• 3 months ago

Category

📺
TV
Transcript
00:00This programme contains strong language and adult humour.
00:05APPLAUSE
00:31Good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown studio.
00:34Let's talk about eureka moments.
00:36I read a fascinating story, Rachel, about a Swedish woman,
00:40and she wasn't doing much with her life, really,
00:44and she had a eureka moment, an epiphany,
00:48an epiphany at three in the morning.
00:50She suddenly knew what she wanted to do for the rest of her life.
00:53She formed a stationary company,
00:56and today it's a worldwide brand, it's extraordinary.
00:59So, in the middle of the night, she thought, I got it.
01:03I have an epiphany most nights.
01:05I get very excited and I wake up in the morning
01:08and I realise it was a rubbish idea,
01:11even more stupid than the night before,
01:14and I still have no idea what I'm going to do
01:17with the few dwindling years left of me.
01:20What about you? Do you have lots of epiphany nights?
01:23Tell us some of these ideas you've had.
01:25I'm not prepared to discuss them in public.
01:27Just write them down and pass me a note.
01:29I will do. I'll tell you later. What about you and your epiphany?
01:32I think it is the middle of the night, isn't it?
01:34It's when you're quite sleepy.
01:36At the end of last year, I interviewed David Beckham
01:39for World Aid Day for grassroots soccer,
01:41and normally, when you're interviewing footballers,
01:43especially for Man United or big ones,
01:45their people give you a list of approved questions,
01:48and it might be an hour before,
01:50and it's like, stick to this and don't ask anything awkward,
01:53and with David, they said, oh, you know, do what you like.
01:56So I had to basically stalk him for a long time,
01:58so I was reading everything and watching everything
02:01and had all this information and thought,
02:03where on earth do you start with his life,
02:05and then woke up one morning, 8 o'clock,
02:07and the idea was there, and suddenly,
02:09before I'd woken up properly as I was dozing,
02:11I'd written half of it in my head.
02:13Amazing. Amazing. Good for you.
02:15Now, Rachel, Dougie's back.
02:17Two good wins, 109 and 78 from memory,
02:19company director from Guernsey.
02:22How are you feeling? Very well, thank you. Refreshed, ready to go.
02:25Good, you're a very cool player, good player.
02:27You're joined by Colin.
02:29Colin Broome from Leicester, retired nurse,
02:32and a big darts player, loves darts, plays in two teams.
02:36I do indeed.
02:37It's become a fantastic television sport now, hasn't it?
02:40It's huge. It's cheap, I suppose, for TV.
02:43Is it cheap? For TV?
02:45I suppose you hire a hall, everybody pays to come in,
02:48they sell lots of beer, and they give the players a few quid.
02:52The top players, definitely.
02:54Who do you think you might earn, then? I have no idea.
02:57Not as much as Rachel's pal over there.
02:59Not as much as Beckham, perhaps.
03:01All right. Have a lot of fun today, both of you.
03:03A big round of applause now for Dougie and Colin.
03:11And Susie is over there.
03:13Of course she is, sitting next to a legend.
03:15He needs no introduction, but I'm going to do it anyway.
03:19Legendary singer-performer, it's the wonderful Jimmy Osmond.
03:22Good to meet you. Thank you.
03:24Thank you so much.
03:28A real pleasure. Thank you.
03:30Dougie, off we go.
03:32Good afternoon, Rachel. Afternoon, Dougie.
03:34Could I have a consonant, please? Thank you.
03:36Start today with G.
03:38And another?
03:40M.
03:42And a third?
03:44S.
03:46A vowel?
03:48E.
03:49A vowel?
03:51I.
03:53Consonant?
03:55G.
03:57Consonant?
03:59R.
04:00Vowel?
04:02A.
04:04And a final consonant, please?
04:06And a final N.
04:08And here comes the Countdown Clock.
04:21CLOCK TICKS
04:40Well, Dougie?
04:42Eight. Colin?
04:44Dodgy seven.
04:46And how dodgy is that, I wonder? Reaming.
04:48Thank you. And? A greasing.
04:51Very good.
04:53It's an engineering term.
04:55Yeah, it's to widen a hole with a special tool.
04:58Yeah, reaming, yeah.
05:00Thank you. What else have we got in the corner, I wonder?
05:03Jimmy and Susie?
05:05I had a seven. Enigmas.
