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00:00Thank you very much for having me.
00:01Thank you.
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00:30Hello and welcome to Countdown.
00:33On this day in 1873, Levi Strauss and Jacob Davis gave birth to jeans.
00:41I don't know about you, Rachel, but they are the most useful thing in my wardrobe.
00:47In fact, I expect most women have got two or three pairs, if not four or five.
00:52I've got a few pairs, but only one pair that I can fit in that are maternity ones still.
00:56I bet the only woman I can think of that I've never seen in a pair of jeans
00:59Have you ever seen the Queen in jeans?
01:02I'm not sure I've seen her in trousers
01:04I think I've seen her in trousers because she rides, doesn't she?
01:07Well, those are joggers
01:09Well, I mean, we'll get the dictionary expert on if they're count as trousers
01:13but I definitely haven't seen her in jeans
01:14No, or probably before your time, Margaret Thatcher
01:18I never saw her in a pair of trousers
01:19No, or a pair of leggings, funny though
01:21I don't think she owned any trousers, actually
01:23She was all about the unitard, wasn't she?
01:25The 80s onesie for her working out, I remember
01:29Let's meet our contestants
01:31Ryan from Glasgow, a man of few words but very, very good at Countdown
01:37If you win today, you'll be an OctoChamp
01:40Yeah, I'll do my best to try
01:42And you've got another Glaswegian
01:45Do you live anywhere near each other?
01:47This is William, which end of Glasgow do you live?
01:50I'm the west end of Glasgow
01:51West end, and you?
01:53I'm north, I'm in a little village a little bit outside of Glasgow
01:56but I know the area well
01:57I'm not going to ask which is best
01:59William, what do you do?
02:00I'm a janitor in a primary school
02:02Are you?
02:03Yes
02:04Traditionally, we always think that the children are a big nuisance to the janitor
02:10They're not really in my case
02:12I work at a school where the kids are great
02:14The older ones are a wee bit troublesome at times
02:16but that's MJ sacking up his kids
02:18How are they troublesome?
02:20They just act up at times, which kids do at that age
02:24I think they're more excited about going to high school than being at primary school
02:28And how do you deal with them when they're being annoying?
02:31I tend to just go and get a member of staff to deal with them
02:34Oh really? That's not fair
02:36A round of applause for our contestants
02:42Hi Susie
02:43Hi Ann
02:44And hi again, Nicky Chapman
02:45Hello
02:46We're going to talk to you today a bit more about how the music industry has changed
02:51Okay
02:52Let's get on with the game
02:54Ryan, you're first with your letters
02:56Hi Rachel
02:57Hi Ryan
02:58Can I start the day with a consonant please?
03:00You can indeed, start the day with D
03:02And another
03:05W
03:06And another
03:08N
03:09And one more
03:12T
03:13Go for a vowel
03:15A
03:16And another
03:17U
03:18Another
03:20A
03:22And another
03:24I
03:25And a final consonant please
03:27And a final R
03:30Let's play Countdown
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04:4158
04:42Very impressive
04:43Unitard bringing it back
04:457
04:46Thank you
04:47William, your letters
04:49Hi Rachael, can I have a consonant please?
04:52You can indeed
04:53G
04:54Another
04:55D
04:57And a third
04:58R
05:00Vowel
05:02E
05:03And another
05:05I
05:06Consonant
05:07M
05:09And another
05:10And another.
05:12L.
05:13A verbal.
05:15O.
05:16And a final consonant, please.
05:18And a final T.
05:20Time starts now.
05:40MUSIC PLAYS
05:53William?
05:54Six.
05:55Ryan?
05:56Seven.
05:57What's your six, William?
05:58Mellow.
06:00What is your seven?
06:01Motleyer.
06:03Yes, very nice indeed.
06:05Sort of disparate in appearance, I suppose, the Motleyer crew.
06:09Anything else?
06:10Lots of sevens, didn't we?
06:12Gloried.
06:13Yes.
06:14Godlier, as well.
06:16Goitered.
06:17So, a few sevens to be had.
06:19Thank you.
06:20Ryan, your numbers.
