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00:00This programme contains strong language and adult humour.
00:05APPLAUSE
00:31Good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown studio.
00:35Now, the British summer simply would not be the same,
00:38would not be right without those wonderful country fairs and shows
00:41when the farming communities and the local businesses get together
00:45and show off their produce, basically.
00:48The farmers, their animals,
00:50and the local communities, of course, put up their stalls.
00:54It's such fun to go and poke about among the cows and the horses
00:58and look at the sheep and all that sort of carry on.
01:00All highly polished, you know.
01:02Those cows, they have their hooves painted
01:04and their eyebrows and eyelashes done, it's fantastic.
01:07We think, oh, yes, cows, but then the number of breeds of cows,
01:11you know, the Guernseys and the Jerseys, the Blue Holstein,
01:14the Frisian, of course.
01:16Never knew you were such a cow fancier.
01:18Yeah. Oh, no, they're wonderful.
01:20Lois.
01:21I have to speak to my brother.
01:22He did an animal management course when he was younger.
01:24He got distinction in all of his animal management courses
01:27except the one that was putting your hand inside a cow.
01:30He had to repeat that because the first time, apparently,
01:33he was singing to the cow and lost the marks for that.
01:36These things are necessary, I guess, yeah.
01:38Next time you're at a country fair, see if you can get a rubber glove.
01:41I think possibly. You might get a thick ear for doing that.
01:44Now, then, Martin Hurst is back with us, Rachel,
01:48who actually was given a bit of a fright.
01:51Just slightly, yeah.
01:53Just slightly, but you came through with one of the fastest conundrums.
01:57Tremendously fast. Well done.
01:59Insurance document right from Ash Vale in Surrey.
02:02Five wins under your belt.
02:04And you're joined by Yvonne Endicott,
02:06a retired post office manager from Ampton in Bedfordshire.
02:10You used to have a pet tortoise called Houdini.
02:12Yes.
02:13But you told me the most wonderful story about your Turkish holiday.
02:17We got to Turkey late at night,
02:20so we all got into our hotel room and closed the curtains,
02:24didn't really know what was outside, went to sleep.
02:27We were woken up really early, about six o'clock in the morning,
02:30this noise that we had never heard before.
02:33It kept going on and on.
02:35So we opened the curtains
02:37and there was a flat-roofed apartment next to our hotel
02:41and there was a camel on the roof.
02:43Peering through your window. Almost.
02:45Extraordinary. Yeah.
02:47That's where they kept it at night.
02:49Brilliant stuff. Well, good luck, Yvonne, good luck, Martin.
02:52Big round of applause for today's contestants.
02:55APPLAUSE
02:57What a lovely story, imagine that.
02:59Good holiday story, that one.
03:01And welcome back to Gloria Hunneford,
03:03of course, known for 40 years now
03:06and is doing so much on television these days.
03:09Your rip-off Britain's running at the moment.
03:11Yes, well, it has been actually running at prime time.
03:14We started to make it for daytime nine years ago, believe it or not.
03:18The reason I always say that it works so well,
03:20because, first of all, it came in just before recession, actually,
03:24and so everybody felt they were being ripped off anyway.
03:27And because it's presented by three girls of a certain age,
03:31we think that we have the believability and credibility,
03:34but I think if you'd given it to three 25-year-olds,
03:37it wouldn't have the same gravitas,
03:39because we'd been round the block, etc.
03:41And you hear some very tragic stories,
03:43but also from us, I think, good warnings
03:45on how to avoid scams and not get caught up.
03:48Absolutely. No, it does a good public service, actually.
03:50I think it does, actually. I'm sure of it.
03:52Yes, thank you. Brilliant.
03:54And Susie, too, welcome back, as ever, as ever.
03:57Now, Martin, take us away.
03:59Hi, Rachel. Hi, Martin.
04:01Can I start with a vowel, please?
04:03You can, Andy, thank you. Start today with U.
04:05And another?
04:07I.
04:08And a third?
04:09A.
04:10And a consonant, please?
04:12N.
04:13And another?
04:15M.
04:16And another?
04:17V.
04:19And another?
04:21H.
04:23And another?
04:25R.
04:27And a final vowel, please?
04:30And the last one? E.
04:33And here's the Countdown Clock.
04:43CLOCK TICKS
05:05Martin? Six.
