plants and areas that I can sit and chill and work out in,
16:06as in not physically work out, but work outdoors or read outdoors.
16:10So sort of entertaining spaces, but much more green than it was before.
16:15But it's so small, I don't think grass would survive in my back garden.
16:19And a sunny garden? Ish.
16:21I always vowed, and I work in property,
16:24I always vowed I was going to have a west-facing garden.
16:26No, I've ended up east.
16:28But I'm just grateful for this space, I'm not going to lie.
16:31Nicky Chapman. Thank you.
16:36The scores are 50-6. Ryan, your letters.
16:40I'll have a consonant, please, Rachel. Thank you, Ryan.
16:43T
16:44And another.
16:46F
16:48And another.
16:50L
16:51And one more.
16:53R
16:54A vowel.
16:55A
16:56Another vowel.
16:58E
16:59And another.
17:01O
17:02A consonant.
17:04S
17:06And I'll take a final vowel, please.
17:09A final I.
17:11Off you go.
17:14♪
17:43Ryan.
17:44Eight.
17:45Paul.
17:46Eight.
17:47What's your eight, Ryan?
17:48Floaters.
17:49Paul.
17:50Same.
17:51Yep.
17:52In the corner.
17:53Well, I thought florist was going to come up,
17:55keeping the Chelsea theme for seven,
17:57but, of course, Susie can do better than that.
17:59No, but florist is, though, which is lovely.
18:01Flotea is there for an eight, fralist for an eight,
18:04and the lovely trefoils are there.
18:07Small European plants of the pea family
18:09with yellow flowers and clover-like leaves.
18:11Ah, lovely.
18:13Thank you.
18:14Paul, your letters.
18:15Thank you.
18:16Consonant, please, Rachel.
18:17Thank you, Paul.
18:18N
18:19And another.
18:21P
18:22And a vowel.
18:24E
18:25And another.
18:26E
18:27A consonant.
18:29D
18:30Consonant.
18:32F
18:33And another.
18:35N
18:36And a vowel.
18:38I
18:39And a final consonant.
18:41A final T.
18:43Time starts now.
19:12Paul?
19:14Seven.
19:15Ryan?
19:16Six.
19:17What's your six?
19:18Pinned.
19:19Paul?
19:20Fainted.
19:21Yes, and you spend that with the two Es.
19:23Absolutely fine, yes, to make a deceptive move, to faint.
19:26Yep, faint a blow in boxing, for example.
19:28Any advance on that?
19:30Well, we also had pendant for seven.
19:32Yes, again, with an E at the end this time rather than an A.
19:35It's something hanging down.
19:37So, pendant.
19:38Catkins.
19:40Catkins, for example.
19:42Ryan?
19:43Your numbers.
19:45I'll have six small, please, Rachel.
19:47Six little ones and another mental challenge, potentially.
19:51And this round is four, four, one, two, three, very small, and nine.
19:58Let's have a look at the target.
20:00490.
20:02490.
20:10490.
20:34Ryan?
20:35486.
20:36Paul?
20:37No idea.
20:38Ryan?
20:394 plus 4 plus 1.
20:404 plus 4 plus 1 is 9.
20:42Times 3?
20:4427.
20:45Times 2?
20:46Times 2 is 54.
20:48Times 9?
20:49Times by 9 is what you declared, 486.
20:53Lovely.
20:54Rachel?
20:55There was a way for this one.
20:57If you say 4 times 9 is 36, minus 1 is 35, times that by 2, 470,
21:05and then you have a remaining 4 plus 3 for 7, and times them together for 490.
21:14Very easy.
21:16Second teaser, Pound Set.
21:18Pound Set and the clue.
21:20Set to get rid of more pounds than the next person.
21:23Set to get rid of more pounds than the next person.
21:26See you in a minute.
21:35APPLAUSE
21:42Welcome back.
21:43I left you with the clue, set to get rid of more pounds than the next person,
21:48and the answer is outspend.
21:51The score, 65-21.
21:54Come on, Paul, your letters.
21:56Thank you, Rachel. I have a consonant.
21:58Thank you, Paul. M.
22:00And another?
22:02G.
22:03A vowel?
22:05A.
22:06And another?
22:08A.
22:09And a consonant?
22:11C.
22:12A consonant?
22:13L.
22:14And another?
22:15T.
22:16And a vowel?
22:18O.
22:20And a final vowel?
22:22A final E.
22:24Off you go.
22:33MUSIC PLAYS
22:57Paul.
22:58Only a five.
23:00Ron?
23:01Just a five as well.
