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00:00This programme contains strong language and adult humour.
00:05APPLAUSE
00:31Good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown studio.
00:34We all like a good moan now and again,
00:36but some people moan more than others.
00:39What about Britain's biggest moaner, Rachel?
00:41Britain's biggest moaner. He's got a name.
00:44His name's Chris Owen and he reckons to save about £1,000 a year by moaning.
00:48Whenever there's a problem and he's not responsible for it, he moans.
00:53And apparently, you know, he sort of gets repaid
00:57or people don't charge him or whatever it is.
00:59It's extraordinary. He doesn't go out of his way to complain.
01:02He says, but if something's not right,
01:04then you should bring it to the attention of the person who's responsible.
01:08But I've got a friend who I think could give Chris Owen a run for his money.
01:13He has got filing cabinets all lined up,
01:17full of letters of complaint about almost everything.
01:21And in a sense, and he's a great, great mate of mine and I tease him about it,
01:26but he enjoys it.
01:28He doesn't do it when he's been round meals for dinner or anything, does he?
01:30Write you a nice letter of complaint afterwards?
01:32No, no, it's quite a good idea, though. I'll bring it to his attention.
01:35What about you? Do you have a little moan now and again?
01:38Well, I don't think it's moaning. I think it's complaining.
01:40I think you have a right to complain if you don't get good service.
01:42And yes, I've been known.
01:44If there are grounds for complaint and you've been sort of diddled in some way,
01:47why not? I'll tell you who's not shortchanging us.
01:51Dave Ashton isn't shortchanging us.
01:53He comes in here like a breath of fresh air.
01:56Day one, 95. Day two, 105.
01:59And here we are, your third appearance, Dave.
02:03Security guard from St Helens.
02:05Well, it's good to have you back, Dave.
02:07Thank you very much.
02:08All right. You're joined by Dan Martin.
02:10Now, Dan is a department secretary at the University of Warwick,
02:13and you're from Coventry.
02:14I'm not from Coventry.
02:16That's what it says on my piece of paper.
02:18But I live in Coventry.
02:19You live in Coventry. All right.
02:21And just to be particular about it, where are you from?
02:23I'm from Dartford in Kent.
02:25Okay.
02:26Dartford to Coventry and working at the University of Warwick.
02:29Nailed that one. Brilliant.
02:31And you like trains.
02:34You were inter-railing across Europe and you got your trains fixed up.
02:37What happened?
02:38Yeah, well, we were in Poland.
02:41I can't remember what station we were at.
02:43We were trying to get back to Krakow.
02:45Two trains came in at the same time from opposite directions,
02:47and we'd gotten the wrong one.
02:49And you were swept off somewhere else.
02:51Yeah.
02:52A very nice Polish man got us in the right direction.
02:54Excellent.
02:55Do you speak Polish or he spoke English?
02:57He spoke some English. Enough.
02:59Good.
03:00Well, you're very welcome here.
03:01Both of you have fun.
03:02He knows how to do it.
03:03But Dan Martin, have some fun.
03:05And that's a big round of applause for our contestants.
03:08APPLAUSE
03:12And over in the corner, Susie.
03:15Welcome back, of course.
03:17And for the final time, Mark Pugach, TV and radio sports presenter.
03:22Great to have you back.
03:23APPLAUSE
03:27Now, Dave, off we go. Let us go.
03:31Thank you. Afternoon, Rachel.
03:33Afternoon, Dave.
03:34Could I have a consonant, please?
03:35Thank you. Start the week with S.
03:38And another.
03:40T.
03:42And another.
03:44P.
03:45And one more.
03:47B.
03:49And a vowel.
03:51E.
03:52And a vowel.
03:53O.
03:55And a vowel.
03:57A.
03:59And a consonant.
04:01T.
04:03And another consonant.
04:05And lastly, D.
04:07And here's the Countdown Clock.
04:15CLOCK TICKS
04:40Well, Dave?
04:41A seven.
04:42A seven. Dan?
04:44A six.
04:45And your six is?
04:46Pasted.
04:47Pasted. Yes, Dave?
04:48Spotted.
04:49And spotted. Well done.
04:51Well done.
04:52Mark, what do you reckon?
04:53A few sevens in there. Could have boasted of what you got.
04:56Yes.
04:57And a bedpost as well.
04:59And a bedpost.
