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00:00This programme contains strong language and adult humour.
00:05APPLAUSE
00:31Good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown studio.
00:34Now, I read an alarming survey recently to do with names.
00:39Now, apparently a fifth, Rachel, a fifth of people
00:43regret the names they've given to their children.
00:47Can you imagine? A fifth.
00:49But, of course, there's this terrible sort of trend
00:52to give children trendy names.
00:54There's one lady in Southampton that certainly regretted it.
00:57She was a big Star Wars fan.
00:59She called her little chap Jediah after Jedi,
01:02and she was just very uncomfortable about screaming out in the park,
01:06Jediah!
01:07So she decided now to call him Jed, which is quite a nice name, actually.
01:11I'm not sure what it's short for,
01:13but it's quite a traditional northern name, I think, Jed.
01:16But names, I remember...
01:18I don't... I'm not... I'm quite happy with my name,
01:21but I remember I was at school with a kid called Rory O'Rory.
01:24I thought, that's a cool name.
01:26What about you? You happy with Rachel?
01:28I like Rachel, yeah. Rachel's a good name.
01:30But our floor manager, Jay, he's just had a little baby boy
01:33and was trying to push the name Zlatan on them.
01:36You want something original that stands out?
01:38He's a Leeds fan. Yes.
01:40So I don't think he's ever going to be called Zlatan.
01:43I didn't realise that the baby had arrived.
01:46I must congratulate him. Yes.
01:48I'll push a funny name, too. You go for Zlatan.
01:50I'll think of something. All right. Excellent.
01:52Now, who have we got with us? We've got Wesley Jardinebag,
01:55freelance sales representative from Darlington,
01:57who's got five great wins under his belt.
01:59Welcome back. Welcome back, Wesley.
02:02You're joined today by Bob Rowe, retired, living in Altrincham.
02:06Retired, in fact, from 33 years as a racing manager
02:10at Wimbledon and White City.
02:12That was a great career, wasn't it?
02:14Oh, wasn't it? Yeah, I was very lucky.
02:16I was involved in ground racing in the big days
02:18and I was in charge of the ground derby at White City
02:22and then on to Wimbledon for that length of time.
02:24So I had some good times.
02:26Of course, in those years, in the heydays of dog racing,
02:29they had royal patronage and Duke of Edinburgh, for example,
02:32Princess Anne, Prince Edward, all owned greyhounds at various times.
02:35In fact, the Duke of Edinburgh actually won the ground derby
02:38in 1968 with Camira Flash.
02:40Really? Good man. Well done. Thank you, Bob.
02:43Let's have a big round of applause for Bob and Wesley Jardine.
02:46APPLAUSE
02:50And please welcome, as ever, over in the corner, of course,
02:53Susie Dent, and he's back!
02:56It's Good Morning Britain's Richard Arnold.
02:58Richard, how are you?
03:00Very well, thank you, sir.
03:02And we'll hear some more great showbiz stories from you a little later,
03:06but now we turn to Wesley for the first letters game.
03:10Hi, Rachel. Consonant, please.
03:13Thank you. Start today with L.
03:16And another.
03:18T
03:20And a vowel.
03:22I
03:23And another.
03:25E
03:27And a consonant.
03:29P
03:31And another.
03:33H
03:35A vowel.
03:37A
03:39A consonant.
03:43B
03:47And I'll finish with a consonant, please.
03:50And finish with F.
03:53And here's the Countdown Clock.
04:12CLOCK TICKS
04:26Yes, Wesley?
04:28I'll try an eight.
04:31An eight. Bob?
04:33Just six.
04:34And that six?
04:35Please.
04:36Yes, Wesley?
04:38Spiteable.
04:40Spiteable. OK.
04:44Um, not there, I'm afraid, Wesley. Sorry.
04:47And over in the corner, what do you think?
04:50Epiblast.
04:53I promised I was going to apply myself this time as well, Nick.
04:56That's a good start.
04:58How did it go down with La Dente?
05:00Yeah, no, it's great. It's from embryology, so quite a specific trade.
05:05It's the smallest layer of an embryo
05:07before it differentiates into ectoderm and mesoderm.
05:11So a very specific branch of science.
05:14Wow, Richard!
05:18Brilliant. That's why she looks so young, Nick.
05:21I know. So there we are. Bob's off to an early start.
05:24There's six points and it's Bob's go.
