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00:00This programme contains strong language and adult humour.
00:04CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
00:31Good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown studio.
00:34Now, I hope that what I'm about to tell you is not second-hand news
00:39and certainly not little lies, or indeed even rumours,
00:43because there's a lot of big love,
00:45as one of the world's most successful bands makes dreams come true.
00:50Yes, between now and 11th July, Fleetwood Mac is on an almost
00:55non-stop tour of the UK and Ireland.
00:58They're everywhere, and it all kicks off tonight in London's O2 Arena.
01:04If you've got tickets, then, to see Stevie Nicks, Mick Fleetwood,
01:08Lindsey Buckingham, Christine McVie and John McVie are in for a big, big night.
01:13Do you have a favourite song from Fleetwood Mac?
01:16Up until you just mentioned a load of the titles,
01:18I wouldn't have been able to name one tune, I think.
01:21There's one called The Chain, apparently, that's a big hit,
01:24but apparently they're still rolling along.
01:26Don't Stop's a good tune. Don't Stop's a good tune,
01:28and the O2's a brilliant venue.
01:30I saw Justin Timberlake there once, he was amazing.
01:33It's a big place, though, isn't it?
01:35You've got to have some decent seats.
01:37Good for the acoustics. Recommend it.
01:40For sure. All right.
01:42Now, who have we got? Here we've got Steve Redfern's back.
01:45Now, Steve, six games under your belt, that's fantastic.
01:49Only two more to go, and then we'll see
01:52whether you're going to be an octochamp or not.
01:55I've got a sense that you might well do it.
01:57But, first of all, you've got a clamber all over Anne-Marie Davies,
02:01an accountant from Widness in Cheshire
02:03who enjoys playing Countdown against her husband Mark,
02:07who the other day actually got the conundrum.
02:10Nice, nice, nice man.
02:13And you've got a terrible sense of direction.
02:15I'm glad that you've made it here today.
02:18What happened exactly when you followed that bus?
02:22It was one of those things. I got completely lost, didn't know where I was.
02:26I phoned my mum, as you do, to see what to do,
02:29and she said, find a bus and you'll find your way home.
02:32Find something you recognise.
02:34So I followed a bus, and it kept pulling into bus stops
02:37and I had to keep pulling in in front of it,
02:40letting it go past me again until I found somewhere I recognised
02:43and found my way home.
02:45I share your pain, because I'm hopeless at directions.
02:48Even with a sat-nav, I can get it badly wrong.
02:51I share your pain. Let's see how you get on today.
02:54You're up against Steve Redfern.
02:56So, a big round of applause for Anne-Marie and Mr Redfern.
02:59APPLAUSE
03:03And over in the corner, we have, of course, Susie
03:07and the wonderful Steve Bagshall,
03:11who's given us some great stories.
03:13A naturalist, a writer too.
03:15Great to have you back with us.
03:17Thank you. Great to have you back.
03:19Off you go. Good luck.
03:21Hi, Rachel. Hi, Steve. Can I have a consonant, please?
03:24You can, thank you. Start today with D.
03:26And another.
03:28W. And another.
03:31N. And another.
03:34R. And a vowel, please.
03:36O. And another vowel.
03:39E. And another.
03:42A. And a consonant, please.
03:45L.
03:48And a final consonant, please.
03:50And a final C.
03:52And here comes the Countdown Clock.
04:17CLOCK TICKS
04:24Well, Steve? Seven.
04:26Anne-Marie? Seven.
04:29Steve? Clowned.
04:31Anne? Clowned.
04:33Did you sort of discuss it amongst yourselves?
04:35Yes. Very well done.
04:37And in the corner, Steve and Susie.
04:40Similar, had crowned, but that's it for me.
04:45There was an eight there, which was a colander,
04:48if you're thinking of cooking.
04:50The strainer is a colander.
04:52I wasn't, but I'm prepared to give it a moment's thought.
04:55Seven points apiece. Now then, Anne-Marie, letters game.
04:58Can I have a consonant, please, Rachel?
05:00Thank you, Anne-Marie. N.
05:02And another.
05:04Z.
05:06And another.
05:08T.
05:09And a vowel.
05:11O.
05:13I.
05:15And another.
05:17O.
05:19And a consonant.
05:21S.
05:23And another.
05:25G.
05:27And a final consonant, please.
05:29And a final P.
05:31Stand by.
