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00:00MUSIC
00:04APPLAUSE
00:16Good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown studio.
00:19I don't know whether you've stumbled across the same articles I did
00:22quite recently about an American, American bloke in Oregon
00:26who had a very lucky escape, actually.
00:28And what happened, apparently, Rachel, was that he climbed into
00:32a recycling bin full of cardboard and fell asleep.
00:35So the refuse truck pulled up.
00:38He was lifted up in this bin, put in, and gently crushed.
00:44I think it may have been the sound of his snapping leg that woke him up.
00:49I'm sorry, but apparently that was it.
00:51Suddenly, anyway, he shouted out and they stopped everything
00:55and he survived.
00:56My word, I almost refuse to believe it. Would you believe it?
00:59Oh, boom, boom. I know, I know.
01:01But thinking about places that, you know, one's slept in that are unusual...
01:06I remember when I used to be sent across the Irish Sea,
01:10I used to save the money I'd been given by my loving mum and dad
01:14for a little cabin.
01:16I used to undo the tarpaulin on the lifeboat that was slung over the side
01:22and snuck in there and sleep overnight in there.
01:25Saved the cabin money.
01:27Did you ever find yourself waking up somewhere rather odd?
01:30I think it's a male thing. So many men I know do that.
01:33Well, my favourite story, my friend is half Japanese.
01:36He was in Japan. He missed the last tube home.
01:38He managed to go into a hotel that he wasn't staying at
01:41and he woke up trouserless in a lift surrounded by Japanese security.
01:47And they led him off to the security room and showed him videos
01:50of him going into the lift, going onto the roof, taking his trousers off,
01:53going back into the lift and falling asleep.
01:55I've got plenty of stories like that about male friends
01:57and none about female friends.
01:59Because you mix with very sober girls.
02:01Sensible, sensible girls.
02:03All right. Now, Rachel, we've got Andrew McLeod back yet again.
02:07And you remember on Friday he completed his fourth good win
02:10and now he's heading, hopefully, to become an OctoChamp.
02:13Very high score on Friday, I think. 122?
02:16Yeah.
02:17Now then, you're joined, Andrew, by Rory MacDonald,
02:21a trainee accountant from Harpenden.
02:23Welcome, Rory.
02:24Loves performing, plays guitar and the piano.
02:28Now then, apparently, you once found yourself
02:31in an Austrian village surrounded by cows.
02:34What was going on there?
02:35I did a coach trip to Oktoberfest Beer Festival in Munich a couple of years ago.
02:40We were staying in an Austrian village.
02:42We went out that evening after a few too many drinks.
02:45I'd lost the group and couldn't make my way back to the hotel.
02:48So when I got back in the morning, we'd missed the coach
02:51and I'd spend the day in the village.
02:53But there was a cow festival going on and I got to ride a horse,
02:56so it was still a good day.
02:57Very good. A cow festival.
02:59Everybody brought their favourite cow down from the mountain.
03:02Well, that's exactly it.
03:03They brought the cows down from the mountain and...
03:05And they had big bells.
03:06They did have big bells, yeah.
03:08And you found yourself on a horse.
03:10You stay off the sauce, my boy.
03:12All right, let's have a big round of applause then for Rory and Andrew.
03:20Very good. Good luck to you both.
03:22And over in the corner, Susie, of course, on this Monday,
03:25joined once again by the wonderful Brendan Cull,
03:28one of the original dancers on Strictly and still going strong.
03:31Still going strong. Myself and Anton.
03:33Very good. More from you later,
03:35but now we get on with the letters game with you, Andrew.
03:38Hi, Rachel. Hi, Andrew.
03:40We're going to have a consonant, please.
03:42Thank you. Start the week with G.
03:45And another.
03:47M.
03:48And another.
03:51F.
03:52And a vowel.
03:54A.
03:55And another.
03:56I.
03:57And another.
03:59U.
04:01And a consonant.
04:03R.
04:04And another.
04:06D.
04:07And a vowel, please.
04:09And the last one.
04:11E.
04:12And here's the Countdown Clock.
04:39CLOCK TICKS
04:45Andrew?
04:46Seven.
04:47A seven. Rory?
04:48Just a six.
04:50And your six?
04:51Framed.
04:52Now then, Andrew?
04:53Figured.
04:54So, figured. What do you think about that?
04:56Yeah, absolutely fine.
04:57Can he match it?
04:58Susie can do one better. She's found an eight.
05:01She's feeling very argumentative. She's arguified.
05:03Yes.