05:27Hi, Rachel. Hi, Bob.
05:29A vowel, please. Thank you. Start with E.
05:32And one more.
05:34And a consonant.
05:36D. And another.
05:39Q.
05:41And a vowel.
05:43A. Another vowel.
05:46E. And a consonant.
05:49C. Another.
05:52Z.
05:54And lastly, a consonant.
05:56And lastly, N.
05:58Stand by.
06:05MUSIC
06:30Yes, Bob? Six.
06:32Two sixes. Bob? Bacon.
06:34No, Wesley? Canoed.
06:36Yep. Good sixes, Bob.
06:38Very good. Can we beat six, Richard?
06:41Encode. Yes.
06:43Another six, but that's as far as we got, wasn't it?
06:45Yep, those were our three.
06:47All on sixes. Yes. All right.
06:49So, 12 pays six, Wesley on six, and it's Wesley's numbers game.
06:53Wesley?
06:55Six small ones, please, Rachel. Thank you, Wesley.
06:57Six little ones to start the day.
07:00And the selection is...
07:02four, two, seven, five,
07:06another seven, and nine.
07:09And the target, 491.
07:11491.
07:13MUSIC
07:31MUSIC
07:44Wesley?
07:46490.
07:48Bob? 493.
07:51493. Right.
07:53Wesley?
07:55Five twos of ten. Yep.
07:57Seven sevens of 49.
07:59And multiply.
08:01491 away.
08:03Well done, Wesley. Well done.
08:0513 plays Bob's 12.
08:07But now we turn to Rachel.
08:09491, Rachel, please.
08:11Yes, it was there. If you split up this multiplication,
08:13if you say seven times seven is 49,
08:16times five is 245,
08:19and then take away the four for 241,
08:22times it by two for two...
08:24Sorry, four, eight, two,
08:26and add the nine, 491.
08:28Well done. Well done, Rachel.
08:30APPLAUSE
08:33Terrific.
08:35So, 13 plays 12.
08:37Wesley, one point in the lead as we turn to our first Tea Time teaser,
08:40which is Tidy Saver.
08:42And the clue.
08:43She saved up a tidy sum of money
08:45to help her through the difficult times.
08:48She saved up a tidy sum of money
08:50to help her through the difficult times.
08:53MUSIC
08:59APPLAUSE
09:08Welcome back. I left with a clue.
09:11She saved up a tidy sum of money
09:13to help her through the difficult times.
09:16And the answer to that one is adversity.
09:19Adversity.
09:21Now, Bob slipped one point behind,
09:24but plenty of time for this.
09:27Letters game.
09:28Vowel, Rachel, please.
09:30Thank you, Bob.
09:31I.
09:32And a consonant.
09:34W.
09:35And another.
09:37S.
09:38And one more.
09:40C.
09:41And a vowel.
09:43E.
09:44And a consonant.
09:46B.
09:47One more.
09:49T.
09:50And another.
09:53M.
09:54And finally, a vowel.
09:55And last one.
09:57O.
09:58Stand by.
10:00MUSIC
10:25MUSIC
10:32Yes, Bob?
10:33Five only.
10:35Five.
10:36And Wesley?
10:37A six.
10:38And a six.
10:39Bob?
10:40Moist.
10:41Ah, yes, moist.
10:42Wesley?
10:43Comets.
10:45Happy now?
10:46Yes.
10:47Now, then.
10:48Richard and Susie, what have you conjured up?
10:51Bestow.
10:53Yes.
10:54And then there's also Maui's, M-O-W-I-E-S.
10:58It's a Devonian word, or a Cornish word also,
11:01for a yard or enclosure.
11:03All right, well done. Thank you.
11:0519, please. 12.
11:07And, Wesley, you're off again on a letters game.
11:10A consonant, please.
11:12Thank you, Wesley.
11:13S.
11:14And another.
11:16S.
11:18And a vowel.
11:20E.
11:21And another.
11:22I.
11:23A consonant.
11:25G.
11:26And another.
11:28M.
11:30And a vowel.
11:32A.
11:34And a consonant.
11:36S.
11:41And I'll finish with a consonant, please.
11:43And finish with an R.
11:45And the clock starts now.
11:54CLOCK TICKS
12:17Wesley.
12:18A seven.
12:20A seven, Bob?
12:21Just six.
12:22That's six?
12:23Masses.
12:24Now, Wesley.