05:07A six. Yvonne? Six.
05:09Well done. Martin?
05:11Yvonne?
05:13Marine.
05:14Marine and hernia?
05:16Yes, absolutely fine. Gloria?
05:18I was wondering if, Martin, have you had a hernia?
05:20Er, not yet. Not yet.
05:22Personal question, anyway, pretty soon.
05:24But, yes, we had manure, that was it,
05:26as we were talking about cows earlier on.
05:29Manure. That's right.
05:31Vayner is also there for six.
05:33Harine for five, but it was a tough one to start with.
05:36Indeed. Six apiece, though, and it's Yvonne's letters game.
05:40Yvonne.
05:41Oh, good afternoon, Rachel. Afternoon, Yvonne.
05:43Can I have a consonant, please?
05:45You can indeed, thank you. Start with L.
05:48And a vowel?
05:50O.
05:52Another vowel?
05:54A.
05:56Consonant?
05:58D.
06:00Another consonant?
06:03S.
06:05Ooh. A vowel, please?
06:08U.
06:10Consonant?
06:12B.
06:14A consonant?
06:18R.
06:20And a final vowel?
06:22And a final O.
06:24Stand by.
06:38CLOCK TICKS
06:57Yvonne.
06:59A risky seven. I think I'll risk a seven.
07:01All right. How about Martin?
07:03Seven. Yvonne?
07:05Busload.
07:07Martin?
07:08Labours.
07:09And labours?
07:11Excellent. Busload is in the dictionary.
07:13Oh, well done.
07:14Yeah, busload for me as well.
07:16Well done. Susie?
07:18Yes.
07:19Anything else?
07:20That was it, yeah.
07:21Well done. So it's 13 apiece and it's Martin's numbers game.
07:24Martin?
07:25One large, please.
07:26Thank you, Martin. One large and five little.
07:28Not gambling this early.
07:30And these little ones are...
07:32Eight, ten,
07:34eight, seven,
07:36three and 50.
07:38And the target...
07:40158.
07:42158.
08:07CLOCK TICKS
08:14Martin?
08:15Yeah, 158.
08:16Yvonne?
08:17158.
08:18Let's get this over with, Martin.
08:20Three times 50, plus eight.
08:22Yeah, I think even Bruce the guide dog in the audience got that one.
08:25And Yvonne, too.
08:26Jolly good.
08:27So, 23 apiece as we turn to our first Tea Time teaser,
08:31which is Risk Then.
08:33And the clue...
08:34He's about to risk all his money on one horse,
08:36then he changes his mind.
08:38He's about to risk all his money on one horse,
08:41then he changes his mind.
08:58Welcome back, welcome back. I left you with the clue...
09:00He's about to risk all his money on one horse,
09:02then he changes his mind.
09:04Because he rethinks it.
09:07He rethinks it.
09:09Rethinks.
09:1023 apiece, Yvonne.
09:12Letters game.
09:15Consonant, please, Rachel.
09:17Thank you, Yvonne.
09:18T
09:19Vowel?
09:21E
09:23Another vowel?
09:24I
09:26Consonant?
09:29S
09:31Consonant?
09:33L
09:35Another consonant?
09:37X
09:39Another one?
09:41F
09:43A vowel, please?
09:46E
09:48And...
09:52Another...
09:54Vowel.
09:55And the last one?
09:57O
09:58Stand by.
10:28Yvonne?
10:30Risky seven again.
10:32Thank you. Martin?
10:34Seven.
10:35Yvonne?
10:36Lofties.
10:38Lofties. How about Martin?
10:40Foxiest.
10:42Oh, look at Yvonne, you're upset with yourself.
10:45Foxiest, yes, great word, great superlative.
10:48Unfortunately, you can't be a loftie.
10:50There's no group of lofties.
10:52Bad luck, bad luck.
10:54Nah, then.
10:55Oh, Susie has a word here which she's going to explain to us.
10:58I have, yes. Not what you might think.
11:00Sexfoil is a noun in architecture, meaning an ornamental design
11:05having six leaves or petals radiating from the centre.
11:09A sexfoil?
11:10Yes.
11:11Lovely.
11:1230 plays 23. Martin, letters game.
11:16Can I have a vowel, please, Rachel?
11:18Thank you, Martin.
11:19U
11:20And another?
11:21A
11:22And a third?