05:04You're a little agitated today. Is that what that means?
05:06To arguefy is a factual way of saying to argue.
05:09It's a bit like speechify.
05:11I'm going to use that.
05:12Good.
05:13All right. Well done.
05:14Seven points to Andrew and now Rory.
05:16Your first letters game. Off you go.
05:18Hi, Rachel.
05:19Hi, Rory.
05:20Consonant, please.
05:21Thank you. Start with Z.
05:22And another one.
05:25S.
05:26And a vowel.
05:28I.
05:29Another vowel.
05:31A.
05:33Consonant.
05:34N.
05:36And another consonant.
05:38T.
05:40And a vowel.
05:42E.
05:44And another vowel.
05:46I.
05:48And a consonant, please.
05:49And the last one.
05:51R.
05:52Stand by.
06:04MUSIC PLAYS
06:24Rory?
06:25Er, I think a nine.
06:27Andrew?
06:28Try a nine.
06:29Let's go, chaps. Rory?
06:31Er, sanitiser.
06:33Andrew?
06:34Sanitiser.
06:35There we are. Well done.
06:36Fantastic. Well done.
06:37Well done.
06:43Excellent. 18 points apiece.
06:44Now, then.
06:45You had sanitiser?
06:47We did.
06:48Perhaps not as quickly.
06:49He did really well.
06:50What else?
06:51Rainiest.
06:52Rainiest?
06:53Yes.
06:54Rainiest autumn.
06:55A nice eight.
06:56Well done.
06:5825 plays, 18.
06:59And now, Andrew.
07:00First numbers game of the day.
07:02Can I have two large and four small, please?
07:04Your usual, thank you, Andrew.
07:05Two large, four small.
07:06And the first one of the week is...
07:0810.
07:106.
07:129.
07:138.
07:14And the large ones, 25 and 100.
07:17And the target, 612.
07:196-1-2.
07:21MUSIC PLAYS
07:33MUSIC STOPS
07:51Andrew?
07:526-1-2.
07:53And Rory?
07:546-1-2.
07:566-1-2 also?
07:57Yep.
07:58Andrew?
07:59100 plus 10 minus 8 is 102.
08:02Yep.
08:03Times 6.
08:04Straightforward, 612.
08:05Rory?
08:06Yeah, 10 minus 8 is a 2, plus 100 is 102, times 6.
08:11Same way, yep.
08:13There we go.
08:14Thank you, well done.
08:15APPLAUSE
08:18So, nothing in it yet.
08:20It's 35-28 as we turn to our first Tea Time teaser,
08:24which is Dave Waugh.
08:26And the clue, Dave Waugh, a look of astonishment
08:29when the occasion got to him.
08:31Dave Waugh, a look of astonishment when the occasion got to him.
08:37MUSIC PLAYS
08:45APPLAUSE
08:52Welcome back, welcome back.
08:54I left you with the clue, Dave Waugh, a look of astonishment
08:57when the occasion got to him.
08:59And the answer is overawed, overawed.
09:03Now, don't be overawed at the thought of becoming a contestant on Countdown.
09:08If you'd like to become such a contestant,
09:11you can email Countdown at channel4.com to request an application,
09:17or write to us at contestantapplicationscountdownleadsls31js.
09:25And now, Andrew on that 35, Rory on 28, and it's Rory's letters game.
09:29Rory.
09:30Hiya. Can I get a consonant, please?
09:32Thank you, Rory. C.
09:34And another one.
09:37N.
09:38And a vowel.
09:40U.
09:41And another vowel.
09:43O.
09:44And another vowel.
09:46E.
09:47And a consonant.
09:49P.
09:51And a consonant.
09:53S.
09:55And a vowel.
09:58A.
09:59And another consonant.
10:02R.
10:03Countdown.
10:05MUSIC PLAYS
10:17MUSIC STOPS
10:35Rory.
10:36Eight.
10:37An eight. Andrew.
10:38Try an eight.
10:40Rory.
10:41Pouncers.
10:42And...
10:43Pouncers.
10:44There we go. Pouncers.
10:46Any more pouncers over there?
10:48Well, we were hoping to be, as in, my cats are good pouncers,
10:52but it's not in the dictionary, pouncer, I'm afraid.
10:55Really?
10:56So I have to disallow, sorry.
10:58What can we have?
10:59For a seven, a persona.
11:02Persona, yep. Anything else, Susie?
11:04No, that was the best we could do. We were looking at pouncers.
11:07No pouncers. All right.
11:0835, therefore, remains, as does 28, and it's Andrew's letters game.
