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00:00This programme contains strong language and adult humour.
00:05If you're not comfortable with something, please leave a comment.
00:10This programme contains strong language and adult humour.
00:15If you're not comfortable with something, please leave a comment.
00:20APPLAUSE
00:31Good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown studio
00:34on the day that Breakfast at Tiffany's takes off on a UK tour.
00:38Now, the part of Holly Golightly,
00:40so wonderfully portrayed by the glorious Audrey Hepburn way back in 1961,
00:46will be played by Pixie Lott and also by Georgia Mayfoot,
00:51and Pixie, of course, has been starring in the West End version.
00:54So, Truman Capote's story, it was such a great film.
00:58He was a strange man, but that was his big breakout success.
01:02And, of course, it all took place in New York City.
01:05I thought to myself, well,
01:07is there anything that has inspired me to go somewhere
01:10because I've seen it portrayed on film?
01:13And the answer, candidly, is no.
01:15Did you ever see anywhere on a film that you thought,
01:18do something, I've got to go there, or I must never go there?
01:21Um, well, I've watched Pretty Woman a fair few times in my time,
01:27so when I went to LA, I did have to go down to Rodeo Drive
01:29and go to the shop where she was refused and do all the, you know,
01:33see the hotel, all that kind of stuff, yeah.
01:35All the hot spots, along Rodeo Drive, there's the shop where she went in,
01:39and there's also a cupcake ATM machine
01:42where instead of getting the money out, you literally get a cupcake out,
01:45and it's right next to an ice cream shop,
01:47so you can get an ice cream while you queue for your cupcake.
01:49Only in LA. Brilliant stuff.
01:52All right, now, Rach, we've got Jamie Washington back,
01:55Jamie Washington from Huddersfield.
01:57Two good wins before the Paralympics. Well done.
02:00Thank you. Welcome back, too.
02:02But you're joined today by Gareth Bann,
02:05risk assessment man from Fence in Lancashire,
02:09and you're a bodybuilder, amateur bodybuilder, and a road cyclist, too.
02:14Yeah, they don't normally mix.
02:16The two body shapes don't exactly lend themselves to each other.
02:19I'm quite a bit bigger than the average road cyclist,
02:22so I'm trying to taper that down a bit and concentrate on cycling.
02:25On cycling. Very healthy stuff.
02:27You love New York City. I do, yes.
02:29Yeah? Got married in New York City.
02:31I did, I got married at Wagner's Cove in Central Park.
02:35I'm planning to go back next year for our fifth wedding anniversary.
02:38Good for you. It's probably my favourite place to holiday.
02:41Yeah, I still prefer London. New York City's great.
02:44All right, let's have a big round of applause then, shall we,
02:47for Jamie Washington and Gareth Bann.
02:50Welcome. Welcome to the studio.
02:54Over the corner, of course, back here in the studio, Susie Denton.
02:59Of course, our TV personality, raconteur,
03:02was a producer in Talent Scout, Michael Whitehall.
03:06Unbelievable. Thank you.
03:08Such a career. Thank you very much.
03:10The best storyteller in town, that's what they say.
03:14Yeah. Live with it, Michael. It's true.
03:17Jamie, shall we have a letters game?
03:20Hi, Rachel. Hi, Jamie.
03:22Start with a consonant, please. Thank you.
03:24Start the week with S.
03:26And another.
03:28W.
03:30And another.
03:32G.
03:33And a farth.
03:35N.
03:37And a vowel.
03:39A.
03:40And another.
03:41I.
03:43And a third.
03:45E.
03:47And a consonant.
03:49D.
03:50And a final consonant, please.
03:52And a final P.
03:54And here's the Countdown Clock.
04:15CLOCK TICKS
04:27Yes, Jamie? A seven.
04:29A seven. Gareth? Just a six.
04:32And your six? A sewing.
04:34Yes. Spewing?
04:36Spewing. Spewing. Yep.
04:38Crowd spewing out from an auditorium.
04:40Mm. Yeah.
04:42And a river can spew, I think?
04:44Yes. You can use it in lots of figurative ways, can't you?
04:47What have we got, Michael, Susie?
04:49We've got, um...
04:51Spawned. Yep.
04:53Yep, that will get you to another seven.
04:55OK. Thank you.
04:57Seven points to Jamie and it's Gareth's letters game.
05:00Gareth. Hi, Rachel. Hi, Gareth.
05:02Have a consonant, please. Thank you. Start with T.
05:05And a vowel.
05:07O.
05:08A consonant.
05:10S.
05:11A consonant.
05:13A vowel.
05:15U.
05:17And a vowel, please.
05:19I.
05:20A consonant.
05:22N.
05:23A consonant.
05:25M.
05:27And another vowel, please.
05:29And the last one, E.
05:31Stand by.
05:43MUSIC PLAYS
06:03Yes, Gareth?
06:04Seven.
06:05Seven. Jamie?
06:06Seven.
06:07Gareth?
06:08Costume.
06:10Costume and costume.
06:12Any more costumes, Michael, Susie?
06:14We didn't have that one, actually. Very nice.
06:17We had a couple of eight counties there and miscount as well.
06:22And miscount. Thank you very much.