11:24I
11:25And a consonant?
11:27B
11:28And another?
11:30N
11:31And another?
11:32G
11:34And another?
11:36C
11:38And another?
11:40N
11:42And a final consonant, please?
11:47And a final N.
11:49Stand by.
11:52This programme contains strong language and adult humour.
11:58MUSIC PLAYS
12:22Martin?
12:23Seven.
12:24You got a seven. Yvonne?
12:25Seven.
12:27Now, then.
12:28The same.
12:29Same. There we go.
12:30Yep.
12:31Very good.
12:32Do we have a seven in the corner?
12:34Camping, not blamping, camping.
12:36Right. And Susie, anything else?
12:38Down to sixes, then. Things like pacing, Nick.
12:41Thank you. All right.
12:4237 plays 30, and it's numbers for you, Yvonne.
12:46Can I have one large, please, Rachel?
12:48You can, I think. One large, five little. Thank you, Yvonne.
12:52And this time, your little ones are seven, four, one,
12:57another seven, and eight, and the big one, 50.
13:01And the target, 857.
13:03857.
13:22MUSIC PLAYS
13:35Yvonne?
13:36864.
13:38864. Martin?
13:40I think I've got 857.
13:42Let's hear.
13:43Four minus one is three.
13:44Yep. Four minus one, three.
13:46Times eight.
13:4724.
13:48Minus seven.
13:49Is 17.
13:50Times 50.
13:51And add the other seven.
13:52Lovely. Well done, 857.
13:54Well done. Well done.
13:59Well done indeed.
14:00Actually, Rachel, Martin's red-hot on the numbers, you know.
14:04I don't think he's failed yet, has he?
14:06No, he's doing very, very well.
14:08Now, then, Gloria, you've had a smiley all week.
14:12You've got a smiley all the time, actually.
14:14What have you got for us today?
14:16Another silly story, really, from Ireland.
14:18We're talking about numbers.
14:19So we're now in Ireland racing.
14:21Horse racing is very, very popular there.
14:23And this chap from the north,
14:25who actually would be a Northern Ireland Protestant
14:28going into Catholic area, I tell you that for a reason,
14:31and he's not very good at betting and everything,
14:34but he sees this priest, and it's a week-long meeting,
14:38and every day he watched the priest,
14:40and the first day he watched him,
14:41and he saw the priest pick up a load of dosh.
14:44The next day, he watched the priest again,
14:46and the priest was whispering into the horse's ear.
14:48So he thought, I know what I'll do.
14:50So he put his money on number six or whatever it was.
14:53Sure enough, along with the priest, he won all the money.
14:56Next day, same thing, saw the priest whispering again,
14:59this time number 10 in purple.
15:01Right, put the bet on, scooped in all the money,
15:04and he thought, this is fantastic.
15:06I can't fail at this.
15:07Your man's got a line to these horses, you know?
15:10And so he got to the very last day,
15:11and he thought, it's been so successful.
15:13He said, I'm going to watch the priest whispering.
15:16I'm going to put all my money on this number.
15:18So sure enough, he saw the priest whispering away.
15:21And this day, the horse just about limped home.
15:23I mean, it was last in the field.
15:25And he went up to the priest afterwards and said,
15:27I don't get it.
15:28All week you've been whispering,
15:29and all week you've been winning,
15:31and the last day you lose.
15:32And I said, that's the problem with you boys from the North,
15:35you Protestants from the North.
15:37You don't know the difference between a prayer
15:39and the last rites.
15:42APPLAUSE
15:47That's very good. That's very good.
15:50All right.
15:5147 to 30, if on on 30.
15:53And it's Martin's letters game. Martin.
15:55Time for a vowel, please.
15:56Thank you, Martin. E.
15:58And another?
16:00A.
16:01And a third?
16:02E.
16:03And a fourth?
16:05I.
16:06And a consonant?
16:08C.
16:09And another?
16:10W.
16:11And another?
16:13L.
16:14And another?
16:16R.
16:18And a final consonant, please?
16:21And a final T.
16:23And here's the Countdown Clock.
16:41CLOCK TICKS
16:55Martin?
16:56Eight.
16:57And eight, Yvonne?
16:59Seven.
17:01And your seven?
17:02Watered.
17:03Watered, retailed, and retailed.
17:07Excellent.