05:07Very good. Very nice.
05:09And you can get to an eight, Nick, with smearing.
05:11Thank you. All right.
05:13Eight points to Dougie. Now, Colin.
05:15What are we going to do?
05:17Good afternoon, Rachel. Afternoon, Colin.
05:19Can I have a consonant, please?
05:21Thank you. Start with J.
05:23And another one?
05:25M.
05:27And another?
05:29R.
05:31Vowel, please?
05:33I.
05:35Another vowel?
05:37O.
05:39Consonant?
05:41S.
05:43Consonant?
05:45H.
05:47And a consonant?
05:49And lastly, P.
05:51Stand by.
06:17Yes, Colin?
06:19Five.
06:21Dougie?
06:23Six.
06:25Colin?
06:27Humps.
06:29Humps and shrimp.
06:31Shrimp. Nice.
06:35Now, Jimmy, what do you reckon?
06:37Jumps, for a five.
06:39Thank you. And Susie?
06:41You can have hoories, or howries, as well.
06:43H-O-U-R-I-S.
06:45Especially one of the virgin companions of the faithful
06:47in the Muslim paradise.
06:49Should be good.
06:51Dougie, numbers. Numbers game for you.
06:53One large and five small, please, Rachel.
06:55Thank you, Dougie. Potentially keeping it simple.
06:57We shall see. First numbers of the day.
06:59R. Six.
07:01Two. One.
07:03Five. Seven.
07:05And the large one, 100.
07:07And the target, 686.
07:09686.
07:15CLOCK TICKS
07:41Well, Dougie?
07:43686. Colin?
07:45686. Yes, Dougie?
07:47I did 100 minus 2.
07:4998.
07:51Times 7. Simple as that. Well done.
07:53And Colin?
07:555 plus 2 is 7. Yep.
07:57Times 100 is 700.
07:59It is.
08:012 times 7 is 14. Take it away.
08:03I'm sorry, Colin, but you've used your 2 there.
08:05Bad luck. Bad luck.
08:07Cos you could have used the rest, as well, to rub it in.
08:09Bad luck. 24 points to Dougie,
08:11for his first tea-time teaser,
08:13which is red motion and the clue.
08:15He kept a close eye on the falling price
08:17of computer equipment.
08:19He kept a close eye
08:21on the falling price of computer
08:23equipment.
08:25APPLAUSE
08:39Welcome back. Warm welcome back.
08:41I left with the clue, he kept a close eye
08:43on the falling price of computer
08:45equipment.
08:47In fact, he monitored it.
08:49He monitored the falling
08:51price of monitors.
08:53Now, if you'd like to become
08:55a Countdown contestant,
08:57you can email countdown at channel4.com
08:59to request an application form
09:01or write to us at
09:03contestantsapplications
09:05countdownleads
09:07LS31JS.
09:09So,
09:1124 points to Dougie.
09:13Colin yet to score. Bags of time, Colin.
09:15Try this one. Letters game.
09:17Constant, please.
09:19Thank you, Colin. X.
09:21And another.
09:23S. And another.
09:25T.
09:27Vowel, please.
09:29A. And another.
09:31E.
09:33Constant.
09:35R.
09:39Constant.
09:41V. Vowel.
09:43A.
09:45And
09:47a constant.
09:49R3D.
09:51Countdown.
10:19Well, Colin?
10:21Six. Dougie?
10:23Er, I'll stick with a seven.
10:25Colin?
10:27Xpats.
10:29Xpats and parades.
10:33Now, what have we got in the corner there, Jim?
10:35Well, I had parades for seven,
10:37but adapters.
10:39Oh, very good.
10:41APPLAUSE
10:43Excellent.
10:45Now, Dougie, it's your letters game.
10:47Constant, please, Rachel.
10:49Thank you, Dougie. L.
10:51And another.
10:53F. And a third.
10:55H.
10:57Vowel.
10:59O.
11:01Vowel.
11:03U.
11:05Vowel.
11:07E. Constant.
11:09N.
11:11Constant.
11:13S.
11:15And a final constant, please.
11:17And a final T.
11:19And the clock starts now.
11:21CLOCK TICKS
11:45CLOCK TICKS
11:51Dougie?
11:53Just six. Six.
11:55Six for Colin as well. Dougie?
11:57Flouts. Flouts and...