12:25Grasses.
12:27Thank you.
12:28Yeah.
12:29We happy with that?
12:30Very happy, yes.
12:31Now, then.
12:32A seven.
12:33Richard and Susie, what have you got?
12:35Gassier.
12:36Thank you.
12:38Anything else?
12:40Images are also there, devices that record images.
12:43Images.
12:44Well done. Thank you. 26, please. 12.
12:47And we're back with the numbers.
12:49We're back with Rachel for Bob's numbers game.
12:52Rachel, one large and five small, please.
12:54Thank you, Bob. One from the top this time.
12:56Five little ones coming up.
12:58And for this round, your small numbers are four, three, five,
13:03one and two.
13:05And the large on 100.
13:07And the target, 529.
13:09529.
13:20BELL RINGS
13:42Yes, Bob?
13:43524.
13:45524. Wesley?
13:47529.
13:48529. So, Wesley?
13:50100 add four.
13:53104.
13:54Multiplied by five.
13:56520.
13:58Two add one.
13:59Is three.
14:00Times the three.
14:01Is your nine.
14:02And add it on.
14:03Well done.
14:04Very good indeed. Well done.
14:06APPLAUSE
14:10Very smart there, Wesley. Excellent stuff.
14:1236 plays that.
14:13Bob's 12, which we turn to the wonderful Richard Arnold.
14:17Here we are.
14:182017, a big year for you.
14:22Pourquoi?
14:2320 years on the breakfast television sofa.
14:26I don't look old enough, do I, ladies and gentlemen?
14:28LAUGHTER
14:29This is the first time I've had to wear bins on the show, Nick.
14:31Do you think they make me look smarter? Yeah.
14:33Of course they do, Susan. You hang on my every word.
14:35Yeah, it's been brilliant. I mean, it's been great. What a job.
14:37I've seen the world. I've rubbed shoulders with Prime Ministers
14:39and sporting heroes and the odd X Factor contestant
14:41and rolled out more red carpets than I care to mention.
14:43A lot of people think I only work three minutes a day.
14:45I work 15 minutes a week across 20 years.
14:48So it adds up, right?
14:49I mean, there is a little bit more to that.
14:51Not a lot, but there is a little bit more to that.
14:53But I remember the first day I arrived at the GMTV studios
14:55back in 1997, in that January,
14:57and it's the same studios as the Good Morning Britain studios now,
15:01so it's basically three port-a-cabins on top of the ITV building.
15:05And I was on the sofa that day.
15:07In the absence of a visual, I'll give you one, ladies and gentlemen,
15:09I was a very blousy-looking...
15:11Think Gary Barlow in his blousy years, you know?
15:14I still have a shirt on, frosted tips,
15:18and I was brought in to talk about a cast clear-out at Coronation Street.
15:21Do you know when someone gets...
15:22When they clear out the cast in these soap operas,
15:24the producer's called a mad axeman, and I'm basically following along.
15:28So it's not always good news for the cast whenever I'm booked.
15:30That was in the old days, of course, when I was called Soapy Dick.
15:33Story for another time.
15:35LAUGHTER
15:38But I remember going into the green room.
15:40Now, I won't mention names,
15:42because I don't want you to read your history books
15:44or take to the internet when I let you switch it back on again, Suze.
15:48But at the time, there was not so much a feud,
15:50but an ongoing frisson between two well-known presenters
15:53on the breakfast television sofa back then when I started.
15:56And one half of that duo had left on the Friday,
16:00and I started on the Monday.
16:02And I went into the green room, and they had these,
16:04I was going to say glamour shots, but not glamour shots,
16:06glamorous shots of the presenters in little clip frames.
16:10And this presenter who'd sadly departed,
16:13where that picture should have been, there was just a ring of dust
16:16and two raw plugs hanging out.
16:18And I thought, that's what I'm going to call my autobiography,
16:20because this business is brutal.
16:22But, ladies and gentlemen, I'm still here!
16:24CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
16:29Always great for a laugh. Well done.
16:3136 plays 12, Wesley's in the lead, and it's Wesley's letters game.
16:36Start with a consonant, please.
16:38Thank you, Wesley. D
16:40And another.
16:42F
16:44And a vowel.
16:46E
16:47And another.
16:49U
16:51And a consonant.
16:53R
16:54And another.
16:56G
16:58A vowel.
17:00O
17:03Consonant.