05:43MUSIC PLAYS
06:03Anne-Marie?
06:04Seven.
06:05A seven. Stephen?
06:06Eight.
06:07Right. Anne-Marie?
06:09Sopping.
06:11Steve?
06:12Opposing.
06:13Opposing.
06:14Absolutely brilliant. Well done.
06:16Well done.
06:20Did the corner have opposing?
06:22We didn't. You could tell by the surprise on our faces.
06:24No, it was a really good one.
06:25What did you have?
06:27Something that happens quite often to me when I'm catching animals
06:30is that they poop all over me.
06:33So, pooping.
06:34Pooping?
06:35Yes.
06:36Yeah. They say it's lucky.
06:38Particularly if it's a pigeon.
06:40I don't believe it.
06:41All right. 15-7.
06:43Steve's in the lead, but early days.
06:45Now, then.
06:46Numbers.
06:47Steve?
06:48Can I have one large, please?
06:50One large and five small. Thank you, Steve.
06:52Of course you can.
06:53Right, for this round, the small ones are...
06:56four,
06:57ten,
06:58seven,
06:59two,
07:00and eight.
07:01And the big one, 100.
07:03And the target, 585.
07:05585.
07:07MUSIC PLAYS
07:11MUSIC CONTINUES
07:37Yes, Steve?
07:38584.
07:39584. And Marie?
07:41585.
07:42585. Well done.
07:44So, how did you get there?
07:46I did 4 plus 2 equals 6.
07:48Yep.
07:49Multiplied by the 100.
07:51600.
07:52And then 7 plus 8 is 15.
07:53Perfect.
07:54And take it off.
07:55So, 585. Well done.
07:56Well done. Well done.
07:57APPLAUSE
08:00Well done. So, you're ahead two points.
08:0217 to Steve, 15,
08:04as we turn to a tea time teaser,
08:07which is Let's Rest.
08:09And the clue...
08:10Let's rest here, they said,
08:12and they've been there ever since.
08:14Let's rest here, they said,
08:16and they've been there ever since.
08:19MUSIC PLAYS
08:27APPLAUSE
08:33A warm welcome back.
08:34A warm welcome back are left with the clue,
08:36Let's rest here, they said,
08:38and they've been there ever since.
08:40Who has?
08:41Why, settlers have.
08:43Settlers.
08:44So, 15 for Steve,
08:46slightly behind Anne-Marie,
08:48who's on 17,
08:49and it's Anne-Marie's letters game.
08:51Can I have a consonant, please, Rachel?
08:53Thank you, Anne-Marie.
08:54S.
08:55And another?
08:57D.
08:58And a third, please?
09:01G.
09:02And a vowel?
09:04E.
09:05Another?
09:07O.
09:08Another?
09:10U.
09:11And a consonant, please?
09:14T.
09:15Consonant?
09:17S.
09:19And a final consonant, please?
09:22And a final T.
09:23Stand by.
09:25MUSIC PLAYS
09:35MUSIC CONTINUES
09:56Anne-Marie?
09:57Er, six.
09:58Steve?
10:00Six.
10:01Yes, Anne-Marie?
10:02Er, guests.
10:03And Steve?
10:04Touted.
10:05Touted. We happy over there?
10:07Very happy.
10:08All right. Any improvements there?
10:10Steve and Susie, what have you got?
10:12Just sixes.
10:13We were wondering about outsets, er, in the plural,
10:16but actually it's pretty much always used in the singular,
10:19from the outset.
10:20Um, and ousted.
10:22And that's it?
10:23Yeah, that was about it.
10:24All right.
10:25So there we are, 21 plays Anne-Marie's 23.
10:27Steve, what are you going to do? You're behind.
10:29Letters game.
10:30Hi, can I have a consonant, please?
10:32Thank you, Steve.
10:33L
10:34And another.
10:36B
10:37And another.
10:38S
10:39And another.
10:41T
10:42And a vowel, please.
10:44E
10:45And another vowel.
10:46A
10:47And another.
10:49E
10:51And another.
10:53I
10:55And a final consonant, please.
10:57And a final N.
10:59Stand by.
11:00MUSIC PLAYS
11:02MUSIC STOPS
11:30Yeah, Steve?
11:31Eight.
11:32An eight. Anne-Marie?
11:33S, just a six.
11:34And your six?
11:35Invest.
11:36Invest. Now then, Steve?
11:38Vaseline.
11:39Well, we had Vaseline as well.