05:00Yeah.
05:01It's always good to have four of them, I think.
05:05Anything else, Susie?
05:06No, just sevens for us.
05:07Thank you. Now then, Dan, it's your letters game.
05:10Good afternoon.
05:11Afternoon, Dan.
05:12Can I have a consonant, please?
05:13Thank you. Start with N.
05:15And another one.
05:17R.
05:19And a vowel.
05:21I.
05:23And a consonant.
05:25F.
05:27And a vowel.
05:29U.
05:31And another vowel.
05:33E.
05:35And a consonant.
05:37V.
05:39And another consonant.
05:41N.
05:43And one last vowel, please.
05:45And lastly, A.
05:47Stand by.
06:12Yes, Dan?
06:14Just a five.
06:15A five. And Dave?
06:17Seven.
06:18And a seven. Dan?
06:20Finer.
06:21Thank you. Dave?
06:23Funnier.
06:25Yeah, very good.
06:26Well done.
06:27Well done, Dave.
06:28And in the corner?
06:29Nothing above a seven, nothing above funnier.
06:32No, we have ravine for six, otherwise.
06:34Well done.
06:39Well done.
06:41Funnier, indeed.
06:4214 points to Dave.
06:44Dan, you have to score, but lots of time for that.
06:46Lots of time.
06:47Very early days.
06:48Dave, it's a numbers game.
06:50One from the top, please, Rachel, and five from anywhere else.
06:53Thank you, Dave.
06:54One large, five little for the first one of the week.
06:56And this selection is...
06:58two,
06:59three,
07:00seven,
07:01eight,
07:02five, and the big one, 100.
07:04And the target to reach, 529.
07:07529.
07:38Well, Dave?
07:40529.
07:41Dan?
07:42529.
07:43Thank you, Dave.
07:44100 plus 7 times 5.
07:46107 times 5, 535.
07:493 times 2 is 6. Take it away.
07:51It is indeed. Well done. 529.
07:53Yes, Dan.
07:545 times 100, 500.
07:56500.
07:578 times 3 is 24.
07:59Yep.
08:00Minus the 2 is 22, plus the 7, 29.
08:03529.
08:04Lovely. Well done.
08:05Well done.
08:06APPLAUSE
08:10Dan, off the block, sir, with ten points
08:12as we turn to our first Tea Time teaser,
08:14which is Entrap Men.
08:16And the clue...
08:17Wave to the lady with an everlasting marker.
08:20Wave to the lady with an everlasting marker.
08:33APPLAUSE
08:37Well done.
08:40Welcome back.
08:41I left with the clue,
08:43wave to the lady with an everlasting marker.
08:47And the answer to that is permanent.
08:49Permanent.
08:5124, please.
08:52Ten.
08:53Dan, your letters again.
08:55I'll start with a vowel, please.
08:57Thank you, Dan.
08:58O.
08:59And another one?
09:01A.
09:02And a consonant?
09:05L.
09:06And another one?
09:08D.
09:10And another one?
09:12K.
09:14And a vowel, please?
09:16E.
09:18And a consonant?
09:20M.
09:22And a consonant?
09:25H.
09:27And one more consonant, please.
09:29And the last one?
09:31R.
09:32Stand by.
09:35CLOCK TICKS
10:03Yes, Dan?
10:04I have six.
10:05A six, Dave?
10:06Six.
10:07Dan?
10:08Hand.
10:09And, Dave?
10:10Herald.
10:11Herald, indeed, yeah.
10:13Can we beat a herald, I wonder?
10:15There is a seven in there.
10:17Herald-um.
10:18Ah.
10:19You'd need a herald.
10:20Yes, exactly. You're almost there, Dave.
10:22Yeah.
10:23Susie, anything else?
10:24No, down to six is otherwise, isn't it?
10:26Hark, just that kind of thing.
10:28Hark the herald angels sing.
10:3030 plays 16. Dave on 30.
10:32Dave, your letter's going.
10:34Consonant, please, Rachel.
10:35Thank you, Dave.
10:37N.
10:38And another one?
10:40P.
10:42And another one?
10:44R.
10:45And one more, please.
10:47M.
10:49And a vowel?
10:50E.
10:52Another vowel?
10:54I.
10:55Another vowel?
10:57U.
10:59A consonant?
11:02R.
11:04And a vowel?