17:08APPLAUSE
17:11Retailed was going to be our best shot,
17:13but you got there first, Martin, as always.
17:15Very good indeed. 55 to 30.
17:17Yvonne, letters game.
17:19Can I have a consonant, please, Rachel?
17:21Thank you, Yvonne.
17:22S.
17:24Another one?
17:26Z.
17:28And another one?
17:30R.
17:34A vowel, please?
17:36A.
17:37Another?
17:39E.
17:40And another?
17:42O.
17:44Consonant?
17:46V.
17:51Consonant?
17:53M.
17:57And a final vowel, please?
17:59And a final A.
18:01Stand by.
18:08CLOCK TICKS
18:33Yvonne?
18:34Six.
18:35Six and?
18:36Six.
18:37Yvonne?
18:38Movers.
18:39Movers, you're both moving?
18:40Yep, same.
18:41Two movers here.
18:43We got an eight, did we?
18:45Seven.
18:46Seven?
18:47Yes.
18:48I'm bad counting again.
18:50This word, samovar, is it an urn kind of thing?
18:53It is, yes.
18:54It's a very decorated Russian tea urn, a samovar.
18:57Yeah, a samovar.
18:58Lovely thing.
18:59Very pretty.
19:00Yes, indeedy.
19:0161 plays 36.
19:02Martin, it's your numbers game.
19:04One large, please.
19:05Thank you, Martin.
19:06One from the top again, and five from the bottom ones again.
19:09And this time around, your selection is two, six,
19:13another two, nine, another six, and 100.
19:18And this target, 634.
19:21634.
19:23CLOCK TICKS
19:35CLOCK TICKS
19:54Martin?
19:55634.
19:56Well done. Yvonne?
19:58634.
19:59Well done. Now then, Martin.
20:01OK, 100 plus six?
20:03106.
20:05Times the other six?
20:06636.
20:07And take away two?
20:08634. Lovely.
20:10There we go. And Yvonne?
20:11That's the same way.
20:13Yep.
20:14That's it. Well done. All right.
20:16APPLAUSE
20:21So we turn to a tea-time teaser now, which is Bar Riots,
20:24and the clue, he doesn't close down all the shops,
20:26he just gets rid of some branches.
20:28He doesn't close down all the shops,
20:31he just gets rid of some branches.
20:48Welcome back. I left you with the clue,
20:50he doesn't close down all the shops,
20:52he just gets rid of some branches,
20:55because he's an arborist.
20:57An arborist. Tree search, I guess.
20:59Is it Susie, an arborist?
21:01Absolutely right, yes.
21:03Somebody who looks after trees, is a tree surgeon,
21:07or sometimes it's just somebody who's passionate about trees,
21:10but it's usually somebody who works with them.
21:12All right. In their arboretum.
21:14So, 71 plays 46, Martin on 71.
21:16Yvonne, letters game.
21:20A vowel, please, Rachel.
21:21Thank you, Yvonne. E.
21:23Another.
21:25I.
21:26And another.
21:28E.
21:30Consonant.
21:32T.
21:33And another.
21:35R.
21:37And another.
21:39N.
21:41Erm...
21:43Another, please.
21:45R.
21:49Another.
21:51Another N.
21:53And a vowel, final vowel, please.
21:56And lastly, O.
21:58And the clock starts now.
22:27Yvonne?
22:29Six.
22:31A six.
22:32Six.
22:33Yvonne?
22:34Intern.
22:35And Martin?
22:36Entire.
22:38Intern and entire.
22:40Yes.
22:41There is an eight there.
22:43To reorient yourself is the same as reorientating yourself,
22:47so reorient.
22:48OK. Thank you.
22:50APPLAUSE
22:52Well done.
22:54And now it's Martin's letters game.
22:56Martin, can I have a vowel, please, Rachel?
22:58Thank you, Martin.
23:00I.
23:01And another.
23:03A.
23:04And a third.
23:06O.
23:07And a consonant.
23:08P.
23:09And another.
23:11T.
23:12And another.
23:14P.
23:16And another.
23:18G.
23:20And another.
23:22M.
23:24And a final vowel, please.
23:27And a final E.
23:29Standby.
23:52MUSIC PLAYS
24:02Martin?
24:03Six.
24:04Six. Yvonne?
24:05I'll risk a seven.
24:07Martin?
24:08Magpie.