06:21Thanks. I'll have one from the top, Rachel.
06:24Never know what you're going to say.
06:26Not many characters like you, Ryan.
06:28Jack of all trades, numbers-wise.
06:30And this time, the five little ones are seven, four, two, three, five,
06:35and the large one, 25.
06:37And the target, 391.
06:39391.
06:41MUSIC PLAYS
07:08Ryan?
07:09Sorry, I have nothing.
07:11OK, William?
07:12390.
07:14William?
07:15Three times five is 15.
07:18Three times five, 15.
07:20Times 25 is 375.
07:23Yep.
07:24Four times two is eight, and add the seven, it's 15, and add it on.
07:29It's eight and seven, and that gets you to one away.
07:31Yep, well done.
07:33Very good.
07:34Rachel?
07:36Yes, definitely out of time, but as I stand here,
07:39you could say 25 plus three is 28.
07:44Two times seven is 14.
07:47Times those together for 392,
07:50and you have five minus four left over for one, and 391.
07:54APPLAUSE
07:58First teaser, Jeff, you're up.
08:02First teaser, Jeff Beck.
08:05Jeff Beck.
08:07And the clue, information from the public about the guitar noises.
08:11Information from the public about the guitar noises.
08:14See you in a minute.
08:24APPLAUSE
08:28APPLAUSE
08:31Welcome back.
08:32I left you with the clue, information from the public
08:35about the guitar noises, and the answer is feedback.
08:40Now, if you'd like to become a Countdown contestant,
08:43you can email countdown at channel4.com
08:46to request an application form,
08:48or you can write to us at contestantapplications,
08:52and the Countdown leads LS31JS.
08:57The scores are 14-7.
09:00William had quite a triumph with his numbers.
09:04Keep going, William. It's your letters.
09:06Can I have a consonant, please?
09:08Thank you, William. H.
09:10And another?
09:12T.
09:14Double?
09:16U.
09:17And another?
09:19I.
09:20Consonant?
09:22N.
09:23And another?
09:25M.
09:27Vowel?
09:29O.
09:31And another?
09:34A.
09:35And a final consonant, please.
09:37A final R.
09:3930 seconds.
09:50MUSIC PLAYS
10:12William? Seven.
10:14Ryan? Seven.
10:16William, your seven? Minotaur.
10:18Ryan? Raynout.
10:20Raynout is great. I'm sorry, William, what was yours?
10:23Minotaur. M-I-N-O-T-A-U-R.
10:27So, you've got the minotaur, which I think is capitalised, actually.
10:32And that needs a U anyway, so there's no minotaur, I'm afraid.
10:37Sorry about that. And the corner?
10:39Yes. So, we had a series of, well, three Thebans
10:44that need a little bit of explanation.
10:46One is a chinamoo, which is a ground-dwelling American bird,
10:49a bit like a grouse.
10:51Another is a manitou, which is a good or evil spirit
10:54amongst some North American Indian peoples.
10:57And there's also thorium, which is chemical element number 90,
11:01radioactive.
11:03Thank you, Susie. You're welcome.
11:05Ryan, your letters. OK, I'll start with the vowel, please, Rachel.
11:08Thank you, Ryan. A.
11:10And another one?
11:12U. And another?
11:14O.
11:16And a consonant?
11:18L. And one more?
11:20S.
11:22Another one?
11:24D.
11:26OK, another consonant?
11:28S.
11:30A vowel?
11:32E.
11:34And a final consonant?
11:36A final B.
11:38Good luck.
11:44ELECTRONIC MUSIC PLAYS
12:09Ryan? I'll try an eight.
12:11William? Seven.
12:13What's your seven? Doubles.
12:15Ryan? Dousable.
12:18Not there, I'm afraid. Sorry, Ryan. No worries.
12:21In the corner?
12:23We've got busloads for eight.
12:25Yeah, that's brilliant.
12:27And a couple more sevens. Bloused and lassoed.
12:30Thank you. William, your numbers.
12:33Rachel, can I have an inverted T, please?
12:35You can indeed. Thank you, William.
12:37Inverted T, one from the top and five little.