23:02Paul?
23:03Gloat.
23:04Ryan?
23:05The same.
23:06Yep.
23:07Over in the corner.
23:09Suze has come up with oatmeal for seven.
23:12Yes, that is there for seven, as is gel coat,
23:15which is a resin surface coating of fibreglass.
23:20And there was a sixth there, malate,
23:22which is a chemical term for malic, salt of malic acid,
23:25which we'll find in unripe apples.
23:27Thank you.
23:29Ryan, your letters.
23:31I'll have a vowel, please, to start, Rachel.
23:33Thank you, Ryan. E.
23:35And another?
23:37U.
23:38And one more?
23:40O.
23:41A consonant?
23:43N.
23:44And another?
23:45S.
23:46And another?
23:48P.
23:49One more?
23:50H.
23:52Another consonant?
23:54R.
23:55And a vowel?
23:57And the last one?
23:58I.
23:59Start the clock.
24:30Ryan?
24:31Seven.
24:32Paul?
24:33Seven.
24:34Your seven, Ryan?
24:35Fournier.
24:36Paul?
24:37Seven.
24:38Yep.
24:39In the corner.
24:40We've managed to do one better, haven't we, Suze?
24:42She takes all the credit.
24:43Punisher for eight.
24:45Yes.
24:46Oh, very good.
24:52And, Suze, over to you.
24:54Thanks, Anne.
24:55Well, hat tip today to Mignon Fogarty,
24:59who is also known as Grammar Girl on the web,
25:02and she often makes just lovely, lovely articles
25:05about various aspects of English
25:07and often reminds me of some of its adventures.
25:10And she's got an article on ghost words in the dictionary,
25:13so I've been talking recently about a lot of mistakes
25:16that go in the dictionary, so I'm going to kick off with one,
25:19and then I'm going to talk about some very deliberate mistakes,
25:22which I will explain a bit later.
25:24One of the most famous ghost words in English dictionary-making
25:28is DORD, D-O-R-D,
25:31and it all began...
25:33We used to compile dictionaries with slips of paper.
25:36For each entry, there was a sort of postcard-sized slip of paper,
25:39and any lexicographer's office
25:41was literally stacked full of these slips of paper,
25:44which would go towards making the dictionary.
25:46And on one of these slips was written capital D or lowercase d,
25:51and it was there as an abbreviation for density.
25:54And because quite often you will find on these little slips of paper
26:00that people typed out the spelling of the words with spaces in between
26:03so that they were much more legible because they were handwritten.
26:06And obviously somebody mistook the D or D for DORD,
26:11so it went into the dictionary.
26:14This was the... I think it was the Webster's New International Dictionary.
26:18This was in 1934, and they put DORD, meaning density,
26:22and it stayed there for quite a few editions
26:25before somebody spotted the mistake.
26:27So that's really famous, at least for dictionary-makers.
26:30But there are also a couple of words, or at least a couple of words,
26:33where they're put in a dictionary
26:35so that the dictionary's editors can tell
26:38whether the dictionary has just been plagiarised and copied by other people
26:41because these are nonsense words,
26:43and if other people pick them up and put them in their dictionary,
26:46they've done theirs properly.
26:48One of the first was Esquivalience, or Esquivalience.
26:51I'm not sure how to pronounce it, actually.
26:53This was in the New Oxford American Dictionary in 2001,
26:57and they defined it as
26:59the willful avoidance of one's official responsibilities, as a joke.
27:03And they even gave it a made-up etymology,
27:05saying it arose in the 19th century and it comes from the French,
27:08esquiver, meaning to slink away, etc.
27:10So that was the first one.
27:12And there's another one that we love,
27:14and that's Mountweasel,
27:16and that is actually in this dictionary as well.
27:18And this is an encyclopaedia fake entry,
27:21and Henry Alford, who was the author of the...
27:24I think the 1975 New Columbia Encyclopaedia,
27:27basically described a woman called Ms Mountweasel,
27:31and she was given the biography of...
27:45..only to die at 31 in an explosion
27:48while on assignment for Combustibles magazine.
27:51So pretty weird and obviously quite fanciful,
27:55but again, this was copied by other people
27:58so that the encyclopaedia's editors knew
28:01that other people had just literally taken the whole text
28:04and plagiarised it.
28:06So it was a kind of red flag, if you like,
28:08to know whether your text had been plagiarised.
28:10Mountweasel now in the dictionary is a bit of a joking entry
28:13because it's not completely made up.
28:15Oh, good wheeze, though. Thank you, Susan.