11:42And I'm gutted, for all of us, that it has a capital V,
11:46cos it's still a trademark.
11:48It hasn't quite slipped into English.
11:50Yeah.
11:51If you'll forgive the pun.
11:55I want you to go outside this studio, Susie.
11:59And I want you to say three Hail Marys.
12:03And then you can come back.
12:06OK.
12:07Anything else?
12:09Well, no, we were very happy with that one
12:11until we looked it up at the last second.
12:13You liked Vaseline, didn't you?
12:14Yeah, I did.
12:15Yeah, didn't work, though.
12:16No.
12:17Never mind.
12:1829 plays Steve's 21.
12:21And we go now to a numbers game.
12:24Anne-Marie?
12:25Can I have three large, please?
12:26You can, indeed.
12:27Thank you, Anne-Marie.
12:28Three from the top and three little ones.
12:30For this round, the three smalls are 1, 6 and 7.
12:34And the three big ones, 25, 100 and 75.
12:38And the target, 538.
12:41538.
12:56MUSIC PLAYS
13:14Anne-Marie?
13:15534.
13:17Four away, Steve.
13:18538.
13:19538, right.
13:216 minus 1 is 5.
13:23Yep.
13:24100 plus 7.
13:25100 plus 7, 107.
13:27Multiply by the 5.
13:28Is 535.
13:30And 75 over 25 is 3.
13:32Yep.
13:33And add that one.
13:34Well done, 538.
13:35APPLAUSE
13:36Well done.
13:38Strings you back into the lead, too, by two points.
13:4131 to Anne-Marie's 29 as we turn to Steve.
13:45And, Steve, you've told us about a fun encounter
13:48with a dingo bonding with sperm whales
13:51and a lovely meeting with the baby gorilla
13:53who held your hand and reduced you to tears.
13:56But there must be some scary moments
13:59when an animal perhaps approaches you.
14:02Yeah, I think probably one of the most dramatic
14:04was filming with humpback whales
14:07off the Pacific north-west coast of America.
14:10And for the majority of the year, humpback whales are solitary
14:13unless you have a mother with her calf.
14:15But in this one specific place,
14:17they've learnt how to hunt huge shoals of herring.
14:19What happens is they'll swim below the shoal of herring
14:22and one whale will do a circuit,
14:24blowing out air through its blowhole,
14:26creating a shimmering, silvery curtain of bubbles
14:29that the fish won't swim out of.
14:31And then they all erupt up to the surface
14:33with their mouths open, their gullets billowing,
14:36swallowing tonnes of fish with every single lunge.
14:39And we'd been filming this for about a week off Alaska
14:43in a kayak, in a fairly small sea kayak.
14:46And all of a sudden, one afternoon,
14:48the water went completely flat
14:50and a neat ring of bubbles started with our kayak
14:53right slap-bang in the centre of it.
14:55And then from nowhere, 15 humpback whales,
14:58each of which possibly weighed as much as 40 tonnes,
15:01erupted out of the water,
15:03towering as much as five metres above our boat.
15:07And we were probably the closest anyone's ever come
15:11to being actually swallowed by a whale.
15:14And they wouldn't have noticed you, particularly,
15:16the mouth is so big.
15:18It's probably as big as this, is it, or bigger?
15:20It's bigger. The gullet itself isn't huge
15:23and they certainly wouldn't have been able to swallow us in our kayak.
15:26But to them, we were an insignificant piece of flotsam on the surface.
15:30They had no idea we were even there.
15:32If you look it up on the internet,
15:34there's a cracking little bit of footage of us
15:36very nearly getting swallowed.
15:38What do we look up, actually? I'm going to do this.
15:40If you look up Steve Baxhall nearly swallowed by whales,
15:42then you'll find it.
15:44Thank you very much. I think that's worth a big round of applause.
15:49Well done, Steve. Thank you.
15:52So, Steve Redfern, 31 to Anne-Marie's 29.
15:56Close-run thing here and you're back on Letters Game.
15:59Have a consonant, please. Thank you, Steve.
16:01R And another.
16:04B And another.
16:06T And another.
16:09D And a vowel, please.
16:12A And another.
16:14E And another.
16:17O And a consonant, please.
16:20F And a final consonant, please.
16:23And a final W. Countdown.
16:47MUSIC
16:59Yes, Steve. Six.
17:01Thank you, Anne-Marie. Six.