12:39A countdown classic.
12:41Let's see if this numbers round is.
12:43We have nine, two, eight, five, ten,
12:48and the large one, 50.
12:50And the target... Oh, definitely not.
12:53600.
12:55Six, zero, zero.
12:58ELECTRONIC MUSIC PLAYS
13:11ELECTRONIC MUSIC CONTINUES
13:28William, you seem very composed there.
13:31Yeah, I've got 600.
13:33Have you? Good.
13:35Ryan? 600.
13:37William? Eight plus two is ten.
13:40Add one to the 50 gives you 16 times the ten.
13:43I'm not standing up for that.
13:45Ryan?
13:47Ten plus two for 12 and times 50.
13:49Definitely not a countdown classic, this one.
13:52Oh, well, well done. Let's have a round of applause.
13:55APPLAUSE
13:59Vicky, I got that. Did you get that?
14:01Well, I was too busy watching them sitting there,
14:03looking happy, both of them.
14:05Yeah, very easy.
14:07I want to talk to you about the music business,
14:10because you had quite a few years,
14:13and since then you must have been looking on at the music business.
14:17How much has it changed?
14:19Well, I don't want to be one of those people
14:21that said it was better in my time,
14:23because we've all heard that, haven't we?
14:25And the music industry now is exciting.
14:27It was just very different in my time.
14:29I mean, I was a publicist,
14:31so it was my job to get the most publicity in TV and radio
14:34for my artists, and we didn't have social media.
14:37So it's not that long ago, but it changed beyond measure.
14:41The Stones and the Beatles and Eric Clapton,
14:45would you dare to say they were more talented
14:48than, say, the Spice Girls?
14:50Oh, Anne, you're putting me on the spot now, aren't you?
14:53That's what my job is. It is, isn't it?
14:55I think it's a different type of talent.
14:58If you look at Adele and Ed Sheeran,
15:02real songwriters, they'll be going for years.
15:05I think with the Spice Girls, it's much more a collective,
15:09and it's a different type of music for a different audience.
15:13And I would say the talent is there,
15:15it's just a different type of talent.
15:17Did I get away with that? Sort of.
15:20What about other groups that have come through
15:23from the talent shows, where it's pretty clear
15:27none of them can probably sing?
15:30Well, you look at people like Stacey Solomon, who didn't win,
15:34has had an extremely successful career.
15:37She's on television all the time.
15:39You look at One Direction, they didn't win.
15:42They were actually put together for a talent show,
15:45and at one point they were the biggest band in the world.
15:47Couldn't they sing? Yeah, they can sing.
15:50To be fair, there's very few people
15:52that get through a talent show that can't sing,
15:54because you are so vulnerable.
15:56Every week you're on that stage, so you've got to be able to sing.
15:59It's the difference between being a karaoke singer and a true artist.
16:03But what I love about talent shows,
16:05and obviously I'm going to be biased having done a couple of them,
16:08is that it opens doors for people.
16:10Olly Murs is a great example of a presenter,
16:13but still singing as well.
16:15And are there other artists from talent shows
16:18that sadly just disappear?
16:21Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. And what makes the difference?
16:24I've also buried a few artists in my time. Have you?
16:28Who have you buried?
16:30Well, I loved working with her,
16:32but I don't think Kylie Minogue's most successful period of time
16:35was when I was looking after her,
16:37although I really loved the album that I was working.
16:39But, yeah, there's definitely people that have come through a talent show
16:42and have done quite well and then you've not heard of them again.
16:45But, I mean, there's extraordinary people like Rylan Clark-Neal,
16:48who has done so well, who didn't come anywhere near the top three,
16:52but everybody remembered Rylan, and now look at him.
16:55I remember, I think it was a New Year's Eve television programme
16:59where Kylie was singing, and I was with three music people
17:05and they were sort of... their tongues were hanging out
17:08and I said, is her voice that good?
17:11And they said, doesn't matter.
17:14Oh, I mean, I love... I know, because she looked fabulous.
17:18Yeah, I love Kylie, and she can sing,
17:21but if she is as good a singer as other people,
17:23she'd probably be the first to say, no, she's not.