11:06And the last one?
11:07E.
11:09Well done.
11:31MUSIC
11:42Well, Dave?
11:43A seven.
11:44A seven. Dan?
11:45Six.
11:46And your six is?
11:47A ruiner.
11:48A ruiner.
11:49Dave?
11:50Premier.
11:52Now, Mark and Susie.
11:54We have a seven in pre-mer.
11:57Anything else, Susie?
11:59The perineum is there for an eight.
12:02Perineum.
12:03Yep.
12:05Perineum. There it is.
12:07Now, 37 plays 16. Dave on 37.
12:10And it's Dan's numbers game. Dan?
12:12I'll take one large and five smalls, please.
12:14Thank you, Dan.
12:16One big five little coming up for you.
12:18And this time around, the selection is ten,
12:21three, four, seven,
12:24six and the big one, 75.
12:27And this target, 642.
12:29642.
12:31MUSIC
12:58MUSIC STOPS
13:01Dan?
13:03I have 650.
13:05Eight away. Dave?
13:07643.
13:08Let's turn to you, Dave, shall we?
13:10OK, 75 minus six minus four.
13:13Minus six minus four, 65.
13:16Times ten.
13:17650.
13:18Minus seven.
13:19Yep, one away.
13:21643.
13:22Very, very close, but not absolutely spot on.
13:25642. Is that a tricky one, Rachel?
13:28There were a couple of ways, Nick.
13:30If you say 75 times four is 300,
13:34divided by three is 100,
13:37add seven for 107 and times that by six,
13:40you get 642.
13:41Perfect. Well done.
13:46So, the score, then.
13:4844 to 16. Dave on 44.
13:50As we turn to Mark.
13:52Child prodigies.
13:54I thought, for my final appearance,
13:57we'd talk about child prodigies.
13:59I think when everybody has a child,
14:01they're thinking,
14:02am I going to have a genius here?
14:04Let's be honest, am I going to have somebody
14:06upon whom I can rely and then retire early?
14:08But for all the ones, of course,
14:10that we hear about are child prodigies,
14:12there are plenty more that are child prodigies
14:14who never translate, as it were.
14:16But Tiger Woods, introduced to golf by his father, aged two.
14:19Astonishing career, if a bit of a fall from grace,
14:21but nevertheless astonishing career.
14:23The youngest ever male champion of Wimbledon,
14:25aged 17 in 1985.
14:27Sort of from nowhere,
14:29and then won it again the next year.
14:31Nadia Comaneci, I'm sure you remember,
14:33in the Olympics in Montreal.
14:35Nadia Comaneci winning the first perfect ten
14:38in gymnastics on the uneven bars,
14:40aged 14.
14:42Sachin Tendulkar was 16
14:44when he first played cricket for India.
14:46And he went on to make 100 centuries
14:49in all forms of the international game.
14:51In a country where there's over a billion population
14:53and cricket is the sport.
14:55I mean, it's extraordinary pressure on him
14:57every single time.
14:59And then, of course, away from sport,
15:01you've got Mozart composing, aged five.
15:03You've got Picasso and everything he did
15:05at such a young age.
15:07So when I had children, I was watching closely.
15:09Have we got any geniuses here?
15:11But before I get on to my own one,
15:13a friend said to me that
15:15their son came home from school one day
15:17when he was about six or seven.
15:19And he said, Dad, I can count to ten
15:21in French already.
15:23I said, well, that's absolutely fantastic.
15:25Here we go. Come on, then.
15:27Count to ten in French. And the little boy went,
15:29one, two, three.
15:33That's not quite the point.
15:35And one Christmas, my boy
15:37must have been about five,
15:39and he came home and he said, Dad,
15:41if Jesus was in our class,
15:43he'd sit next to me.
15:45Sit right next to me.
15:47I said, how do you work that out?
15:49He goes, well, there's Olly Parsons over there,
15:51and then there's me, Sam Pugatch,
15:53and then there's Jesus Price.
15:55LAUGHTER
15:57So I think, you know what,
15:59when it's all said and done,
16:01there's less pressure on than being in the middle of the road,
16:03isn't there?
16:05APPLAUSE
16:09Lovely. Thank you, Monk.
16:11Thank you. Now, 44-16,
16:13Dave on 44, and it's Dave's letters game.
16:15Thank you. Consonant, please, Rachel.