17:03Two sixes, Steve.
17:05Fedora. And?
17:07Boater. And a boater.
17:09How interesting. Well done, both of you.
17:12And in the corner? Aborted.
17:14Yeah, that's good. That's there for seven.
17:16Another seven is forbade.
17:18Forbade, yeah.
17:20All right. So, 37 to 35.
17:22Still that two-point difference.
17:24Anne-Marie, you're chasing him.
17:26Let's see whether you can catch him with this Letters Game.
17:28Have a consonant, please, Victor. Thank you, Anne-Marie.
17:30R And another.
17:33S And another.
17:37H And a vowel, please.
17:40A And another.
17:43O And a third, please.
17:46I And a consonant.
17:49K And another.
17:53S And a final vowel, please.
17:57And a final A. Countdown.
18:01MUSIC
18:13MUSIC
18:32Yes. Anne-Marie?
18:34Six. A six, Steve?
18:36Six. Anne-Marie?
18:38Sharks. Sharks AND sharks.
18:40Both of you?
18:42There we go.
18:44And in the corner?
18:46They took my sharks.
18:48I was so chuffed that I got to talk about sharks and it's gone.
18:51Nothing else?
18:53Seeker, which is a kind of deer. That's about it, really.
18:55And Susie?
18:57Seven. I'm staying on the cooking theme.
18:59Karahis are there.
19:01K-A-R-A-H-I-S.
19:03And they are bowl-shaped frying pans, two-handled,
19:06used in Indian cooking.
19:08Very good. 43 to 41.
19:10We've got that two-point lead and it's numbers for Steve.
19:13Can I go with four large, please?
19:15You can, thank you, Steve.
19:17Four from the top and two little ones this time.
19:20And for this round, the little ones are nine and seven.
19:23And then the big ones, 75, 50, 100 and 25.
19:28And the target, 602.
19:30602.
19:32MUSIC
19:40MUSIC
20:04Steve?
20:06600. Two away. And Marie?
20:08700 as well.
20:10So, Steve, seven times 100?
20:13Seven times 100 is 700.
20:16Minus 75 and 25?
20:18For 600.
20:20And Marie?
20:22Same way.
20:24Just thrusted it, Steve, there.
20:27So, 602. Rachel?
20:29Tricky one. If you say 50 divided by 25 is 2.
20:3475 minus 2 is 73.
20:37Times by 7 is 511.
20:40And then add on the 100 and take away the 9.
20:43All 602.
20:45Smashing. Well done, Rachel.
20:50Well done. As we go into a tea-time teaser,
20:53the score stands, Steve on 50, Anne-Marie, 48.
20:56Just that two little points in it.
20:58And the tea-time teaser, it's grabs ear.
21:01And the clue, grabs someone's ear and gives them lots of abuse.
21:06GRABS SOMEONE'S EAR AND GIVES THEM LOTS OF ABUSE
21:25So, welcome back. I left you with the clue,
21:27grabs someone's ear and gives them lots of abuse.
21:30And the answer is barrages.
21:33Barrages. You can barrage somebody.
21:35But I reckon it's got a military origin, has it?
21:39Yeah, it did have a military origin.
21:41It was a concentrated artillery bombardment over a wide area.
21:44That was the original meaning of a barrage.
21:46And then over time, obviously, it took on a figurative meaning
21:49of overwhelming amount of insults or words directed at a particular person.
21:55Thank you. Well done, Susie.
21:57So, 50 plays 48. Where shall we go?
21:59Anne-Marie, that's where we're off to. Letters.
22:02You can have a consonant, please, Rachel. Thank you, Anne-Marie.
22:05T And another.
22:08B And a third, please.
22:11S And a vowel.
22:15E And another vowel.
22:19I And another.
22:22A And a fourth, please.
22:27E And a consonant.
22:31N And a final consonant, please.
22:34And a final Y. Stand by.
23:01MUSIC
23:08Anne-Marie?
23:10I'll risk an eight.
23:12An eight. Steve? Seven.
23:14And your seven? Beanies.
23:16Beanies. Now then, Anne-Marie?
23:19Beaniest?
23:21Beaniest.
23:23As in the beaniest stew I've ever eaten.
23:27It's not there, I'm afraid.
23:29Beanies definitely are, but beediest, beaniest, no beaniest.
23:32I think you knew you were challenging your arm a bit.
23:35Yeah, got to make those two points up somehow.
