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00:00This programme contains strong language and adult humour.
00:05APPLAUSE
00:31Good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown Studio
00:34and the day that has been designated Safe Internet Day
00:38with the aim of creating a better internet together.
00:42Now, for those of you old enough to remember the world without the internet,
00:46you will join me in, I think, suggesting
00:49the internet has been the most fantastic development.
00:53Rachel, you've got no idea what it was like beforehand.
00:56Now everything is possible. It's a wonderful thing.
00:59But no matter how fabulous the internet is, there's always a bad side to it.
01:03And if we're talking about children, you know,
01:05there's cyberbullying, which seems to be in the papers all the time.
01:08And I suppose children find themselves all, you know,
01:11when they're growing up, looking at the wrong stuff.
01:14And is it down to parental guidance?
01:17Because so many youngsters, even little kids of six and seven,
01:20are watching the internet and getting up to mischief, maybe,
01:23without any parental guidance or any parental presence in the room.
01:27Well, there's a very good side to the internet as well.
01:29There's lots of educational websites,
01:31especially I'm involved with some maths events,
01:33and World Maths Day, which runs every year.
01:35You go online and kids from all around the world
01:38can play against each other in real time and get their statistics.
01:41And it's really good for just getting them motivated,
01:44because they like playing computer games.
01:46If you put a bit of maths in there as well, they have a great time.
01:48Very good. Now then, who have we got here?
01:50We've got Graham back again, now on two wins.
01:52You beat Owen Keegan yesterday, 77-59.
01:55Quite a close-run thing.
01:57And from Newcastle, running a post office with your dad.
02:00And you're joined by Chris Murgatroyd,
02:03kitchen design from Halifax,
02:05been playing in a rock group since 1977.
02:08What's it called?
02:10It's called Tax Loss. Tax Loss?
02:12It's quite appropriate.
02:14Great stuff. And how often do you play? Every week?
02:16Yeah, we get together and practise every week.
02:18We play pub gigs, things like that, perhaps five or six times a year.
02:22Great fun. Good for you. Absolutely.
02:24Let's look out for Tax Loss, you're called.
02:26Tax Loss. Indeed.
02:28Over in the corner, Susie as ever,
02:30and of course we've got the great Richard Arnold,
02:33I suppose the father confessor to showbiz,
02:37to Tinseltown, is that right?
02:39I think it's fair to say that a lot of them have learnt quite a bit at my knee,
02:42yes, over the years, from my vast amount of experience in the business, Nick.
02:45Quite right. And you have that father confessor sort of look about you.
02:48Frankly, I'm flushing at what this one's told me over the last couple of days.
02:52Brilliant stuff. All right, well, we'll hear more from you later, Richard,
02:55but now it's time to get on with the game, and it's Graham's letters game.
02:59Afternoon, Rachel. Afternoon, Graham.
03:01Have a consonant, please. Thank you. Start today with V.
03:05And a vowel.
03:07I.
03:09And a vowel.
03:11O.
03:13And a vowel.
03:15E.
03:17And a consonant.
03:19T.
03:21And another one.
03:23R.
03:25And another one.
03:27N.
03:29And another one.
03:31C.
03:33And another consonant, please.
03:35And the last one, T.
03:37And here's the Countdown Clock.
03:51CLOCK TICKS
04:07Now then, Graham.
04:09A six.
04:11A six. Chris. Six also.
04:13All right, Graham. Cornet.
04:15A cornet and...?
04:17Covert.
04:19Happy about that? Yes.
04:21Now, what else have we got there? Richard?
04:23I love coming on this show cos I learn so much at your knee, Suze.
04:26Cornetti.
04:28Cornetto being a wind instrument. Yes.
04:30And cornetti being the plural thereof.
04:33Two of them. Great stuff. One more, indeed.
04:35Anything else, Suze? One more. Eight is contrive.
04:38Contrive. All right.
04:40Six all, and Chris, your first game.
04:42Hi, Rachel. Can I have a consonant, please?
04:45Thank you, Chris. Start with K.
04:47And a vowel.
04:49A.
04:51And another consonant.
04:53Y.
04:55And another.
04:57M.
04:59And another.
05:01R.
05:03And a vowel.
05:05U.
05:07And another vowel.
05:09I.
05:11Consonant.
05:13F.
05:15And a final G.
05:17M is countdown.