28:17You're welcome.
28:21Paul, your letters.
28:23Thank you. Consonant, please, Rachel.
28:25Thank you, Paul. D
28:27And a vowel.
28:29E
28:30And a vowel.
28:32O
28:33And a consonant.
28:35B
28:36And another.
28:38D
28:39And another.
28:41A vowel.
28:43I
28:44And a consonant.
28:46R
28:47And a final vowel.
28:49A final E.
28:51Let's play Countdown.
29:11MUSIC PLAYS
29:23Paul.
29:24Six.
29:25Ryan.
29:26Seven.
29:27Paul.
29:28Recode.
29:29Ryan.
29:30Decried.
29:31Yes, very good. In the corner?
29:33We had decoder for seven.
29:36And decider as well for seven.
29:38Thank you.
29:39Round 13. Ryan, your letters.
29:41I'll have a consonant, please, Rachel.
29:43Thank you, Ryan. J
29:45And another.
29:47S
29:48And another.
29:50M
29:51And another.
29:53N
29:54A vowel.
29:56A
29:57And another.
29:58E
29:59And another.
30:01I
30:03A consonant.
30:05L
30:06And a final vowel, please.
30:09A final A.
30:11Time starts now.
30:13MUSIC PLAYS
30:38MUSIC STOPS
30:44Ryan.
30:45Seven.
30:46Paul.
30:47Seven.
30:48Ryan.
30:49Jasmine.
30:50Paul.
30:51Same.
30:52Oh, OK. In the corner.
30:54There's quite a few sevens, isn't there?
30:56Yes.
30:57Animals.
30:58And malaise.
30:59There's just two?
31:00Yes. Amnesia as well for seven.
31:02But, yes, can't beat Jasmine. Love Jasmine.
31:05OK.
31:06So, you've been an MOD for many, many years.
31:09Were you a sort of cyber spook?
31:12One of many, yes.
31:14Oh, OK. And was that your first job?
31:16No, I was actually in the army originally as a captain in the artillery.
31:20Oh. Why did you give that up?
31:22I didn't choose to, but in 1997 there were quite a few cutbacks
31:26and, unfortunately, I was one of the victims of...
31:29So, by now, you could be a major general, couldn't you?
31:32My fellow soldiers might have something to say about that,
31:36Oh, gosh.
31:37And even if Ryan wins, which he will,
31:40it would be nice that he's beaten a would-be major general.
31:44Your numbers.
31:46Thank you. We'll have two large and four small, please.
31:50Thank you, Paul. Two from the top and four little ones to finish today.
31:54And the selection is seven, two, nine, four.
31:59And the large ones, 75 and 25.
32:02And your target, 199.
32:05199.
32:32MUSIC
32:38Paul? 200.
32:40Ryan? 199.
32:42OK. 75 plus 25?
32:4475 plus 25, 100.
32:46Plus four? Plus four, 184.
32:49Times two? Times two, 208.
32:51And take away the nine?
32:53I'll do it, 199. Lovely.
32:55APPLAUSE
32:59Final round.
33:01Fingers on buzzers.
33:03Please reveal today's Countdown Conundrum.
33:19Paul? Unbuckled.
33:21Let's have a look.
33:23Oh, well done.
33:25APPLAUSE
33:28Well done. That's a win all on its own.
33:31However, commiserations also,
33:33because the very, very skilled Ryan has beaten you.
33:37Thank you for being here, Paul. Thank you.
33:40Well done. One more game and you're an Octo Champion.
33:44Let's see how that goes. Yeah.
33:46He's never overexcited, Ryan from Glasgow.
33:51Thank you, Susie. Thank you, Nicky. Thank you.
33:54It's very rare we've got someone in who's served in the forces
33:57and is a cybersecurity expert.
33:59I think we should just give him a teapot. Can you have a word, Anne?
34:02I'm not going to have a word. Do you want a teapot?
34:04I would love a teapot, Anne. Have a teapot.
34:07Thank you for watching. Bye.
34:09APPLAUSE
34:11You can contact the programme by email at countdown at channel4.com
34:15or write to us at countdownleads ls31js.
34:19You can also find our web page at channel4.com forward slash countdown.
34:24APPLAUSE
34:28Kirstie and Phil are getting their capes on once again
34:30to save the day and find the perfect location.
34:33Stream the new series So Far and All For.
34:36With summer approaching, you might want to transform your outdoor space.
34:39So why not get inspiration from the great garden revolution?
34:43Starting Saturday at 8.15 on Channel 4.
34:46Next, A Place in the Sun.