16:17Thank you, Dave.
16:19S. And another.
16:21B.
16:23And another.
16:25N.
16:27And one more.
16:29C.
16:31And a vowel.
16:33A.
16:35And another.
16:37O.
16:39And another.
16:41E.
16:43Consonant.
16:45S.
16:47And another consonant, please.
16:49And lastly, J.
16:51Stand by.
17:13MUSIC PLAYS
17:23Yes, Dave?
17:25Six.
17:27Dan? Six.
17:29Thank you, Dave.
17:31Season.
17:33Dan? Canoes.
17:35Mark and Susie?
17:37Yes, we had canoes and a couple of sevens as well in there.
17:39Beacons is one of them.
17:41Yes.
17:43Banjos. You can spell O-E-S as well as O-S.
17:45Banjos. Thank you.
17:47Thanks, Susie. 50-22, Dan.
17:49Off we go. Letters game.
17:51Consonant, please. Thank you, Dan.
17:53D.
17:55And another one.
17:57P.
17:59And another.
18:01H.
18:03And one more.
18:05G.
18:07And a vowel.
18:09O.
18:11And another.
18:13E.
18:15And a consonant.
18:17M.
18:19And a vowel, please.
18:21And the last one. O.
18:23Countdown.
18:25MUSIC PLAYS
18:39MUSIC CONTINUES
18:55Well done. I've got a six.
18:57A six, Dave? Six.
18:59Dan? Homage.
19:01Homage and hooped.
19:03Susie? Yes.
19:05Happy? Yes, happy with both. Yep.
19:07The two tremendous words.
19:09Mop head. Yes.
19:11Which you'd think is slang, actually, wouldn't you?
19:13You'd think it wasn't really there. Yeah.
19:15Slang, a lot of slang in here.
19:17And a great eight.
19:19I really like this one.
19:21Umpahd.
19:23It's the bad umpahd from the terraces.
19:25APPLAUSE
19:29Umpah, umpah, yeah.
19:3156-28.
19:33Dave, numbers game. Off we go.
19:35Thank you. One from the top, please, Rachel,
19:37and five from anyone else.
19:39Same as usual. Thank you, Dave.
19:41And we'll go for these five little ones,
19:43which are one,
19:45three,
19:47ten, two,
19:49seven, and the big one, 25.
19:51And the target,
19:53719.
19:55719.
19:57MUSIC PLAYS
20:05MUSIC CONTINUES
20:27Well, Dave?
20:29718. And Dan?
20:31720.
20:33720. All right.
20:35Let's try Dave first, then. Dave?
20:37Ten times three
20:39is 30, minus one.
20:41Ten times three, 30, minus one,
20:4329.
20:45Times by 25.
20:47725. Minus seven.
20:49Minus seven, one below. 718, well done.
20:51And one over. Dan?
20:5325 minus one
20:55is 24.
20:5725 minus one, 24.
20:59Multiplied by ten is 240.
21:01Multiplied by three is 720.
21:03It is, indeed.
21:05And right in the middle there,
21:07the 719, Rachel,
21:09can we find it?
21:11It was rather elusive. Leave it with me.
21:13Thank you. Certainly will. 63
21:15plays 35. Dave in the lead.
21:17And it's time for our second
21:19tea-time teaser, which is
21:21fair, trust, and the clue.
21:23When it came to something for dessert,
21:25this was way above
21:27everything else. When it came to something
21:29for dessert, this was way above
21:31everything else.
21:47Welcome back, welcome back. I left you with
21:49the clue. When it came to something
21:51for dessert, this was way above
21:53everything else. What was? Starfruit
21:55was. That's what was.
21:57That's the answer.
21:5963 plays 35. Dave
22:01on 63. Dan, your letters
22:03game. A consonant, please.
22:05Thank you, Dan.
22:07N
22:09And a vowel.
22:11E
22:13And another one.
22:15A And a consonant,
22:17please. G
22:19And a vowel.
22:21I
22:23And a consonant.
22:25T And another one.
22:27X
22:29And another one.
22:31P
22:33And a
22:35vowel, please. And
22:37final U.
22:39Done by.