23:38Anyway, there we are, so it's 57 now to 48.
23:41So, the corner, what have we got over there?
23:44Do you've got a seven?
23:47Yes. Beastie? Yes.
23:49We beasties? Yes.
23:51Always looking at those.
23:53And otherwise a six, satiny, like satin.
23:56Thank you very much. All right.
23:58Let's return to Steve as we're in the final stretch here.
24:02Letters time, Steve.
24:04Can I have a consonant, please? Thank you, Steve.
24:06L. And another.
24:08G. And another.
24:10S. And another.
24:14R. And a vowel, please.
24:16A. Another vowel.
24:19E. And another one.
24:22I.
24:24And a consonant, please.
24:26S. T.
24:28And a final consonant, please.
24:30And a final L.
24:32Down, down.
24:56MUSIC PLAYS
25:04Steve? A seven.
25:06A seven. Anne-Marie? A seven.
25:08Steve? Tillers.
25:10And Anne-Marie?
25:12Retails.
25:14Retails. Pretty good. Yes.
25:16And of the corner, Steve and Susie?
25:18I had realist, which is all right,
25:21but then you stuck a G in it and made it regalist,
25:24which is rather better.
25:26Oh, that is good, yeah.
25:28That's when the ruling monarch is supreme in religious matters.
25:32That's regalism.
25:34But there is a nine there, actually, which is an allergist.
25:37And an allergist is a practitioner specialising in the diagnosis
25:41and treatment, obviously, of allergies.
25:43Oh, that's terrific.
25:45Allergies.
25:47Yeah.
25:49So many allergies around.
25:5154, please, Anne-Marie.
25:5355, as we turn to you, Susie, and your origins of words.
25:57And today...
25:59My well-winter of the body and different bits of the body
26:02and how they've crept into English in expressions and words and phrases.
26:06And I'm going to talk about the face today.
26:09The word face we took from the French, face,
26:13but while we kept it, they, in fact, took on visage,
26:16that came from the Latin visus, meaning sight,
26:19so they lost face, but we gained it.
26:21To affront somebody, originally meant to slap them in the face,
26:25to literally hit their front.
26:27Very, very literal meaning,
26:29which took on the figurative one a little bit later.
26:32Coconut, that comes from the Spanish and Portuguese coco,
26:35which meant a grinning face.
26:37Much feared, actually, because of the eerie resemblance
26:40of the three holes in the base of the shell to a human face,
26:44but a rather scary one, if you look at it.
26:46I'll never look at a coconut again in the same way, having learnt that.
26:49A complexion meant a combination of bodily humours.
26:53And in medieval medicine, medieval physiology,
26:56the colour of the face reflected the various balances of the humours
27:00within the body.
27:02So, you know, if you were green, obviously you were full of bile,
27:06melancholy, etc.
27:08And that's where we get complexion from.
27:10It literally meant knitting together.
27:12Grimace comes from the French for a grotesque face or ugly mug.
27:16And a grima in Old Saxon was a face mask,
27:19and it shares a root with grim.
27:21That's where we get grim from,
27:23the idea of a really ghoulish, grotesque face mask.
27:26And finally, morgue goes back to a very old French word
27:29meaning to look solemnly,
27:31which, of course, the many, many visitors who flocked
27:34to the original morgue in Paris would most certainly have done.
27:38Well, well, well. Very good.
27:4264 to Anne-Marie, 55.
27:45Anne-Marie, you're back with a letters game.
27:47Can I have a consonant, please, Rachel?
27:49Thank you, Anne-Marie. M
27:51And another?
27:53H
27:54And another?
27:56N
27:57And a vowel, please?
27:59O
28:00And another?
28:01U
28:03And another?
28:05O
28:07And a consonant, please?
28:09J
28:12And another?
28:14P
28:17And a final consonant, please?
28:19And a final D.
28:21Canter.
28:42MUSIC STOPS
28:54Anne-Marie?
28:55Just a five.
28:56A five.
28:57Just a five as well.
28:58Two fives. Anne-Marie?
29:00Pound.
29:01And Steve?
29:02Hound.
29:03And hound.
29:05Any advances on five?
29:07Steve and Susie?
29:09No.
29:10Unhood, to remove the hood from a horse, for example.
29:14That gives you six.
29:16Yes.
29:17Otherwise there's mojo, which is a nice four.
29:19There's dojo, which is somewhere where you can go to study martial arts.