11:59Hustle. Hustle.
12:01Yes. Can we beat six, Jim?
12:03No, I only had five. What did you have?
12:05She's the genius.
12:07A couple of sevens are there.
12:09There's a nest full.
12:11You might have a nest full of children
12:13at home or a nest full of young chicks.
12:15And foulest is also there for seven.
12:17Yes. Talking about birds.
12:1937 to 6.
12:21And, Colin,
12:23your numbers game.
12:25One large and five small, please.
12:27Thank you, Colin. One from the top.
12:29Five little coming up for you.
12:31And this time around, the five small ones are
12:333, 7, 9,
12:35another 7 and 5,
12:37and the big one, 50.
12:39And the target, 767.
12:41767.
13:11Well, Colin?
13:13766.
13:15One away, Dougie?
13:17767, not written down.
13:19Let's try for it, then.
13:2150 plus 5.
13:2350 plus 5, 55.
13:25Multiply that by 7 plus 7.
13:277 plus 7 is 14,
13:29times them together for 770.
13:31And take away the 3.
13:33Well done.
13:35Well done.
13:37APPLAUSE
13:39Very brisk. Very good.
13:41And now,
13:43it's time for us to turn to Jimmy.
13:45Jimmy, you've got some stories
13:47from the high days.
13:49We were just talking, though, about the 70s,
13:51and it's crazy.
13:53It seems like it was yesterday.
13:55Do you still have your 70s flares?
13:57No.
13:59Come on, I bet you do.
14:01Maybe they're somewhere.
14:03Yeah, but those are crazy times, you know,
14:05if you didn't live through the 70s.
14:07I was a little boy, and I can remember
14:09being cooped up in a hotel
14:11with the Jacksons.
14:13They were there as well.
14:15Back in those days, there were only a few channels, weren't they?
14:17And a handful of groups would have
14:19that much attention.
14:21So it created this hysteria, you know?
14:23And some crazy things would happen
14:25on the road.
14:27Fans would mail themselves to us,
14:29actually, in a crate once.
14:31No kidding.
14:33And one time we were playing the Diplomat Hotel
14:35and I can remember,
14:37we see a lot of kitchens and back doors
14:39and trucks to hide you,
14:41but I can remember being hurried
14:43into this hotel with my brothers,
14:45rushed up to the fifth floor,
14:47I think it was,
14:49and into this room.
14:51And we looked out on the balcony,
14:53and hey, we didn't really see anybody screaming or anything.
14:55And all of a sudden, this rope
14:57started coming down.
14:59And from the roof,
15:01these girls were hoisting themselves
15:03down onto our balcony.
15:05Perfect.
15:07And it was a wild time, though.
15:09A lot of style, though, in the 70s.
15:11Yeah? Yeah.
15:13And can you believe, long-haired lover from Liverpool
15:15is over 40 years old. How depressing is that?
15:17Who would have thought that?
15:19Great times, though. We all lived through them.
15:21But you were all touring
15:23with, say, the Jacksons,
15:25and you'd go around the country together.
15:27Well, no, we would play at the same time
15:29but different venues.
15:31And I remember being stuck in this hotel in London,
15:33and there was 5,000 girls outside.
15:35And the fire brigade was there
15:37because they were breaking windows
15:39and all kinds of craziness.
15:41And I remember playing football
15:43in the hallways with them
15:45and just having a great time.
15:47But it was such a bizarre thing.
15:49I thought every kid did what I did.
15:51And it was a wild way to grow up.
15:53After a lot of therapy, I'm going to be OK.
15:55I think you're perfectly OK.
15:57But you were a young lad, too.
15:59Yeah, I started performing when I was 3
16:01on the Andy Williams show.
16:03And my first hit record over here,
16:05I was 8 years old,
16:07which was Long-Haired Lover from Liverpool.
16:09Amazing. But when you were with
16:11the brothers touring,
16:13when did that start?
16:15How old were you then?
16:17Walt Disney discovered them.
16:19And then the Andy Williams series.
16:21They were regulars on there.
16:23And I started on Andy's show.
16:25So I've been going just over 50 years now
16:27performing with my brothers.
16:29And last year was the big year.
16:31We finished the big arena tour together.
16:33So just great memories
16:35and how lucky we were
16:37to be able to still be friends
16:39after all these years
16:41and work together that closely.