22:55T
22:57T
22:59T
23:01T
23:03T
23:05T
23:07T
23:09T
23:11T
23:13T
23:15T
23:17T
23:19T
23:21T
23:23T
23:25T
23:27T
23:29T
23:31T
23:33T
23:35T
23:37T
23:39T
23:41T
23:43T
23:45T
23:47T
23:49T
23:51T
23:53T
23:55T
23:57T
23:59T
24:01T
24:03T
24:05T
24:07T
24:09T
24:11T
24:13T
24:15T
24:17Stand by.
24:47Well, Dave?
24:49A seven.
24:51A seven and...
24:53A six.
24:55And a six for Dan. You're six down.
24:57Scream.
24:59No, Dave.
25:01Scalder.
25:05Can be a scalder, yes. Absolutely fine.
25:07Mark?
25:09There's a seven in there, isn't there?
25:11Yes, a term from billiards.
25:13Oh, yes, yes.
25:15And earldoms are...
25:17You can put the S on earldom and have earldoms for eight.
25:19Earldoms, indeed.
25:2176 to 35.
25:23Susie, what have you for us today,
25:25by way of your wonderful
25:27origins of words?
25:29I have an email from the Reverend
25:31Richard James of Harrogate.
25:33And he says,
25:35from time to time, my charming wife
25:37refers to me as gormless.
25:39Besides explaining what is the gorm
25:41I have been going without,
25:43please give me a range of suitable
25:45antidotes.
25:47So, gormless.
25:49The original spelling was G-A-U-M, gormless.
25:51And it comes from
25:53a dialect word, which you'll still find
25:55in some parts of Britain, and that's gorm,
25:57meaning care or understanding.
25:59And that, in turn, was a Viking word,
26:01which is why
26:03you will find it particularly in places like Harrogate,
26:05York, etc. And it comes from the Old Norse,
26:07meaning the same thing, care or heed.
26:09So, if you are gormless,
26:11then you are without care,
26:13without heed, and just a little bit
26:15foolish, if you like.
26:17To be gorm-like, by contrast,
26:19used to mean to have an intelligent
26:21look about you. So it's quite a pithy way
26:23of saying that someone looks clever,
26:25if they are gorm-like.
26:27But I suspect that the Reverend James
26:29is actually looking for more subtle
26:31comebacks when he talks about an antidote.
26:33Antidote, incidentally, means
26:35anti-poison.
26:37And one of the best antidotes in the olden days
26:39was treacle. Treacle started off as an
26:41antidote to snake venom.
26:43It goes back to a Greek word, meaning
26:45wild beast or wild serpent.
26:47And it was then eventually
26:49transferred over to the kind of
26:51sweet syrup that you might give alongside
26:53a pill, in order to sugar it and make it
26:55go down more quickly. But,
26:57back to perhaps more subtle comebacks
26:59that the Reverend James can use.
27:01He might call his wife a fustilux,
27:03described as a woman of gross or
27:05corpulent habit, an addiction
27:07of the 19th century. A driggle-draggle,
27:09someone who's untidy.
27:11A clasomaniac, and that's somebody who
27:13seems only able to communicate by
27:15shouting. I'm sure you know some of those, Mark.
27:17A rake-fire, someone who outstays
27:19her welcome. Or perhaps a smell-fungus,
27:21and that's somebody who finds fault
27:23in everything, no matter what.
27:25A snout-band, somebody who's
27:27constantly interrupting or contradicting.
27:29A whiffle-waffler
27:31is simply a ditherer, and a
27:33doodlesack is a windbag.
27:35But I'm sure he won't be using
27:37any of those, and he must
27:39be thoroughly exorious, which is another
27:41useful word meaning excessively devoted to
27:43one's wife. So, if she calls him
27:45gormless again, he can say not only
27:47is he full of gorm, but he can be
27:49epped, gruntled, challant,
27:51kempt, a persona grata,
27:53and totally whelmed with love for her.
27:55I hope that does the trick.
27:57APPLAUSE
27:59APPLAUSE
28:01APPLAUSE
28:03Well done.
28:05Well done, Susie. Thank you. 76-35.
28:07Dan.
28:09Penultimate letters game for you.
28:11Start with a consonant, please.
28:13Thank you, Dan. S
28:15And another one.
28:17L
28:19And a vowel.
28:21E
28:23And another one. U
28:25And a consonant.
28:27V
28:29And a vowel.
28:31I
28:33And another one.
28:35A
28:37And a consonant.
28:39T
28:41And one more consonant.