24:10Yvonne?
24:11Endicott.
24:12Moppage.
24:14Moppage.
24:15Moppage.
24:16You're a gambler.
24:17I know. I've got to.
24:19And I don't blame you, because you can stickage that suffix
24:22onto so many words.
24:24Unfortunately, in the dictionary, mop isn't one of them, I'm afraid.
24:27I'm sorry. No moppage.
24:29There you go. Good sport, though.
24:31Now, Susie, it's your origins of words,
24:34with the score standing 83 to 52.
24:37Susie?
24:39Well, David Baddiel has an excellent series on Radio 4,
24:42which is David Baddiel Tries To Understand,
24:44and he takes a particular subject that people have suggested to him
24:47that they absolutely cannot understand,
24:49and then he goes out, tries to get to grips with the subject,
24:52and will then come back and try to explain it
24:54to the person who asked about it in the first place.
24:56And I asked him about the US presidential election,
24:59because I find it so byzantine and almost impossible to understand.
25:05And we started talking about the language of the elections.
25:09Of course, we've got one coming up in November.
25:11And caucus is one that always sort of gets people slightly puzzled.
25:16They are local meetings at which party members express their preference
25:20for the presidential nominee.
25:23The story goes that a short time before the revolution,
25:26the caucus of Boston, this is C-A-U-L-K-E-R-S,
25:30they were the people who caulked, or waterproofed,
25:33the harbour's boats and ships,
25:35had a heated dispute with some British soldiers,
25:38and there were a number of fatalities,
25:40particularly amongst the harbour workers.
25:43And apparently secret meetings were held later that day
25:46at the caulkers' houses to decide on what punishment
25:49they would mete out to these British soldiers.
25:51And the sound similarity between caulkers and caulkers makes you think...
25:55caulkers, rather, makes you think
25:57that's why it's called the so-called secret meeting.
26:00The dates, unfortunately, so far, are against it,
26:03and it's more likely it comes from a North American Indian term,
26:06believe it or not, which meant one who urges or encourages,
26:09which is, of course, what these party members are doing.
26:12They're encouraging a presidential nominee.
26:15And so much of English, not just American English,
26:18but British English as well, is full of words from North American English,
26:22so the obvious ones like tomahawk or totem or caribou, etc.
26:27But caulkers and caulkers, not so obvious.
26:30But, yes, lovely to think it goes back to a revolutionary dispute,
26:33but more likely to go back to the Algonquian Indians.
26:36Brilliant. Thank you so much. Well done.
26:42The Algonquian Indians, indeed.
26:4483 pays 52, Martin on 83. Yvonne, letters game.
26:48I'll have a vowel, please, Rachel. Thank you, Yvonne.
26:51A
26:53Another.
26:54O
26:56And another.
26:57U
26:59Consonant.
27:01D
27:03And another.
27:05L
27:06And another.
27:07H
27:09And another.
27:11T
27:14A vowel.
27:16I
27:20And a final consonant, please.
27:22And a final N.
27:24Stand by.
27:42MUSIC
27:57Yvonne.
27:58Six.
27:59A six, Martin.
28:00Seven.
28:01And a seven, Yvonne.
28:02Untold.
28:04Martin.
28:05Outland.
28:07Outland, yes.
28:08But you can have it in singular.
28:10A remote foreign territory,
28:13which is why outlandish originally meant the barbarians.
28:17Very good. Now then, Gloria.
28:20Yes, possibly hand-eyed.
28:22Yeah, that's a good one. That's a seven as well.
28:25So, Martin, final letters game. 90 paying 52.
28:28Vowel, please.
28:29Thank you, Martin. O
28:31And another.
28:33E
28:34And a third.
28:35A
28:36And a consonant.
28:37G
28:38And another.
28:39R
28:41And another.
28:42S
28:44And another.
28:46T
28:48And a consonant.
28:50C
28:52And a final consonant, please.
28:56And a final K.
28:58Stand by.
29:00MUSIC
29:08MUSIC CONTINUES
29:30Martin.
29:31Seven.
29:32A seven. Yvonne.
29:33Seven.
29:34Martin.
29:35Storage.
29:36And Yvonne.
29:37Stacker.
29:38A stacker.
29:39Shelf stacker.
29:40Yeah.
29:41Very good.
29:42Stock replenishment executive.
29:44Indeed.