17:25But she has her own identity and we really buy into her as a performer
17:30and I think that's what's so important.
17:32You know, Robbie Williams would be the first to tell you
17:35he's not the best singer in the world, but, my goodness, can he entertain.
17:39So I think there's different strengths.
17:41Sometimes the best presenters aren't always the ones you want to watch on TV.
17:45No, and I think Adele...
17:47I hope you like watching me. I quickly add.
17:50Adele... Yeah.
17:52..is fabulous that she appeals across the board.
17:56She does, absolutely.
17:58I think her and Ed Sheeran, you know, two incredible artists
18:02doing so well and have done for the past 15 years or so.
18:06Taylor Swift is another one that, again,
18:08will still be around in 20, 30 years' time.
18:11Nicky Chapman, thank you. Thank you.
18:13APPLAUSE
18:17Ryan, your letters.
18:19OK, I'll have a consonant, please, Rachel. Thank you, Ryan.
18:23T
18:24And another one.
18:26M
18:27And another.
18:28C
18:29And a fourth.
18:31T
18:33A vowel, please.
18:35U
18:36And another one.
18:37A
18:38And another.
18:40E
18:41A consonant.
18:43P
18:45And another consonant, please.
18:47Lastly, T.
18:49Start the clock.
19:16MUSIC STOPS
19:22Ryan.
19:23Six.
19:24William.
19:25Six.
19:26Ryan.
19:27Mutate.
19:28Same, mutate.
19:30In the corner.
19:32Suze has come up with attempt for seven.
19:35Oh, good.
19:36Yes, and there's also tapetum, T-A-P-E-T-U-M,
19:39which is a reflective layer in the eyes of many animals
19:42that cause them to shine in the dark.
19:44Thank you.
19:45William, your letters.
19:47Vowel, please.
19:49Thank you, William.
19:50I
19:52And a consonant.
19:54S
19:55And another.
19:57L
19:58And a third.
20:00T
20:01A vowel.
20:03O
20:05Consonant.
20:07R
20:08Another.
20:10G
20:11A vowel.
20:14I
20:15And a final vowel, please.
20:17And a final.
20:19Another O.
20:20Off you go.
20:22MUSIC PLAYS
20:44William.
20:45Just a five.
20:47Ryan.
20:48Just a five here as well.
20:50William.
20:51Torso.
20:52Ryan.
20:53Stool.
20:54This is tricky, girls.
20:55It is very tricky.
20:56It is.
20:57Suze has got some sevens, though, haven't you?
20:59Yes.
21:00Well, there's an ologist, which comes up quite often.
21:03That's there for seven.
21:04Somebody's got an ology.
21:06I've got an ology.
21:08I've got an ology.
21:10I've got an ology.
21:12Somebody's got an ology.
21:14I love that.
21:16And there's strigil, S-T-R-I-G-I-L,
21:19which, for the ancient Greeks and Romans,
21:22was a bit like a scraper in a hot bath.
21:25It had a curved blade and you would scrape off the sweat
21:28and the dirt from your body.
21:30Lovely.
21:31Thank you.
21:32Ryan, your numbers.
21:34I'll have six more, please, Rachel.
21:36Six more.
21:37Back to possibly your favourite pick.
21:39I don't know.
21:40The final one goes for you for a while.
21:42They are 8, 1, 6, 3, 4 and 7.
21:49And the target to reach, 178.
21:52178.
22:10MUSIC
22:25Ryan.
22:26177.
22:27William.
22:28178.
22:29OK.
22:306 x 4 is 24.
22:33It is.
22:34Times 8 is 192.
22:36192.
22:373 minus 1 is 2.
22:39And times it by the 7 is 14 and take it away.
22:42Nicely done.
22:44Well done.
22:45You've nicked the lead.
22:46APPLAUSE
22:49You've taken the lead with that.
22:51Well done, William.
22:53Second teaser coming up.
22:54Test Mars.
22:55Test Mars.
22:56And the clue,
22:57it's grown tired of putting up with all your lies.