16:43But you're off on tour here
16:45in September, I think.
16:47Yeah, I've been touring.
16:49And I love this country.
16:51You guys are so nice to me over here.
16:53And I'm doing my 70s jukebox show,
16:55which I started years ago
16:57at Blackpool, as a matter of fact,
16:59when you could do summer seasons
17:01years ago.
17:03And I brought that back,
17:05so put on your boogie shoes
17:07and come boogie with us.
17:09Absolutely.
17:11We'll talk about that more as we go along.
17:13Well done.
17:1547-6.
17:17Dougie in the lead.
17:19Dougie, your letters game.
17:23S.
17:25Third.
17:27N.
17:29Vowel, please.
17:31A.
17:33Vowel.
17:35E.
17:37Vowel.
17:39U.
17:41Consonant.
17:43D.
17:45Consonant.
17:47Q.
17:49And another consonant, please.
17:51♪
18:21Well done, Dougie.
18:23Just six. Colin. Just five.
18:25And a five, Colin. Lens.
18:27Thank you, Dougie.
18:29Uneasy. Yes.
18:31Can we match a five, Jimmy? I can.
18:33Sunday. Yes.
18:35As in the dessert.
18:37Exactly.
18:39Susie? Yes, equals and unseal.
18:41Couple more sixes. Thank you.
18:43And a nice Sunday.
18:45Could do with one of those. Chocolate Sunday.
18:47Exactly. Yes.
18:49And Colin, off we go. Letters game.
18:51Consonant, please.
18:53Thank you, Colin. P.
18:55And another.
18:57C.
18:59Vowel.
19:01O.
19:03Another vowel.
19:05E.
19:07Consonant.
19:09M.
19:11Consonant.
19:13R.
19:15Vowel.
19:17N.
19:19And a final vowel.
19:21And a final E.
19:23Stand by.
19:47MUSIC PLAYS
19:55Colin? A seven.
19:57A seven. Dougie? Four.
19:59And you're four.
20:01Prom. Prom.
20:03Colin? Compare.
20:05Very good. A compare, yes.
20:07Very good. Very nice.
20:09I have a silly one. Moron.
20:11LAUGHTER
20:13That's all I can think of. Thank you for that.
20:15And Susie, what have you got?
20:17I was comparing as well. All right.
20:1953 to 13.
20:21Dougie? Numbers game for you.
20:23Three large and three small, please, Rachel.
20:25Thank you, Dougie. Mixing it up a little.
20:2750-50 split.
20:29And these three small ones are eight.
20:31Eight and two.
20:33And the three big ones, 50.
20:35100.
20:37And 75.
20:39And this target, 896.
20:41896.
20:43MUSIC PLAYS
21:13Just 900.
21:15And Colin? 896.
21:17896. Yes, Colin?
21:1975 plus 50.
21:21It's 125. Yep.
21:23Oh, no, I've gone wrong.
21:25Times eight is 1,000.
21:27It is 1,000, yep.
21:29No, I've gone wrong. I thought it was 900.
21:31I have great hope for you on that one.
21:33Now, Dougie.
21:35I just did eight times 100.
21:37Eight times 100. 800.
21:39Plus 50 times two. Yep. 900.
21:41Rachel.
21:43Get us out of this tangle. 896?
21:45I've just spotted Colin could have finished it this way,
21:47but you could have said
21:4975 times eight is 600.
21:51Divided by 50 is 12.
21:55Add to 100 for 112
21:57and times that by the other eight.
21:59Fabulous.
22:01APPLAUSE
22:03Well done, Rachel. 896.
22:05Amazing.
22:07Now, six to the 13th.
22:09Which is eat so much.
22:11And the clue, he'd eat so much food,
22:13this was constantly covered in it.
22:15He'd eat so much food,
22:17this was constantly covered in it.
22:35Welcome back. I left with the clue,
22:37he'd eat so much food,
22:39this was constantly covered in it.
22:41That was his moustache.
22:43All over his moustache.
22:4560 plays 13.
22:47Dougie in the lead. Colin.
22:49Constant, please.
22:51Thank you, Colin. K.
22:53And another.
22:55T.
22:57A vowel.
22:59I.
23:01And another. O.
23:03Constant, please.
23:05F.
23:07Constant.
23:09T.
23:11A vowel.
23:13E.
23:15Constant.
23:17P.