05:46Thank you, Chris.
05:48Just a four.
05:50A four. Graham?
05:52A five.
05:54Now then, slim pickings. Chris?
05:56Farm. Farm. Thank you. Graham?
05:58Murky.
06:00Murky.
06:02Murky. Talk about murky. Richard?
06:04Well, I think we're making it up, Suze, but apparently it is here.
06:07Argue-fy.
06:09No, come on. Argue-fy.
06:11It does say humorous, but yes.
06:13It won't do to argue-fy, I tell you. It's the example.
06:16OK. Anything else?
06:18And we had figura, which is a symbol in a literary work.
06:22It's some kind of motif or symbol.
06:24All right. 11 points to six.
06:26Graham in the lead.
06:28And, Graham, you're back on. Your numbers game.
06:30Can I have a one, two, one, two, please?
06:32You can indeed. Thank you, Graham.
06:34One, two, one, two for the first time today.
06:36And these five small numbers are one, seven, six, two and four
06:42and the large one, 100.
06:44And the first target of the day, 926.
06:47926.
07:13Yes, Graham?
07:15925.
07:17One away. How about Chris?
07:19925 as well.
07:21OK. Both one away. Graham?
07:23Seven and two.
07:25Seven add two is nine.
07:28Times the 100.
07:30Times 100, 900.
07:33Four times six.
07:35Four times six, 12.
07:37Times 100, 900.
07:39Four times six.
07:41Four times six, 24.
07:43And add them together with the one.
07:46And 925, one away. Well done.
07:48And Chris?
07:49Yeah, exactly the same way.
07:50Same way. Happy about that, Graham?
07:52Yeah.
07:53Very good. Now then, 926. How tricky is that, Rachel?
07:56I could only spot one way, so I think it's quite tricky.
07:58If you say 100 minus seven is 93.
08:02Six minus one is five.
08:04Times two is ten.
08:06Times them together for 930 and take away the four for 926.
08:10There we are. Perfect.
08:12Well done. Well done indeed.
08:15So, 18-13, Graham in the lead as we go into a tea-time teaser,
08:20which is Cheek Bus and the clue,
08:23reserve the ladies' services for absolutely nothing.
08:26Reserve the ladies' services for absolutely nothing.
08:37APPLAUSE
08:45Welcome back. I left with the clue,
08:47reserve the ladies' services for absolutely nothing.
08:50And the answer is Bakshi.
08:54Bakshi. Where does Bakshi come from, Susie?
08:56Well, Bakshi means free of charge, of course.
08:59It actually goes back to the First World War and soldiers' slang
09:04and it's an alteration of Bakshish,
09:07which is a small bribe given for something.
09:10So maybe the idea is if you bribe somebody, you get something for free, maybe.
09:13OK. Bakshi. Very good.
09:1518 points to Chris's 13.
09:17Chris, you're on. Letters game.
09:19We'll start with a vowel, please, Rachel.
09:21Thank you, Chris. O
09:23And a consonant.
09:25H
09:27Another consonant.
09:29Q
09:31A vowel, please.
09:33Consonant.
09:35L
09:37Consonant.
09:39M
09:41Consonant.
09:43R
09:45Consonant.
09:47L
09:48And a final vowel, please.
09:50And a final A.
09:52Countdown.
10:03MUSIC PLAYS
10:23Chris.
10:25Six.
10:27Graham.
10:29Just a five.
10:31Now then, Chris.
10:33I added the E on the end for morale.
10:35Absolutely fine. M-O-R-A-L-E.
10:37Excellent. Very, very good.
10:39All right. Well spotted.
10:41And Richard?
10:43Armhole.
10:45LAUGHTER
10:47Very good. 18 to Chris's 19.
10:49Sprung into a one-point lead there.
10:51And Graham, you're back on.
10:53A consonant, please.
10:55P
10:57And a vowel, please.
10:59I
11:01And another vowel.
11:03I
11:05And a vowel, please.
11:07E
11:09And a consonant.
11:11S
11:13And a consonant.
11:15V
11:17And another consonant.
11:19L
11:21And another consonant.
11:23C
11:25And another consonant, please.
11:27MUSIC PLAYS
11:57Now then, Graham.
11:59A six.
12:01A six. Chris? Six also.
12:03Graham? Select.
12:05Select. How about you, Chris?
12:07Vilest.