29:45Now, Gloria, what have we got?
29:46Yes.
29:47Yes?
29:48An eight.
29:49Escargot.
29:50Escargot, indeed.
29:51Well done.
29:52A beauty, an absolute beauty.
29:53APPLAUSE
29:54Well done.
29:55That's it.
29:56Any more eights?
29:57No.
29:58Well done.
29:5997 to 59, and it's Yvonne.
30:01Final numbers game for you. Good luck.
30:04Can I have two large, please, Rachel?
30:06You can indeed, thank you, Yvonne.
30:08Two large, four little for the final one of the day.
30:11And these numbers are seven, eight, four, one,
30:16and the large two, 75 and 25.
30:19And the target, 771.
30:21Seven, seven, one.
30:23MUSIC
30:35MUSIC
30:55Yes, Yvonne?
30:56I didn't quite get near enough.
30:58No.
30:59Martin?
31:00No, I've gone wrong as well. Sorry.
31:03Rachel, help us, please.
31:05Yep. If you say 75 times eight is 600,
31:1025 times seven is 175,
31:13add them together and take away the four.
31:16Oh, well done. Well done, Rachel.
31:18APPLAUSE
31:21Well done, Rachel.
31:23So, Martin on 97, hasn't cracked 100, Yvonne, and that's down to you.
31:28You're on 59. Well done.
31:30Yes, true.
31:31So, fingers on buzzers, Martin and Yvonne,
31:33let's roll today's Countdown Conundrum.
31:38BELL
31:39Yes, Martin?
31:40Ludicrous.
31:41Ludicrous. You're so good at this.
31:44So good. Ludicrous, let's see.
31:46There it is.
31:48Well done.
31:54107. Martin, well done.
31:57Yvonne Endicott, you did brilliantly.
32:00You did, because I tell you what, he's been sweeping all before him,
32:03but he had to put up with you for quite a long time.
32:06So, well done. Good 59.
32:08And back to Amchil. Yes.
32:11Brilliant, with this goodie bag.
32:13And next time you're in Milton Keynes and you spot me,
32:17come and say hello. I will.
32:18Take me for a coffee. I will. Please. Yeah.
32:20All right, well done.
32:21Great stuff, great stuff.
32:23That's six wins.
32:25Wow, not bad.
32:27Well done, indeed. See you tomorrow.
32:29Now, Gloria, you and I are of a certain age.
32:31We are, indeed. Pretty much the same.
32:33And we are the target of some rotten scamsters.
32:37We are.
32:38What makes me really sad when we come across the cases on Rip Off Britain
32:41is, in the main, the scammers do target people even older than you and me.
32:47And they see vulnerability, they see people living on their own,
32:51and they hone in on that.
32:53And just as you think that we've had enough warnings about scams
32:56and that we're pretty aware of them all,
32:58the scammers are so sophisticated these days and so clever
33:01that they're sort of like one ahead of everybody else.
33:04And in the series coming up,
33:06there's one example of a woman having lost £90,000.
33:10And, of course, when you say to people, when you look back,
33:13how do you feel about feeling ridiculous or stupid even,
33:17you know, about going down this line,
33:19many, many people will say,
33:20but, you know, they were so nice and they were so clever
33:23and they were very helpful, et cetera.
33:25I think the big, big rule is,
33:27if somebody rings you up with an investment opportunity
33:30and you don't know them, you put the phone down.
33:32Don't get involved, because they'll talk you into it.
33:35And the old adage ever seems, you know, too good to be true, it is.
33:39Absolutely spot on. See you tomorrow.
33:42See you tomorrow, Susie.
33:43See you tomorrow, Nick.
33:44Well done.
33:45And what's your bank cards?
33:46I saw a brilliant story last month in the papers
33:48of they tried to steal an old lady's card in a supermarket in Salford
33:53and she beat them round the head with a packet of bacon
33:56and they ran away.
33:57So well done to that lady.
33:59Absolutely.
34:00Brilliant.
34:01See you tomorrow.
34:02See you tomorrow.
34:03Remember, if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.
34:06But join us tomorrow, same time, same place,
34:08you'll be sure of it.
34:09A very good afternoon.
34:10APPLAUSE
34:23And join us tomorrow, same time, same place,
34:25you'll be sure of it.
34:26A very good afternoon.
34:27APPLAUSE