23:19And another constant.
23:21And lastly, B.
23:23Countdown.
23:35CLOCK TICKS
23:57Well, Colin? Risky, six.
23:59Dougie? Six.
24:01Now, then. Potty.
24:03And tiptoe to the potty.
24:05Tiptoe, very good. In the singular potty, the Y.
24:07As you probably thought, Colin, sorry.
24:09And Jimmy?
24:11Tiptoe through the tulips. We had the same one.
24:13Well done. Susie, anything else?
24:15No, just the five of them with pokey.
24:17Fruit machine in Australian English.
24:19Pokey.
24:2166 to 13, Dougie.
24:23Your letters game. Consonant, please, Rachel.
24:25Thank you, Dougie. L.
24:27And another.
24:29V.
24:31R.
24:33Vowel.
24:35E.
24:37Vowel.
24:39A.
24:41Vowel.
24:43I.
24:45Constant.
24:47B.
24:49Constant.
24:51G.
24:53And a final consonant, please.
24:55And a final T.
24:57Stand by.
24:59MUSIC
25:29Jimmy?
25:31Just six. And Colin?
25:33Five.
25:35Five is? Rival.
25:37Rival, Dougie.
25:39Tribal. And tribal. Yes.
25:41Happy about that? Very happy.
25:43What about the corner? You have this as well.
25:45Yes, vibrate will give you a seven.
25:47Vibrate. Yes.
25:49Well done. Thank you.
25:51Now, it's that time of day
25:53for your origin of words.
25:55Your origins of words.
25:57Yes, Susie?
25:59Thanks to Janice Elliot, who emailed in
26:01and wanted to know the origin of up the spout.
26:03In British English,
26:05certainly, if something is broken
26:07or done for, we'll say,
26:09well, that's really up the spout.
26:11And she wonders where that came from.
26:13I'm not going to talk about the slang sense of pregnancy.
26:15This is all about the idea of being broken or gone to ruin.
26:17And to find its origin,
26:19you have to travel quite a long way back
26:21to pre-Dickensian England
26:23and to most streets that you will find
26:25in any of the cities, but particularly London,
26:27where you will find a pawnbroker's
26:29displaying the usual sign
26:31of the three spheres
26:33hanging down from outside the shop.
26:35They were said to have been brought over
26:37by the Lombard family, who actually gave us
26:39the word lumber and lumber shop,
26:41who were very wealthy merchants in Italy.
26:43And the three spheres
26:45were said to be the symbol
26:47of the Medici family.
26:49And according to legend, a Medici
26:51employed by Charlemagne
26:53used three bags of rocks
26:55and that is where the three spheres are said to come from.
26:57Lots of suggestions, but that's
26:59the one that most people believe in.
27:01Anyway, back to the pawnbroker's
27:03shops, as I say, sort of daily sight
27:05in pre-Dickensian London.
27:07And in these shops, they would have
27:09a chute, which
27:11would reach from the top of the house of the pawnbroker
27:13down to the shop itself.
27:15And it was used to convey goods
27:17that were left at the pawnshop,
27:19left in hock, as it was called.
27:21And they would be taken up
27:23to the top of the shop where all the goods that people
27:25had brought in to pawn were stored.
27:27And it was the shape and function
27:29of this device, it was like a dumb waiter really,
27:31it was the predecessor of the dumb waiter that would carry goods
27:33up and down, that gave
27:35the word spout.
27:37So this lift was known as the spout in the
27:39pawnbroker's shop. And the action
27:41of pawning goods was actually called spouting
27:43them. But anyway, something that had been
27:45pawned was said to have gone
27:47up the spout, because it had been taken up
27:49in this lift to the top of the pawnbroker's shop.
27:51And because so often people didn't
27:53have the money to buy them back, still the case
27:55today, unfortunately,
27:57to be up the spout pretty much implied
27:59a permanent loss to the person who
28:01had brought in their valuable goods.
28:03And that is why we got up the spout for being
28:05broken today. Amazing.
28:07APPLAUSE
28:1172 to 13, Dougie
28:13in the lead. Colin.
28:15Constantly, please, Rachel. Thank you, Colin.
28:17N. And another.
28:19G.
28:21And a third.
28:23T.
28:25A vowel, please.
28:27E. And another.
28:29O.
28:31And another.
28:33E.
28:35A consonant.