17:05R
17:07And I'll finish with a consonant, please.
17:09And finish with T.
17:11Stand by.
17:38Yes, Wesley?
17:40A seven.
17:41A seven. Bob?
17:43Seven.
17:44Wesley?
17:45Foreguts.
17:47And Bob?
17:49Grouted.
17:50And grouted.
17:52Foregut.
17:53Foregut, yes, it's the upper part of the gut towards the mouth.
17:56That is your foregut. The anterior part.
17:59Thank you. Foregut, indeed.
18:01Now then, Richard, choose you.
18:03And we've got grouted as well.
18:05Grouted and foregut, well done.
18:07Nothing else? Nothing else, no.
18:09Let's leave it there. 43 plays 19.
18:11Bob?
18:13Your letters game.
18:15Rachel, a vowel, please.
18:17Thank you, Bob. A
18:19And one more.
18:21E
18:22And a consonant.
18:24M
18:25And again.
18:27V
18:28And one more.
18:29L
18:31And a vowel.
18:34A
18:35And a consonant.
18:37T
18:38And a consonant.
18:40T
18:41And a vowel.
18:43And the last one.
18:45I
18:46Well done.
19:04Yes, Bob?
19:06Just five.
19:08A five, Wesley?
19:10Six.
19:11And a six. Bob?
19:13Maple.
19:15Wesley?
19:16A-V-8.
19:18Very nice.
19:19Very good. Excellent.
19:21A-V-8, can we match it? Can we better it?
19:23Palatine.
19:24Palatine.
19:25Palatine.
19:26Palatine.
19:27Palatine.
19:28Palatine.
19:29Palatine.
19:31Can we match it? Can we better it?
19:33Palliative.
19:34Oh, palliative.
19:35Yes, not in terms of palliative care.
19:38That's double L with an E, the I.
19:40But it's appealing to the palate or the taste buds.
19:43Indeed.
19:44Palliative food.
19:45All right.
19:46APPLAUSE
19:47Very good.
19:49Very good indeed.
19:5049 takes 19.
19:52Wesley, it's numbers time.
19:54Go on, I'll six more.
19:56Same again. Six little ones.
19:58Thank you very much, Wesley.
20:00Here we are.
20:01Ten.
20:02Two.
20:03One.
20:04Another two.
20:05Another ten.
20:07And five.
20:09And the target, 283.
20:11283.
20:31MUSIC STOPS
20:43Wesley.
20:45285, two away.
20:48Bob?
20:49Miles away, Nick.
20:50Too far?
20:51Too far.
20:52Let's stick with Wesley for the minute, then.
20:54Wesley.
20:55Two add one.
20:56Two add one, three.
20:57Times ten.
20:5830.
20:59Take away the other two.
21:0128.
21:02Times by the other ten.
21:04280.
21:05And add the five.
21:07285, two away.
21:10Well done, Wesley, well done.
21:12But two away.
21:13Rachel, can you crack this for us?
21:15Yes.
21:16If you say ten times ten is 100,
21:21minus the five is 95,
21:24and then two plus one is three,
21:26times those together, 285,
21:28you've got another two left over for 283.
21:30Well done, Rachel, well done.
21:34Well done.
21:35So, Wesley on 56 and Bob, 19,
21:38as we turn to our second Tea Time teaser,
21:41which is One's Tried.
21:43And the clue.
21:44One's tried by court-martial,
21:46having been charged with this.
21:48One's tried by court-martial,
21:50having been charged with this.
21:53MUSIC PLAYS
21:59APPLAUSE
22:10Welcome back.
22:11I left with the clue, One's Tried by court-martial,
22:14having been charged with this.
22:16Having been charged with desertion.
22:19Desertion. Court-martial offence.
22:2156 plays 19. Wesley on 56.
22:23Bob, letters again.
22:25Rachel Constance, please.
22:27Thank you, Bob.
22:29F
22:30And another.
22:32N
22:33And one more.
22:35G
22:36And a vowel, please.
22:38E
22:39And a consonant.
22:41S
22:42And another.
22:44N
22:45And a vowel.
22:47O
22:48And one more.
22:51I
22:52And a constant, please.
22:54And the last one, S.
22:56And I.
22:57MUSIC PLAYS
23:27Yes, Bob? Just five.
23:29Wesley?
23:30S7.
23:31So, Bob?