23:00It's grown tired of putting up with all your lies.
23:03See you in a minute.
23:05MUSIC
23:20Welcome back.
23:21I left you with the clue,
23:22it's grown tired of putting up with all your lies.
23:25And the answer is mattress.
23:28Scores are 42-45.
23:31William, from one end of Glasgow,
23:33has taken over from Ryan, the other end of Glasgow.
23:37William, your letters.
23:39Can I have a consonant, please?
23:41Thank you, William.
23:42D.
23:43And another?
23:45S.
23:47Vowel?
23:48A.
23:50Another?
23:51E.
23:53Consonant?
23:55M.
23:56And another?
23:58S.
24:00Vowel?
24:02E.
24:04Consonant?
24:06L.
24:07And a final consonant, please.
24:09And a final N.
24:11Off you go.
24:13MUSIC
24:32MUSIC
24:43William?
24:44Seven.
24:45Ryan?
24:46Eight.
24:47William?
24:48Damsels.
24:49Ryan?
24:50Nameless.
24:51Very good.
24:52Yeah.
24:53In the corner.
24:54We've got some other ones as well.
24:56Seedsman.
24:58And maleness.
25:00Salesman as well.
25:02Thank you.
25:03Ryan, your letters.
25:05I'll have a consonant, please, Rachel.
25:07Thank you, Ryan.
25:08T.
25:09And another?
25:11L.
25:12And another?
25:14F.
25:15And one more?
25:17D.
25:18A vowel?
25:20A.
25:21And another?
25:23I.
25:24And another?
25:26A.
25:27Another vowel?
25:29O.
25:31And a final vowel, please.
25:34A final E.
25:36Start the clock.
25:38MUSIC
25:59MUSIC
26:07Ryan?
26:08An eight.
26:09William?
26:10Seven.
26:11What's your seven?
26:12Floated.
26:13Ryan?
26:14Foliated.
26:15Yes, decorated with leaves.
26:16Well done.
26:17APPLAUSE
26:20In the corner.
26:21I don't have anything else.
26:23No, that was our single eight.
26:25OK, and over to you, Susie.
26:27Ah, well, I thought I would ask this because Nicky is here
26:30and obviously Nicky spends a lot of time in gardens.
26:33Do you like the smell of creosote?
26:35I've got to be honest, no.
26:37No, I find it the most offensive smell in the world
26:40because it really chokes, I find,
26:42but some people absolutely love it.
26:44I love it.
26:45OK.
26:46It's the sort of smell of childhood, actually.
26:48Yeah, it's very...
26:49It seems to be quite Marmite in terms of smells,
26:51but anyway, I thought I'd tell you about the origin of it.
26:54Obviously, creosote is that thick, yellowish kind of oil
26:57that is derived from coal tar,
26:59which is perhaps why I find it so suffocating.
27:01And it's used as a wood preservative, isn't it,
27:03on sheds and fences, etc.
27:05But it's got a slightly surprising origin.
27:07So we got it from German,
27:09but ultimately it goes back to a Greek word,
27:12which is kreas, K-R-E-A-S,
27:15and that meant flesh.
27:17And soter, in Greek, meant a preserver or a saviour,
27:21which means that creosote was a flesh preserver,
27:24which sounds slightly odd
27:26until you know that it was actually used as a medicine in ancient times.
27:30And it was a really important one
27:32and it was known for its antiseptic properties,
27:34so it preserved the flesh
27:36by stopping it being attacked by poisons
27:39and literally becoming septic.
27:41So that is where creosote came from.
27:44And it reminds me, really, of the flesh that is related,
27:48that also comes from Greek,
27:50that's behind sarcasm and also sarcophagus.
27:53Sarcasm is...
27:55It means biting flesh
27:57and the idea is that if somebody delivers a sarcastic or caustic,
28:00literally caustic, remark,
28:02it would burn the flesh, almost, of the recipient or the victim.
28:06And sarcophagus was believed by the Greeks
28:09to be a kind of stone that was able to consume the flesh of dead bodies.
28:13Sorry about this.
28:15And then it was used for coffins.