11:12Andrew.
11:13Can I have a consonant, please?
11:15Thank you, Andrew.
11:16P.
11:17And a vowel.
11:19I.
11:20And a consonant.
11:22S.
11:23And a vowel.
11:25O.
11:26And a consonant.
11:28C.
11:29And a vowel.
11:31U.
11:32And a consonant.
11:34N.
11:35And a vowel.
11:37O.
11:38And a final consonant, please.
11:40And the last one, M.
11:42M.
11:43And here comes the Countdown Clock.
12:13Andrew.
12:14Six.
12:15A six, Rory?
12:16Just a five.
12:18You're five.
12:19A scoop.
12:20Scoop and...
12:21Cousin.
12:22Cousin.
12:24Yes.
12:25Scoop and cousin.
12:26Yep.
12:27Brendan and Susie.
12:28An interesting one here, soupçon.
12:30I love that word.
12:31It's a great word.
12:32A soupçon.
12:33And I like copious and ominous for seven.
12:36A soupçon can never be copious, of course.
12:38No.
12:39No.
12:40Just a little subtle hint.
12:42But it's a French word that's in our English dictionary.
12:44French word with a cedilla still, but in the dictionary.
12:46Yes.
12:47Indeed.
12:48Well done.
12:49Thank you, Brendan.
12:50And it's 41 playing 28.
12:51And now, Rory, it's your numbers game.
12:53Target one large and the other five.
12:55Thank you, Rory.
12:56One large, five little coming up.
12:58And this time the little ones are one, four, five, seven and two.
13:04And the big one, 75.
13:06And this target, 876.
13:09876.
13:40MUSIC STOPS
13:42Rory?
13:43No, I've not got it.
13:45No? No good?
13:46No.
13:47Andrew?
13:48874 not written down.
13:50Two away. Let's hear.
13:5275 minus 2 minus 1.
13:5672.
13:57And 7 plus 5 is 12.
14:00Yep.
14:01Multiply.
14:02You get 764.
14:06Sorry, 864.
14:09I've gone wrong, haven't I?
14:11Bad luck, bad luck.
14:13So straighten it out for us, Rachel.
14:15Well, if you'd have stopped at 75 minus 2, 73,
14:20and then 7 plus 5 is 12 and times them together.
14:23876.
14:24There we go, well done.
14:25APPLAUSE
14:26Well done, Rachel.
14:29So, scores 41 to 28 as we turn to Brendan.
14:33Well, this one is a little sensitive for you.
14:36A few of us on Strictly.
14:38We do our own thing after the run is up.
14:41I do a theatre tour that goes around the country.
14:43And we get a bit carried away with ourselves.
14:45So one particular day we're on our coach, 22 of us,
14:4814 musicians, eight dancers on the coach.
14:50And in the coach, in the front of the coach,
14:52we'd found some, let's say, some risky magazines.
14:54There was almost a coach load.
14:56So on this particular show we're out doing a lovely fox shot.
15:00Now I'm talking a really beautiful, old-school,
15:02I think it was a bit of Nat King Cole was the band we're playing,
15:05a beautiful fox shot.
15:06One of the girls, Nicole Cutler, do you remember Nicole Cutler
15:09from Strictly Come Dancing a few years back?
15:11And what she'd done is she'd taken some of the pictures out of the magazines
15:14and in the, this is before the iPads, now the musicians use iPads,
15:17but before that we had sheet music,
15:19put some pictures within the sheet music.
15:21As the musicians turned the page, they're playing the horns,
15:24they're playing the piano.
15:26One by one they all just started sniggering and trying to play.
15:30And the whole band behind us were in stitches,
15:34including my MD, Mr Barry Robinson, who's very serious about his job,
15:37a lovely fellow but very serious about his music.
15:39And I could see him just literally wetting himself on the piano.
15:42And it was one of the funniest things I've ever experienced
15:45amongst the beautiful and the calm, serene fox shot.
15:48Good fun. Thank you. Thank you.
15:50APPLAUSE
15:52Well done, Brendan.
15:54Lovely stuff. Well done, Brendan.
15:56So 41 plays 28.
15:58And, Andrew, it's a letters game for you.
16:01Can I have our consonant, please?
16:03Thank you, Andrew.
16:05X. And another.
16:08T. And another.
16:11S. And a vowel.
16:14E. And another.
16:17I. And another.
16:20U. And a consonant.
16:23L. And another.
16:26D. And a final vowel, please.
16:29And final A.
16:31Stand by.