12:09Yes. The vilest person in the universe.
12:11Absolutely fine.
12:13Most vile. Yes.
12:15I'm still here, Suze.
12:17How about Richard?
12:19Pelvic.
12:21Pelvic? Pelvic.
12:23That's nice. Very good.
12:25You've gone increasingly by 25 points
12:27to 24.
12:29And your numbers again, Chris.
12:31I'll try the inverted T, please.
12:33Thank you, Chris. Inverted T.
12:35So one from the top row and five little ones again.
12:37And this time
12:39the numbers are
12:4110, 5, 7, 9,
12:432 and 100.
12:45And the target?
12:47282.
12:49282.
12:51MUSIC PLAYS
12:55MUSIC CONTINUES
13:21Chris?
13:23283, unfortunately.
13:25What about Graham?
13:27283, not written down.
13:29283.
13:31So, Graham?
13:332 x 100.
13:352 x 100, 200.
13:379 x 10.
13:399 x 10 is 90.
13:41Take away the 7.
13:4383.
13:45One away.
13:47One away. Close, but not perfect.
13:49What do you think about 282, Rachel?
13:512 x 100 is 3.
13:53Times by 100 is 300.
13:55And then 2 x 9 is 18.
13:57Take away for 282.
13:59Very good.
14:01As ever.
14:03APPLAUSE
14:05Now that we now turn to Richard.
14:07Richard, the man who is known
14:09as being the sort of chap
14:11who could always get his leg over the rope,
14:13which I understand is shorthand
14:15for you can get into any party that you care to go to.
14:17Has that always been the case?
14:19In the 1990s, you'd go to anything you could possibly get into
14:21because you had empty legs, very little money,
14:23and of course everything was more or less free
14:25if you could get over that rope.
14:27I remember phoning up with a friend,
14:29a particular nightclub that everybody wanted to get into
14:31at the time,
14:33insisting that we'd be coming with Ronnie Corbett,
14:35but Ronnie Corbett would be in drag
14:37and would insist on being called Veronica Corbett.
14:39Thank goodness we never made it down to the door.
14:41But the National TV Awards
14:43were always the one to get into.
14:45Back in the day before, I used to get invited,
14:47it's not every year,
14:49I remember once going up the red carpet
14:51and there was no escape from the red carpet
14:53because, as it was,
14:55the TV Awards used to be at the Albert Hall
14:57and opposite the party would be in the Art College.
14:59Crowds either side, red carpet, nowhere to go.
15:01Just a walk of shame if you get turned away.
15:03So I managed it one year with the lovely Charlie Dimmock,
15:05but the next year they were barcoding the guests.
15:07I mean, that's like CSI, isn't it?
15:09It's like scanning people's retinas to get into a party.
15:11And I just remember I had a rucksack on
15:13so I didn't look the part at all
15:15because I was actually going to be turned away.
15:17I'm going clammy-palmed as I tell this story.
15:19But fortunately as I approached,
15:21Lisa Riley threw her arms around me,
15:23Biggins cried,
15:25Richard!
15:27And Ian Beale from EastEnders, Adam Woodger,
15:29threw his arms around me.
15:31So that gives you an idea of the company I keep.
15:33But I threw the rucksack under the trestle table
15:35where the drinks were laid out
15:37and just partied on into the rest of the night.
15:39But it must have been Dutch courage in the 90s
15:41because I don't think I could ever bear to do it now.
15:43We've got most of it here. Graham.
15:45Back in the lead, 31 points. Where shall we go?
15:47Let's go to Graham. Letters game.
15:49A consonant, please.
15:51Thank you, Graham. R.
15:53And a vowel, please.
15:55A.
15:57And another vowel.
15:59O. And a vowel.
16:01I.
16:03And a consonant.
16:05S. And another.
16:07W.
16:09And another.
16:11T.
16:13And another.
16:15N.
16:17And a final vowel, please.
16:19And a final E.
16:21Stand by.
16:41MUSIC PLAYS
16:53Graham. A seven.
16:55A seven. Chris. Seven.
16:57Two sevens. Yes, Graham.
16:59Weapons.
17:01And Chris? The same word.
17:03Would you just care to shove it across there?
17:05You happy, Graham? All right.
17:07And in the corner, what have we got over there? Richard.
17:09Spawner. Anything else?
17:11No, we had weapons as well, but just those two.