28:43And lastly, R.
28:45Countdown.
29:01CLOCK TICKS
29:15Dan. I've got a six.
29:17A six. Dave?
29:19Eight. And an eight. Oh, Dan.
29:21What have you got? Russell.
29:23Thank you. What's this eight you're talking about?
29:25Falses.
29:27Thank you. Excellent.
29:29Very good.
29:31APPLAUSE
29:33And the corners contribution?
29:35One other eight as well in there.
29:37Rivulets. Small streams.
29:39Yeah, yeah. Little rivulets.
29:4384-35.
29:45Dave, final letters game. Off we go.
29:47Can I start with a consonant, please, Rachel?
29:49Thank you, Dave. S
29:51And another.
29:53T
29:55And another.
29:57And another.
29:59T
30:01And a vowel.
30:03E
30:05And another vowel. O
30:07Another vowel.
30:09A
30:11A consonant.
30:13Q
30:15Another consonant, please.
30:17And to finish, N.
30:19Countdown.
30:21CLOCK TICKS
30:27MUSIC PLAYS
30:51Well, Dave? Six.
30:53Dan? I've got a seven.
30:55That's alls.
30:57Now then, Dan? Fattens.
30:59Very good. Excellent.
31:01Well done. Mark and Susie?
31:03Nope, no advance on fattens.
31:05Anything else, Susie? No, December.
31:0984-42. Into the final numbers game.
31:11Dan?
31:13Let's mix it up and go for two large.
31:15Why not? Thank you, Dan. Two large.
31:17Four littles for the final one of the day.
31:19And this last selection is
31:21nine, ten,
31:23three, seven,
31:25125,
31:27and the target,
31:29217.
31:31217.
31:33MUSIC PLAYS
31:53MUSIC STOPS
32:03Er, Dan?
32:05I have 218.
32:07218, Dave?
32:09206.
32:11Now then, Dan?
32:13So, nine times ten is 90.
32:15Nine times ten is 90.
32:17Plus 100 is 190. Yep.
32:19Plus 25 is 215.
32:21Plus 23 is 218.
32:23What a way. Dave?
32:25Sorry, blown up. Used the nine twice.
32:27Aw.
32:29Oh. Down to Rachel, then. 217, Rachel.
32:31Possible?
32:33Yes, if you say
32:35nine minus three is six,
32:37plus 25 is 31,
32:39and times that by seven.
32:41Thank you, Rachel.
32:43APPLAUSE
32:45Spot on as ever.
32:47So, 84-49
32:49for this final round.
32:51Gentlemen, fingers on buzzers.
32:53Let's roll today's Countdown Conundrum.
32:55MUSIC PLAYS
33:19MUSIC STOPS
33:25Well, Fox, let's roll it and see.
33:27Here we go.
33:29Sceptical.
33:31Sceptical. There we are.
33:33But whatever else we've got,
33:35we've got a winner in Dave. Well done.
33:3785 to Dan's 49.
33:39Well played, Dan. You held him back.
33:41He's been scoring outrageously.
33:43Now you've held him down to 84.
33:45Shame on you, Dave. Sorry.
33:47So, well done, Dan. You played very well.
33:49Take this goodie bag back to Coventry,
33:51or Dartford, or wherever you like, really.
33:53Thanks.
33:55All right, well done. We shall see you tomorrow,
33:57Dave Ashton. Well played.
34:01We will not be seeing Mark tomorrow, sadly.
34:03But listen, you know, we've so enjoyed
34:05your commentaries on the rugby and the football
34:07and everything else, so you come and see us
34:09when you've got a spare moment, will you?
34:11I will do. Thank you for having me.
34:13And Susie, see you tomorrow?
34:15Lovely. And Rachel.
34:17Now, who have we got in tomorrow?
34:19I think we've got our only dictionary caller guest
34:21with his own Twitter account for his hair.
34:23We've got Charlie State on tomorrow.
34:25Well done. All right, we'll see you tomorrow.
34:27See you then. See you tomorrow. All right.
34:29Join us then, same time, same place, you be sure of it.
34:31Very good afternoon.
34:33You can contact the programme by email
34:35at countdown at channel4.com,
34:37by Twitter at c4countdown,
34:39or write to us at countdown leads ls31js.
34:43You can also find our webpage
34:45at channel4.com forward slash countdown.

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