17:02Andrew?
17:04Try an eight. An eight, Rory?
17:06A seven, not written down.
17:08And your seven? A dilute.
17:10Thank you, Andrew.
17:12Lordiest?
17:14Lordiest? Yeah.
17:16Er...
17:19Not there, I'm afraid.
17:21Lordliest, but not lordiest. Sorry.
17:24Mm. I think that was a gamble.
17:26Mm. Did you feel it was a gamble?
17:28Oh, yeah. All right.
17:30So, Brendan and Susie?
17:33Well, dilutes, yes, seven.
17:35Got another good seven.
17:37And, again, one that I didn't know the meaning to.
17:39Luxated. Is that how you pronounce it?
17:41Yes. That is exactly right.
17:43And to luxate is actually to dislocate,
17:45so not something you want.
17:47But, yeah, luxation.
17:49Dislocation of joints.
17:51Thank you. All right.
17:53Now, then, only six in it. 35 plays Andrew's 41.
17:56Rory, off you go.
17:58Consonant plays.
18:00Thank you, Rory. V.
18:02And another one.
18:04H.
18:06And a vowel.
18:08O.
18:10And another vowel.
18:12E.
18:14A consonant.
18:16S.
18:18Another consonant.
18:20T.
18:22And another consonant.
18:24R.
18:26And another vowel.
18:28And the last one.
18:30O.
18:32Tantan.
18:56APPLAUSE
19:04Yes, Rory?
19:06A six. A six and...?
19:08I'll stick with a seven.
19:10Thank you, Rory. A shaver.
19:12Now, then, Andrew.
19:14Shooter. Yep. Absolutely fine.
19:17Very good.
19:19What have we got in the corner?
19:21Oh, very good. A nice eight.
19:23Overshot. Yeah.
19:25APPLAUSE
19:28Overshot. Susie, anything else?
19:30No. I could see, Andrew, you were kicking yourself for that one.
19:33But it is in the dictionary. Yep, perfect.
19:35Thank you. So, Andrew on 48, Rory on 35,
19:38and now it's Andrew's numbers game.
19:40Andrew. Two large, four small, please.
19:42Your favourite. Thank you, Andrew.
19:44Two from the top row and four of the others.
19:46And this time they are three, nine, ten, seven,
19:51and the big one, 75 and 50.
19:54And the target...
19:56Oh, 300.
19:58Three, zero, zero.
20:00CLOCK TICKS
20:25MUSIC STOPS
20:31Andrew. 300.
20:33Thank you, Rory. 300.
20:35Let's get it over with. Andrew.
20:379 minus 3 is 6. Yep.
20:39Times 50. Yep. 300.
20:41And Rory.
20:43I did 10 minus 7 is 3, plus the 3 times the 50.
20:46There we go. So, 58 plays 45.
20:49Same difference as we turn to our second tea time teaser,
20:53Curl Sofa.
20:55And the clue, you'd definitely want to curl up on the sofa
20:58if you had this.
21:00You'd definitely want to curl up on the sofa if you had this.
21:04BELL RINGS
21:12APPLAUSE
21:19Welcome back. I left with the clue,
21:21you'd definitely want to curl up on the sofa if you had this.
21:24And the answer is scrofula.
21:28Which presumably makes you scrofulous, does it?
21:31What is scrofula, exactly?
21:33Famously suffered by Samuel Johnson, in fact,
21:35who went to see the Queen.
21:37It was called the King's Evil and it was thought the monarch could cure it.
21:40It is a form of disease with glandular swelling,
21:43so it's probably a form of tuberculosis
21:45that was quite common in the 19th century.
21:48Not so now, luckily.
21:50Scrofula. There we go. 58 plays 45.
21:53Andrew in the lead in this Rory's Letters game.
21:56Consonant, please.
21:58Thank you, Rory. P
22:00And another one.
22:02W
22:04And another one.
22:06D
22:08And a vowel.
22:10I
22:12And another vowel. E
22:14And another vowel.
22:16U
22:18L
22:20Another consonant.
22:22N
22:24And a vowel.
22:26And lastly.
22:28A
22:30Countdown.
22:49MUSIC
23:00Rory.
23:02Six. Six. Andrew.
23:04Six. Rory.
23:06Denial. And...
23:08Wailed. And wailed.
23:10Yes.
23:12Anything else?
23:14Brendan.
23:16Would you say that's lupine or lupine?
23:18Lupine. Lupine. Good.
23:20And plain.
23:24Plain is in the sense of mourning or lamenting with an I.