17:13Weapons. All right, very good.
17:15So, 38 to Chris is 32.
17:17Chris, your letters game.
17:19Consonant, please, Rachel.
17:21Thank you, Chris. M.
17:23Another consonant.
17:25S.
17:27Vowel. I.
17:29Another.
17:31A.
17:33Consonant.
17:35D.
17:37T.
17:39Another.
17:41N.
17:43Another.
17:45S. And a final vowel, please.
17:47And the last one.
17:49E.
17:51Countdown.
17:53MUSIC PLAYS
18:07MUSIC CONTINUES
18:21Chris. Seven.
18:23Thank you, Graham.
18:25And a seven. Two sevens. Chris.
18:27Madness. Madness.
18:29Are you both?
18:31There we are. Madness.
18:33Very nice. Madness.
18:35What have we got there, Richard?
18:37Sandiest. Yes.
18:39Misdates. Yes, excellent.
18:41Put the wrong date on something.
18:43To misdate.
18:45To misdate. Yes.
18:47Very good. 45 points to Chris's 39.
18:49Graham, numbers game.
18:51I'll have a one, two, one, two, please, Rachel.
18:53Thank you, Graham.
18:55Another one large.
18:57Five, little one, selection.
18:59And this round is ten, nine, two,
19:01five, another two,
19:03seven, eight.
19:05And your target, 349.
19:07349.
19:09MUSIC PLAYS
19:33MUSIC CONTINUES
19:37Yes, Graham.
19:39350, not written down.
19:41And Chris?
19:43Nothing.
19:45Too far away. Come on, then, Graham.
19:47Nine minus the two twos.
19:49Nine minus two minus the other two is five.
19:53And then I had...
19:57..nine minus...
19:59No, I've lost it, sorry.
20:01I think we'll leave it there
20:03and we shall turn to Rachel.
20:05Rachel, 349?
20:07Yeah, a couple of ways. You could have said
20:09nine minus two is seven,
20:11times by 100,
20:13700, minus two
20:15is 698,
20:17and then ten divided by five
20:19is another two, and divide that,
20:21349. Ah, super stuff.
20:23Well done.
20:25Very good. Perfect stuff, Rachel.
20:27So, Graham on 45,
20:29Chris on 39,
20:31as we turn to a Tea Time teaser,
20:33which is One's Urge.
20:35And the clue?
20:37One has the urge to give as much to others as possible.
20:39One has the urge to give as much
20:41to others as possible.
20:43MUSIC PLAYS
20:45APPLAUSE
20:57A warm welcome back.
20:59I left you with the clue,
21:01one has the urge to give as much to others as possible,
21:03and the answer is generous.
21:05One should be as generous as possible.
21:07Now then, Graham, 45,
21:09Chris on 39.
21:11Chris, your letters came.
21:13Vowel, please.
21:15Thank you, Chris. O.
21:17And another?
21:19A.
21:21A consonant?
21:23R.
21:25And another?
21:27D.
21:29And another?
21:31S.
21:33And another?
21:35P.
21:37Vowel?
21:39U.
21:41And a final consonant, please.
21:43And a final B.
21:45Stand by.
21:47MUSIC PLAYS
22:11MUSIC STOPS
22:17Chris?
22:19I'm going to risk an eight.
22:21Thank you, Graham.
22:23Just a six.
22:25And that six?
22:27Boards.
22:29Boards. Now then, Chris.
22:31Up braids.
22:33Yeah, we were just looking at that.
22:35To find fault with somebody, to scold them is to up braid them.
22:37Brilliant.
22:39We're in the world of good.
22:41Two-point lead for you now, Chris.
22:43Like Richard.
22:45Absurd.
22:47And broads.
22:49If you like your women like that.
22:51Anything else, Susie?
22:53No, nothing. We were quite pleased with up braids.
22:55Two points in the lead then, Chris.
22:57And it's Graham's letters game now.
22:59Time to recapture the lead, Graham.
23:01I'll have a consonant, please.
23:03Thank you, Graham. S.
23:05And a vowel, please.
23:07And another.
23:09O.
23:11And another.
23:13E.
23:15And a consonant.
23:17D.
23:19And another.
23:21T.
23:23And another.
23:25D.
23:27And another.
23:29H.
23:31And another consonant, please.
23:33And the last one.