29:23Right, thank you.
29:25But very, very difficult, that one.
29:27Indeed. Because you studied martial arts in Japan for a while, didn't you?
29:30I did, yeah. I spent a year in Japan studying martial arts, living in a dojo.
29:34Good for you. A year in Japan, that sounds like a lot of fun.
29:37As per usual, 69-60, Steve's in the lead,
29:40and it's the last letters game for you, Steve.
29:43Have a consonant, please.
29:45Thank you, Steve. C.
29:46And another.
29:48N.
29:49And another.
29:50P.
29:51And another.
29:53M.
29:54And a vowel, please.
29:55E.
29:56And another vowel.
29:57O.
29:59And another vowel.
30:00I.
30:02And another vowel, please.
30:05A.
30:06And a consonant, please.
30:07And the last one.
30:08Q.
30:10Countdown.
30:37Yes, Steve?
30:38Six.
30:39And Marie?
30:40Just a five.
30:41And your five?
30:42Minx.
30:43Thank you, Steve.
30:44Cinema.
30:45And cinema.
30:46Very nice.
30:48And what else?
30:50Susie and Steve, what have you plunged up for us?
30:53We've got Mopane, M-O-P-A-N-E,
30:56which is a kind of bush and a caterpillar, I think, that feeds off it.
31:01Ah, yeah, OK.
31:03There might well be a caterpillar attached to it,
31:05but we have the tree found in arid regions of southern Africa,
31:08bitter-tasting leaves,
31:10and it has butterfly-like wings that close in the heat, apparently.
31:14Sounds quite beautiful.
31:15Very good.
31:1675 to 60.
31:1815 points now, then.
31:20Numbers for Anne-Marie.
31:22Anne-Marie?
31:24That's too large, please.
31:25You can, Anne-Marie, thank you.
31:27Too large for small, and you can.
31:29Right, the last numbers game of the day is 9, 8, 10, and another 9.
31:35And then the last two, 75 and 100, could be tricky.
31:38Target, or maybe not, 910.
31:41910.
31:59MUSIC
32:20Yes, Anne-Marie?
32:22910.
32:24Well done.
32:25910.
32:26All right, let's get it over with. Anne-Marie?
32:28I did 9 times 100.
32:31900.
32:32Plus 10.
32:33And 10. Rather simple.
32:35I did 100 minus 9 times 10.
32:3791, yeah, lovely.
32:38All right, so there we are.
32:4085 plays 70.
32:42Final round, conundrum time.
32:44Fingers on buzzers, let's reveal today's countdown conundrum.
32:48MUSIC
32:59MUSIC
33:19Well, we're perplexed here, in fact, so perplexed
33:21that I have to turn to the audience and see if anybody's got it.
33:25Nobody? Nobody?
33:27All right, must be a difficult one.
33:29Roll it and let's have a look and see how difficult it was.
33:32Uniformed.
33:34There we go.
33:35So, 85 to 70.
33:37Steve has 7 on the trot.
33:40And Anne-Marie has got to go home to husband Mark and explain it.
33:45Because, of course, Mark is an octo-champ.
33:47Yeah, no room in the house for two teapots anyway, so...
33:50All right.
33:51Well, you take this, another goodie bag for you.
33:53Thank you.
33:54Thank you very much indeed.
33:55We've come all the way to Widnesden, Cheshire now.
33:57Actually, not that far at all.
33:59So we'll see you tomorrow, and tomorrow is the day.
34:01Good luck to you then. Thanks.
34:03And over in the corner, see you tomorrow.
34:05Steve and Susie, see you tomorrow.
34:08And Rachel, too.
34:09Well, we just watched that video of Steve in the break
34:11with all the whales, and if you haven't watched it at home,
34:14go on, go and watch it now, it's amazing.
34:16Incredible. Doesn't it look real?
34:18All right. Ridiculous.
34:19And let's see how Steve gets on tomorrow, then.
34:21Yep. Day for him tomorrow. See you then.
34:24Same time, same place, you'll be sure of it.
34:26A very good afternoon to you.
34:28You can contact the programme by email...
34:45When 77-year-old Jim collapses at the wheel of his ambulance,
34:49he ends up in St George's, Tooting.
34:51New 24 Hours on A&E starts tonight at nine.
34:54And next, double your money or open the box.
34:57You need to be pretty old to remember that,
34:59but someone might just double their money in deal or no deal.

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