23:32Sines.
23:34Now, Mr Jardine.
23:36Sensing.
23:37Sensing, absolutely fine, yeah, very good.
23:39Tricky, this one.
23:41Now, what has the corner got to offer us?
23:43Fessing.
23:45Fessing, as in confessing.
23:47Right, fessing up. Fessing up.
23:49No, that was our best, actually. As I say, it was a tricky one.
23:52That'll do. Fessing up. Well done.
23:5463-19, and it's Wesley's letters game.
23:57Wesley?
23:58A consonant, please.
24:00Thank you, Wesley.
24:01D
24:02And another.
24:04P
24:05And a vowel.
24:07E
24:08And another.
24:10I
24:11A consonant.
24:13W
24:14And another.
24:16R
24:17A vowel.
24:20A
24:22A consonant.
24:24D
24:26And I'll finish with a consonant, please.
24:28And finish with Y.
24:31Stand by.
24:53Yes, Wesley?
24:55I'll try seven.
24:57And Bob?
24:58No, just five.
25:00And that five?
25:01Wired.
25:02Wired.
25:03Yes, Wesley?
25:04Wadier.
25:07Wadier.
25:10Ooh, wadler, fadier, but not wadier.
25:14OK.
25:15Wadier.
25:18Ooh, wadler, fadier, but not wadier.
25:22Well, there is now.
25:23It's a nice try.
25:26Now, Richard?
25:27Diaper.
25:28Diaper, indeed.
25:30Yeah, lots and lots of 60s pairs there as well,
25:32but we couldn't get to the seven.
25:34That'll do. Thank you very much, Bob, on 24,
25:37and Wesley, 63, as we turn to Susie
25:41and her wonderful origins of words.
25:43Susie?
25:44Well, I'm going to talk about a very modern word
25:47and how it actually looks back to medieval warfare.
25:51And in medieval castles, you can still see them today
25:54if you go and visit them, there are openings in walls
25:57which are made either to look through
25:59or, in those days, to fire arrows through
26:02whenever the castle was threatened.
26:04And they were slits that were set in very thick stone walls,
26:07and they gradually widened out at the inside.
26:09You probably know the type that I'm talking about.
26:13And they were called loops, L-O-U-P-E-S.
26:17But the word loop is not related to the loop
26:20that might form in a piece of string, for example,
26:22but rather it's from a Dutch word meaning to peer or to spy,
26:25and it may be the root of a jeweller's loop, if you noticed,
26:28I mean, that they used to peer through
26:30to check out the quality of stones and gems, etc.
26:34And although loop already meant an opening,
26:37hole was attached to it in English for emphasis,
26:40and that is why we have loop holes today.
26:43But rather, of course, than being slits and castles
26:46from which to spy on or to defend oneself against the enemy,
26:49they became an outlet or a means of escape.
26:52We use them particularly in references to tax these days.
26:55And in this sense, a loophole was, as I say,
26:58an ambiguity or an omission in a statue.
27:00That was the first figurative sense, a literal get-out clause.
27:03But little do we know that in those medieval times
27:06they were actually a matter of life and death.
27:09Today, of course, we also have windows.
27:11Regular viewers will know one of my favourite words.
27:14That comes from Old Norse, a Viking word,
27:16and it means literally eye of the wind.
27:18It replaced eithel, which was an eyehole,
27:21and it also replaced, although it vied with it for a while,
27:24the Old French fenester,
27:26but we still keep that in the wonderful word defenestration,
27:30which means to throw somebody out of a window.
27:32Don't try it. Well done.
27:34APPLAUSE
27:37Thank you very much, Susie.
27:3963 plays 24, and it's Bob's letters game. Bob.
27:42Vowel retro, please.
27:44Thank you, Bob. I.
27:46And another.
27:48A. And a consonant.
27:51T. And one more.
27:53K. And again.
27:56L. And a vowel.
27:59E. And a consonant.
28:02T. And again.
28:04N.
28:06M. And one more.
28:08And, lastly, R.
28:11Stand by.
28:34MUSIC PLAYS
28:43Yes, Bob? Seven.
28:45A seven, Wesley? Yeah, I'll offer a seven.
28:48Thank you, Bob. Maltia.
28:50Maltia. And?
28:52Matia.
28:54I just touched that one myself, actually.
28:56Matia and matter, but not Matia, Wesley.
28:59Not having much luck today, sorry.