23:35ELECTRONIC MUSIC
23:37ELECTRONIC MUSIC CONTINUES
24:03Graham?
24:05Six. And Chris?
24:07Six here, too. So, Graham?
24:09Hosted. Hosted. Chris?
24:11Oddest.
24:13The oddest one. Yes.
24:15Very good.
24:17Now then, talking about oddest.
24:19Richard?
24:21Denoted. Denoted.
24:23Something else?
24:25I was looking to see if you could de-stone a fruit, for example, but not there.
24:29What would you do then if you removed the stone from a peach, for instance?
24:33De-stone it?
24:35Maybe it doesn't happen often enough to get in the dictionary, I'm not sure.
24:38Happens all the time!
24:40Yes. I'll take that one back with me.
24:42De-stone. I'd like to think we could have that.
24:4553 to Graham, 51.
24:47And now, back with you, Susie.
24:49Susie, your blessed origins of words.
24:54Well, Nick, do you remember I texted you quite recently
24:57to ask whether you'd ever had a moustache,
24:59and if you had, whether you had a picture of you with a moustache?
25:02Yes.
25:03And you said, never, but I wonder if you've ever had a beard.
25:06I didn't ask you that.
25:08No.
25:09No. OK, well, I asked Richard the same question,
25:11and he gave the coolest answer possible, which was,
25:13yes, I had one in the North Pole, which was wonderful.
25:16I did look like my grandmother, though.
25:18Did you? Yeah.
25:20She was heavily bearded.
25:22Yes, very much so.
25:24Well, I'm not going to talk about bearded ladies,
25:27but I was just going to talk about beards in general,
25:29because they were once associated with very underhand dealings
25:33and dodgy behaviour,
25:35and the idea was that a clean-shaven face
25:37meant purity, integrity,
25:40and the inability to conceal any duplicity.
25:44But a bare-faced lie was a brazen one,
25:47where the liar didn't care one inch
25:49whether or not they would be detected,
25:51so it was such a brazen lie, it was bare-faced.
25:53But beards have got a pretty bad press in language,
25:57as they have in history,
25:59and some linguists believe that the word bizarre
26:01comes from a Basque-Spanish word, bizarra,
26:03which meant beard.
26:05Originally, they obviously liked beards,
26:07because they denoted for them virility and men of spirit,
26:11in the same way as they viewed mustachioed men
26:13as being particularly spirited and courageous.
26:16But somewhere along the way, mistrust obviously crept in,
26:19and so bizarro, a bearded man,
26:21came to be seen as being odd or eccentric,
26:23and that's the root of our word, potentially, bizarre, today.
26:27But there are lots of other bearded words
26:31that are buried in English,
26:33so if you make a rebarbative comment,
26:35it will be a repellent or an objectionable one,
26:37and that originally meant to stand beard to beard against somebody.
26:41The barb that you have at the end of a fish hook,
26:44fish sometimes have barbs around their mouth,
26:47and the idea is of catching them by their mouth,
26:49and actually a barb also was a piece of linen
26:51that was tucked under the chin by nuns,
26:54with the idea, again, of being bearded in some way.
26:57And finally, if you've ever been so fascinated by beards
27:00that you'd like to study them further,
27:02you would become a pogonologist.
27:04That comes from the Greek for beard.
27:06And the foremost point on the midline of the chin,
27:08particularly the male chin, is your pogonion,
27:10which is there, the same root.
27:12Well, I'm dashed. Isn't that excellent?
27:14Brilliant.
27:16Well, that's remarkable, Susie.
27:18Remarkable, Susie. Most interesting. Thank you very much indeed.
27:21And now we turn to Chris.
27:23Chris, who is two points ahead.
27:25Your letters game, Chris. Keep it up.
27:27Consonant, please, Rachel.
27:29Thank you, Chris. R.
27:31And another.
27:33S. And another.
27:36R. And another.
27:39T.
27:41Vowel, please.
27:43U. Another.
27:45E.
27:47A.
27:49And...
27:51Consonant, please.
27:53N.
27:55And a final vowel. And a final...
27:57O.
27:59And here's the countdown clock.
28:17CLOCK TICKS
28:31Yes, Chris?
28:33Seven. A seven, Graham.
28:35And a seven. Chris?
28:37Turners.
28:39Turners and...?
28:41Saunter. Saunter.
28:43We like that. We like that. Saunter.
28:45And then, Richard?