28:37W.
28:39Another consonant.
28:41S.
28:43And we'll try a final vowel.
28:45And a final A.
28:47And the clock starts now.
29:15MUSIC STOPS
29:19Colin. Six.
29:21Dougie? Six as well.
29:23Yes, Colin. Wagons.
29:25Wagons and...
29:27Two wagons.
29:29Jimmy's looking very pensive.
29:31Negate. But you could put the S
29:33for negates. You could.
29:35Negates, indeed. Susie?
29:37I was hoping for wagonette, actually,
29:39but that's double T-E. I didn't risk it.
29:41Yeah, you can't have that one.
29:43Tangos, as in the verb,
29:45and also stowage. The seven.
29:47Thank you very much.
29:4978-19. And, Dougie, final
29:51letters game for you.
29:53Consonant, please, Rachel. Thank you, Dougie.
29:55S. And another.
29:57L.
29:59A third.
30:01D.
30:03A vowel.
30:05O. Vowel.
30:07I.
30:09Vowel.
30:11O.
30:13Consonant.
30:15L.
30:17Consonant.
30:19M.
30:21And a vowel, please.
30:23And, lastly, E.
30:25Stand by.
30:41CLOCK TICKS
30:57Yes, Dougie.
30:59Seven. Seven, Colin. Seven.
31:01Dougie.
31:03Dollies. Dollies and Colin.
31:05Same word. Dollies over here.
31:07What about over there? Doll, but dollies is better.
31:09And Susie, anything there?
31:11You can have mollies as well.
31:13Mollies being killifish, popular in Aquaria.
31:15Lots of different colours.
31:1785-26.
31:19On to the final numbers game.
31:21That's Colin Brooms. Yes, Colin.
31:23One large, five small, please, Rachel.
31:25Thank you, Colin.
31:27Final one of the day.
31:29And these five little ones are
31:31five, four, six,
31:33ten and eight.
31:35And the big one, 25.
31:37And this, Target, 192.
31:39192.
32:07Yes, Colin.
32:09192.
32:11Thank you, Dougie.
32:13192.
32:15And Colin.
32:17Eight times 25 is 200.
32:19Yep.
32:21Ten minus six is four.
32:23It is. Plus the other four.
32:25Eight.
32:27Well done. And Dougie.
32:29I did 25 minus six is 19.
32:3119.
32:33Plus five is 24.
32:3524 times eight.
32:37Well done. 192 again.
32:39There we go.
32:41APPLAUSE
32:43So we've reached the final round,
32:4595-36, in Dougie's favour.
32:47So, chaps, fingers on buzzers.
32:49Let's roll
32:51today's Countdown Conundrum.
32:57BUZZER
32:59Dougie?
33:01Grottiest.
33:03Let's see whether you're right.
33:05Yes, you are.
33:07APPLAUSE
33:09Well done.
33:11Not the grottiest win, though.
33:13105. Fantastic.
33:15Your second-highest score.
33:17109, 78,
33:19now 105. I'll come back to you in a second.
33:21Oh, Colin, you came up against
33:23a cracking player there.
33:2536 points is no shame in that,
33:27that's for sure.
33:29So take this goodie bag back to
33:31you with our very best wishes
33:33and good luck with the arrows.
33:35Thank you very much. I hope I score
33:37more than 30.
33:39Well done. Thanks very much.
33:41We shall see you the next time.
33:43Well done. Three good wins. Thank you.
33:45Well done, Dougie. And we shall see you
33:47the next time, too, when you'll be
33:49talking. This is sort of a spoiler alert
33:51about playing for the Royal Family.
33:53Say no more. OK.
33:55See you then. Thank you so much.
33:57And Susie, too. See you then.
33:59You do have that 3am epiphany and you work out
34:01what you want to do with the rest of your life.
34:03Make sure you still come back here.
34:05You can't leave us.
34:07How are we planning on it?
34:09But, you know, there are a lot of people thinking about it.
34:11We'll see you the next time.
34:13All right, well done. Join us then,
34:15same time, same place. You'll be sure of it.
34:17A very good afternoon.
34:19You can contact the programme by email
34:21at countdown at channel4.com,
34:23by Twitter at C4Countdown,
34:25or write to us at
34:27SLS31JS.
34:29You can also find our webpage at
34:31channel4.com forward slash countdown.

Recommended