23:27And lupine after Lupus, our friend the wolf.
23:30Exactly.
23:3264 plays 51. Andrew on that 64.
23:35And it's Andrew's Letters game.
23:37Could I have a consonant, please?
23:39Thank you, Andrew. G
23:41And a vowel.
23:43E
23:45R
23:47And a vowel.
23:49I
23:51And a consonant.
23:53T
23:55And a vowel.
23:57O
23:59And a consonant.
24:01N
24:03And a vowel.
24:05A
24:07And a final consonant, please.
24:09And a final R.
24:11Stand by.
24:13MUSIC PLAYS
24:39Andrew.
24:41Seven. Rory. Eight.
24:43And an eight. Andrew.
24:45Negator.
24:47Rory. Rotating.
24:49Oh, it's only one T, unfortunately.
24:52Uh, sorry.
24:54Bad luck. Bad luck indeed.
24:56What can we have over in the corner there?
24:58Susie, Brendan.
25:00Well, you can have tango. Thank you.
25:02But this one I've never heard of before.
25:04Yet again, my psychic here has done herself.
25:06Orangite.
25:08Orangite, yes. Don't even know what it means.
25:10It's a variety of thorite,
25:12which is a neosilicate.
25:14That's a chemical term.
25:16And it's a substance that crystallises
25:18in, obviously, a rather beautiful colour.
25:20Orangite.
25:22There we go. Thank you.
25:24All right. 71 to 51. 20 points in it.
25:26And now, Susie, we're back with you
25:28for your origins of words.
25:30What have you got for us today?
25:32Well, on Friday I was talking about the origin of
25:34screaming blue murder and talking about how blue
25:36pops up all over the place in English idioms.
25:38And there's another one that I'm often asked about.
25:40And that's blue stocking.
25:42If you talk about a woman being a blue stocking,
25:44they are intellectual
25:46but slightly old-fashioned,
25:48perhaps slightly staid.
25:50It's not exactly a full-on compliment.
25:52But how did it come about?
25:54The strange beginning of it, really,
25:56is that it applied not to a woman but to a man.
25:58And that man was Benjamin Stillingfeet.
26:00Great name.
26:02He was a botanist, translator
26:04and publisher.
26:06And he had a lot of links with a group
26:08that held some of the best soirees
26:10in London back in the 1750s.
26:12These groups were
26:14independently-minded women
26:16who had had enough
26:18of card playing and bridge playing
26:20and the sort of small talk,
26:22if you like, of normal London parties.
26:24And so they decided to set up their own
26:26soirees, their own evenings,
26:28based on the Parisian
26:30salons, which were all the rage
26:32in those days.
26:34And they would invite guests to come along
26:36and they would have quite serious discussions,
26:38whether about the meaning of life,
26:40other matters of philosophy,
26:42rather than sort of fashion
26:44and typical womanly subjects
26:46or subjects that were thought to be
26:48beloved of women.
26:50And one of the leading lights of this group
26:52was a lady called Mrs Elizabeth Montagu.
26:54She was very powerful.
26:56She was very rich.
26:58And she invited luminaries
27:00from right across the subject areas,
27:02and she was very popular
27:04in London at this time.
27:06So Samuel Johnson came, David Garrick,
27:08Sir Joshua Reynolds,
27:10who was just Joshua in those days.
27:12Lots and lots of people.
27:14Lord Littleton.
27:16So it was quite well-presided over,
27:18if you like, by some of the best minds
27:20in London at the time.
27:22Back to Benjamin's stilling feet.
27:24He was, as I say, a learned botanist.
27:26He was invited to attend
27:28by one of the ladies in this group,
27:30and he couldn't afford to go out
27:32and get the black silk stockings,
27:34which were the traditional wear
27:36of these soirees.
27:38And according to Fanny Burney,
27:40who told the story later,
27:42the lady who asked him, Mrs Vasey,
27:44said, come as you are, it's absolutely fine.
27:46She was liberal-minded.
27:48He turned up wearing his blue worsted stockings,
27:50which were the only ones that he could afford.
27:52And so from then on,
27:54the group became known as the Blue Stockings.
27:56And because their subjects were thought
27:58to be slightly snooty, if you like,
28:00and, you know, not really in keeping
28:02with the fashion of London,
28:04it turned into a slightly derogatory epithet.
28:06But it was all down to Benjamin's stilling feet
28:08that blue stocking has survived to this day.
28:10Very good. Well done.
28:12APPLAUSE
28:14Very good.
28:16Thank you, Susie. Thank you.