29:01Richard and Susie, between you.
29:03Well, Maltia was ours,
29:05otherwise we'd be down for sixes, Marcus, etc.
29:08So, very good to get a seven. Yeah, well done, Bob, well done.
29:1163 plays 31, and, Wesley, final letters game for you.
29:15Consonant, please. Thank you, Wesley.
29:18D. And another.
29:22L. And a vowel.
29:25I. And another.
29:27A.
29:29A consonant.
29:31N. And another.
29:34J.
29:37A vowel.
29:39U.
29:42A consonant.
29:44N.
29:47And I'll finish with a consonant, please.
29:50And finish with L.
29:52And the clock starts now.
29:54MUSIC PLAYS
29:59MUSIC STOPS
30:24Wesley.
30:26A6. Bob?
30:28A6. Yes, Wesley?
30:30Inland.
30:32And, Bob? Unlaid.
30:34And unlaid.
30:36Yeah.
30:38Have you got both of those?
30:40No, we didn't have those, actually.
30:42We have undinal.
30:44U-N-D-I-N-A-L.
30:47That is relating to an undine,
30:49and that's a female spirit or nymph imagined as inhabiting water.
30:53So, quite beautiful.
30:55Well, well, well. Undinal.
30:57Yes, or undinal, possibly, but it's a lovely word.
31:0069 plays 37, and it's Bob's numbers game. Bob?
31:04Rachel, one large, five small, please.
31:07Thanks, Bob. One from the top and five little to finish the day.
31:11And this final selection is...
31:133, 5, 7, 10, 1 and 25.
31:21And the target, 884.
31:23884.
31:25884.
31:56Yes, Bob?
31:58I believe I've got 884.
32:00Thank you. Wesley?
32:02Yeah, 884.
32:04Yes, Bob?
32:06OK, 7 x 5.
32:0835.
32:10Multiply by 25.
32:11875.
32:14And then the separate 10 minus the 1.
32:1710 minus the 1 from the 9.
32:19And add it.
32:20Perfect. Well done. 884.
32:21Well done. And Wesley?
32:23All right.
32:25APPLAUSE
32:29Wesley's standing at 79 to Bob's 47.
32:32As we go into the final round, that'll be the conundrum round.
32:35So, fingers on buzzers, Bob. Finger on buzzer.
32:39We're about to roll today's Countdown Conundrum.
32:43MUSIC PLAYS
33:14No. We're stumped up here.
33:16But who in the audience will have a shot at this conundrum?
33:19Do I see any hands?
33:22No.
33:24All right.
33:25Nick, can I have a go?
33:27Now you've got it? Yeah.
33:29I see. You're not going to get any points for this.
33:31No, I'm not. Go on, then.
33:33Uncloaked.
33:34Uncloaked. Let's see whether you're right.
33:37Well done. Well done.
33:39APPLAUSE
33:42Well done, Wesley. Good win, too. 79 points.
33:45Congratulations on that. That's a good six wins you've had.
33:49So, Bob, no shame in being beaten by a six-times winner.
33:52No, it was good fun, Nick. Thank you.
33:54Excellent. You've got a goodie bag to take back, too.
33:56We're altering them with you.
33:58All right. And young man, we shall see you tomorrow.
34:00Fantastic. Well done. Well done, indeed.
34:03And we shall see you both tomorrow, Richard.
34:05More stories from the Glitter Ball.
34:08And Susie, too, of course.
34:10See you then. See you both tomorrow.
34:12And Rachel, too, of course.
34:13Looking forward to those stories from the Glitter Ball.
34:15They sound very interesting.
34:17You've been there.
34:19All right. See you tomorrow, Rachel.
34:21Join us then, same time, same place.
34:23You'll be sure of it. A very good afternoon.
34:26Contact us by email at countdown at channel4.com,
34:30by Twitter at c4countdown,
34:32or write to us at countdown, leeds, ls3, 1js.
34:37You can also find our web page at channel4.com forward slash countdown.
34:43Coming up tonight here in four, Sarah Beanie is back,
34:45and she's looking for the UK's best place to live.
34:48Could it be your hometown? Find out tonight at eight.
34:50And then at ten, Dr Pixie takes a look back at our medical records
34:54to see if there's any clues to help us stay healthy in 2017 in a doctor's guide.
34:59Next, though, 15 brutally chopped down to one.
35:06.