28:17It was a legendary stone
28:19that would have the desired effect of decomposing bodies.
28:22So all of these, I suppose sarcophagus,
28:24you would expect something perhaps to do with death,
28:27but the others are quite strange, I think, siblings,
28:30in sort of classical terms,
28:32so that actually creosote was all about preserving a body
28:36and stopping it from decomposing,
28:38whereas its siblings, its relatives, sarcasm and sarcophagus,
28:42were all about basically taking the flesh off you.
28:45Thank you, Susie. You're welcome.
28:51William, your letters.
28:55Consonant, please, Rachel.
28:57Thank you, William. P
28:59And another?
29:01S
29:02And a third?
29:04R
29:06Vowel?
29:07I
29:08And another?
29:09E
29:10And a third?
29:12A
29:14Consonant?
29:16W
29:18And another?
29:20T
29:21And a final vowel, please.
29:23Er, final E.
29:2530 seconds.
29:45MUSIC
29:58William?
29:59Seven.
30:00Ryan?
30:01Eight.
30:02William, your seven?
30:04Pirates.
30:05Ryan?
30:06Weariest.
30:07Yes. Yes, very good.
30:09In the corner?
30:11Perhaps for eight.
30:13Yes. And sweatier, too.
30:18Ryan, your letters.
30:20OK, I'll have a consonant, please, Rachel.
30:22Thank you, Ryan. Y
30:24And another?
30:26P
30:28And another?
30:30H
30:32And one more?
30:34C
30:36Vowel, please.
30:38A
30:40And another?
30:42E
30:43Another vowel?
30:45U
30:47A consonant?
30:49S
30:50And a final consonant?
30:52A final D.
30:54Time starts now.
30:56MUSIC
31:10MUSIC
31:26Ryan?
31:27Seven.
31:28William?
31:29Six.
31:30What's your sixth?
31:31Poised.
31:32Ryan?
31:33Psyched.
31:34Psyched, yes. That's excellent, Scott. Well done.
31:37Anything else?
31:39You also have upcased.
31:41Yes, which is to change a lowercase letter to an uppercase one.
31:45Ah, OK.
31:46William, your numbers.
31:48Can I have six small, please, Rachel?
31:51You can indeed, thank you, William.
31:53Six little ones for the final one of the week.
31:56And they are six, one, five, ten, four and eight.
32:05And the target to reach 763.
32:08MUSIC
32:39William?
32:41No one need it.
32:42OK. Ryan?
32:44I have 760.
32:46OK.
32:47So, eight plus four?
32:49Eight plus four is 12.
32:51Times six?
32:52Times 672.
32:54Plus five, minus one?
32:567776.
32:58Times ten?
32:59Yep. Well done to get something out of this one.
33:02Rachel?
33:04Tricky one. You have to leave it with me for a second.
33:07OK.
33:09The scores are 80-45.
33:12Final round.
33:14Fingers on buzzers.
33:17Please reveal today's Countdown Conundrum.
33:33Ryan?
33:35Erroneous.
33:36Let's have a look.
33:43Well done.
33:45William, I'm so sorry, because at one point you were giving him
33:49a run for his money, particularly with the numbers.
33:52But thank you very much for being here.
33:54Thanks for having me.
33:55Ryan, you're an OctoChamp.
33:57Seat number four when you come back for the finals.
34:01Well done.
34:02Thank you very much. I look forward to it.
34:04Susie, thank you.
34:05Nicky Chapman, thank you for a wonderful week.
34:08Thank you very much. I've loved it.
34:10Rachel?
34:11More homework for me, Anne.
34:13Oh, good.
34:14Thank you for watching.
34:16Bye.
34:17APPLAUSE
34:19You can contact the programme by email at countdown at channel4.com
34:23or write to us at countdown leads ls31js.
34:27You can also find our web page at channel4.com forward slash countdown.
34:36Make the most out of your outdoor space.
34:38Back for a fresh run tomorrow, build a piece of paradise
34:41with the Great Garden Revolution.
34:43That's at quarter past eight.
34:45Next, another piece of paradise, just markedly hotter.
34:48A place in the sun.