28:18So 71 to 51, and Rory.
28:20Letters game.
28:22Consonant, please.
28:24Thank you, Rory. T.
28:26And a vowel.
28:28E.
28:30And another vowel.
28:32I. A consonant.
28:34L.
28:36A consonant.
28:38T. Vowel.
28:40E.
28:42A vowel.
28:44A.
28:46Consonant.
28:48S.
28:50And a final consonant.
28:52And a final H.
28:54And here's the Countdown Clock.
29:24CLOCK TICKS
29:28Rory?
29:30Five.
29:32Andrew?
29:34Seven.
29:36And a seven. Rory?
29:38Eight.
29:40Andrew?
29:42Stealth.
29:44Stealth?
29:46Stealth.
29:48Now, Brendan and Susie?
29:50Nice eight. Athletes.
29:52APPLAUSE
29:54Athletes indeed. 78 to 51.
29:56Into the final letters game.
29:58And it's for Andrew.
30:00Consonant, please. Thank you, Andrew.
30:02N. And another.
30:04M.
30:06And another.
30:08R. And a vowel.
30:10I. And another.
30:12A. And another.
30:14E.
30:16And a consonant.
30:18L. And another.
30:20G.
30:22And a vowel, please.
30:24And the last one.
30:26O.
30:28Stand by.
30:30CLOCK TICKS
30:50CLOCK TICKS
31:00Andrew?
31:02Eight.
31:04And eight. Rory?
31:06Six.
31:08And a six. Rory, six?
31:10Malign.
31:12Malign. Andrew?
31:14Malinger.
31:16Malinger.
31:18Malinger or shirker. Very good.
31:20Yeah. A malingerer.
31:22You're malingering again.
31:24You don't have time to malinger on that show of yours.
31:26Brendan, what have you got now?
31:28No, we cannot malinger. Regional is another eight.
31:30Thank you. Susie?
31:32Yeah. That'll do.
31:34Malingerer and regional.
31:3686, please. 51.
31:38And we turn to Rory for the final numbers game.
31:40Rory? Can I get one large and five small?
31:42Thank you, Rory.
31:44One big five little to finish the day.
31:46And these numbers are...
31:48Six. Six.
31:50Eight. Seven.
31:52Three. And the big one, 75.
31:54And the target, 924.
31:56924.
31:58CLOCK TICKS
32:16CLOCK TICKS
32:28Rory?
32:30No, I haven't got anything.
32:32How about Andrew?
32:34924.
32:36You've got it. Well done. Let's hear from you.
32:38Six plus six is 12.
32:40Six plus six, 12.
32:42Times 75.
32:4494.
32:46Very good.
32:50Well done, Andrew.
32:52Consistently really good on the numbers. Well done.
32:54So we go into the final game
32:56with the score standing 96 to Andrew.
32:58Rory on 51.
33:00Things on buzzers.
33:02Let's roll today's Countdown Conundrum.
33:06Wow!
33:08Andrew McLeod.
33:10Bodyguard.
33:12Let's see whether it's there.
33:14There you go.
33:16APPLAUSE
33:18Well done.
33:20Another good score.
33:22But we'll come back to you in a minute.
33:24Rory, bad luck.
33:26He's a very strong player.
33:28You held him back, actually.
33:30This is quite a low score for him.
33:32106.
33:34As I say, on Friday, I think it was something like 122.
33:36So, congratulations, Rory.
33:38Back to Harpenden with a goodie bag
33:40and good luck with your accountancy exams
33:42when they come around.
33:46And we shall see you tomorrow, Andrew.
33:48Terrific stuff. Well done.
33:50Five good wins.
33:52See you tomorrow, chaps.
33:54And Susie, of course.
33:56How about young Andrew?
33:58His maths are good, no?
34:00He's absolutely flying, doing very well.
34:02I'm having very little to do at the moment.
34:04See you tomorrow.
34:06Same time, same place, you'll be sure of it.
34:08Contact us by email at
34:10countdown at channel4.com
34:12by Twitter at c4countdown
34:14or write to us at
34:16countdownleadsls31js
34:18You can also find our webpage at
34:20channel4.com forward slash countdown
34:26Channel 4 Dispatches investigates the pesky lot next door
34:28living with nightmare neighbours
34:30is tonight at 8.
34:32And at 4 today, we're celebrating
34:34the superhumans as they return from Rio
34:36and we're doing so with a parade.
34:38Well, it's only right, isn't it?
34:40Deal or no deal is next
34:42here on 4.

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