28:47We've got resort and trouser.
28:49Indeed, you could saunter in your resort trouser
28:51if you were inclined like I am on occasion.
28:53I can imagine.
28:55A palazzo pant, a culotte or something like that, Susie?
28:57Yes. I'll try it.
28:59I was just looking up Turner.
29:01And it's a person who's skilled in turning wood on a lathe.
29:04Yeah. A Turner.
29:06Very good. 60 points to 58.
29:08Chris, clinging on there.
29:10And we come into the last letters game, Graham.
29:13I'll have a consonant, please.
29:15Thank you, Graham. G.
29:17And a vowel, please.
29:19E.
29:21And another.
29:23I.
29:25And another.
29:27E.
29:29And a consonant, please.
29:31L.
29:33And another.
29:35F.
29:37And another.
29:39T.
29:41And a final consonant, please.
29:43And a final N.
29:45Stand by.
30:12MUSIC STOPS
30:18Graham?
30:20I'll risk a nine.
30:22Now then, Chris.
30:24A safe eight.
30:26A safe eight. Come on, then, Chris.
30:28Fleeting.
30:30Fleeting. Now, the gambler.
30:32I added an S. Fleetings.
30:34Hmm.
30:36Feelings.
30:38Yeah.
30:40The word feeling isn't actually there as a noun on its own,
30:43I'm afraid, Graham, so you couldn't add an S to it,
30:45according to the dictionary.
30:47Bad luck, but worth a shout.
30:49But in the corner, now then, Richard.
30:51Feelings was the one we got, actually.
30:53Feelings. All right, well done.
30:55So, 68 plays 58.
30:57My word, Chris.
30:59And we come to the final game, as it were,
31:01the last numbers game. One for you, Chris.
31:03One, two, one, two, please, Rachel.
31:05Thank you, Chris. One, two, one, two.
31:08Thank you, Rachel Conundrum.
31:10Right, for the last time today, the numbers are one and another one.
31:13Four, eight, two, and the large one, 50.
31:18And the target, 966.
31:21966.
31:38MUSIC PLAYS
31:54Mmm, Chris.
31:56Nope. Graham?
31:58960.
32:00960. All right, let's hear from you.
32:03Er, two times 50.
32:05Two times 50 is 100.
32:07Take away the four.
32:09Minus 496.
32:11And then the eight and the two ones is ten.
32:15Yep. Well done.
32:17960. Not bad. Six adrift.
32:19But how tricky is it, Rachel? 966?
32:22Erm, very tricky. I'll have another look to see if it's possible.
32:25All right. So here we are, then.
32:27It's five points in it.
32:29Graham on 63, Chris 68.
32:31That makes it a crucial conundrum.
32:33So, Graham, Chris, fingers on buzzers, please.
32:35Time to reveal today's crucial countdown conundrum.
32:49BELL RINGS
32:51Graham?
32:53Quickiest.
32:55Let's see whether you're right.
32:57Oh, good stuff. Well done, Graham.
32:59APPLAUSE
33:02Well done indeed.
33:04And you're good at these conundrums.
33:06Very good indeed. 73 to 68, Chris.
33:08Bad luck. You had him on the ropes.
33:10You had him on the ropes.
33:12But he's pulled this conundrum stunt before.
33:14Haven't you, Chris? Very good.
33:16So it's back to, er, back to Halifax, Chris.
33:19Well, look, travel safely back to Halifax.
33:21Take your goodie bag with you.
33:23And you were good fun. You come and see us again.
33:25Thank you. Well done.
33:27Now, then, Graham, great stuff.
33:29You didn't get it until the very last minute, but you pulled it off.
33:32Well done. 73 points to 68.
33:34We'll see you tomorrow.
33:36See you tomorrow with Susie and, of course, Richard.
33:39Great stuff. We'll see you tomorrow.
33:41Now, then, Rachel.
33:43966. Don't tell me you've done it.
33:45I got there in the end. Come on.
33:47If you say 2 plus 1 is 3.
33:508 minus the other one is 7.
33:52Three 7s are 21.
33:54And then 50 minus 4 is 46.
33:58Yes, well done. Well done.
34:02Well done indeed. Well done, Rachel.
34:04We'll see you tomorrow. Same time, same place.
34:06We'll be here. You'll be sure of it. Good afternoon.
34:27APPLAUSE