06:2414 plays seven.
06:26And now, Jamie, first numbers game.
06:29We have one large and five small, please, Rachel.
06:31Thank you, Jamie. One from the top, five from the others.
06:34And the first numbers game of the week is...
06:36Two.
06:37Ten.
06:39One.
06:40Six.
06:41Eight.
06:42And 75.
06:44And the target, 184.
06:46184.
07:11MUSIC PLAYS
07:19Jamie?
07:20184.
07:22Thank you. Gareth?
07:23184, but I've not written it down.
07:25Well, tell us about it. Gareth?
07:27Erm, 75...
07:33..plus eight...
07:35Yep.
07:36..plus six...
07:37Plus eight.
07:38Plus six.
07:39..times two.
07:40He's wrong.
07:41Go on.
07:42178.
07:43Plus the six.
07:44I'm afraid you've got to use it there.
07:46Sorry, Gareth.
07:47Bad luck. What's Jamie got?
07:4975 plus ten plus six plus one...
07:53..ninety-two...
07:54Yep, 92.
07:55..times two.
07:56Yep. Well done. 184.
07:57Very good.
07:58APPLAUSE
07:59Very good. Well done, Jamie.
08:01You ought to be an English teacher.
08:03I think you should be a maths teacher, maybe,
08:05cos you're very good at the maths. Well done.
08:07All right.
08:08So, 24 plays seven. Jamie in the lead.
08:10Let's have a tea-time teaser, which is called Revs.
08:14And the clue...
08:15Gets better at smartening up the old sofas.
08:18Gets better at smartening up the old sofas.
08:22MUSIC
08:30CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
08:34APPLAUSE
08:37Warm welcome back. Left with the clue,
08:39gets better at smartening up the old sofas.
08:41And the answer is Recovers.
08:44Recovers, Recovers.
08:4624 plays seven, and it's Gareth's letters again.
08:49Gareth?
08:50Consonant, please.
08:51Thank you, Gareth.
08:52L.
08:53And another one, please.
08:56T.
08:57And a vowel.
08:59A.
09:00And a consonant.
09:03N.
09:04And a vowel.
09:06O.
09:08And a consonant.
09:10K.
09:12And a vowel.
09:14A.
09:16And another consonant.
09:19D.
09:20And a final vowel.
09:21And a final I.
09:24Stand by.
09:25MUSIC
09:33MUSIC
09:57Gareth?
09:58A six.
09:59A six, Jamie?
10:00No, I've gone the wrong way, haven't I?
10:02Gareth?
10:03Dental.
10:04Oh, there's not a...
10:06Nope.
10:09Now, then, what can we have in the corner, then?
10:12A couple of sixes over here.
10:14It wasn't an easy one, this one, though.
10:16Ladino is a white clover of a large variety native to Italy.
10:21Yes.
10:22Used for fodder in North America.
10:24And there's also daikon, D-A-I-K-O-N,
10:26which is a type of radish.
10:28Radish?
10:29Yes.
10:30The daikon.
10:31Thank you very much.
10:3224 plays seven.
10:33And, Jamie, letters game for you.
10:35Can we have a consonant, please, Rachel?
10:37Thank you, Jamie.
10:38S.
10:39And another.
10:41T.
10:42And another.
10:45S.
10:46And a farf.
10:48J.
10:49And a vowel.
10:50E.
10:51And another.
10:53A.
10:54And another.
10:56U.
10:58Consonant.
10:59P.
11:01And a final consonant, please.
11:03And a final M.
11:05Stand by.
11:29MUSIC PLAYS
11:38Jamie?
11:39A six.
11:40A six. Gareth?
11:41A six.
11:42Jamie?
11:43Upsets.
11:44And?
11:45The same.
11:46Upsets.
11:47There we go. Just show that to Jamie.
11:50Now, can we match that?
11:51Michael, Susie?
11:54We can match it.
11:55We were wondering if we could better it, but I don't think we can.
11:58I was in Flotsam and Jetsam.
12:00Wondering whether you can put the S at the end.
12:02It says mass noun in the dictionary.
12:04I'm one to material goods that have been thrown overboard,
12:07so you can't pluralise it.
12:08Flotsam and Jetsam. Thank you.
12:10All right, 30 plays 13.
12:12And now, Gareth, it's time for your numbers game.
12:15Can we have a two large and four small, please, Rachel?
12:18Thank you, Gareth. Two large, four little.
12:21And for this one, the small ones are one, two, five and one.
12:27Two large, two, 25 and 100.
12:30And the target, 725.
12:33725.
12:58Yes, Gareth?
12:59No, nothing.
13:01And Jamie?
13:02Yeah, 725.
13:04And?
13:05Five plus two for the seven.
13:07I think Gareth is going to kick himself a lot.
13:09Oh, no.
13:12Seven.
13:13Times 100 plus 25.
13:14Yeah.
13:15What did you do, Gareth?
13:17Not that.
13:21Sorry.
13:22There we go.
13:24Sorry.
13:25There we go.
13:26All right.
13:2740 plays 13 as we turn to Michael.
13:29And, Michael, before the Paralympics you were here,
13:32you told us some great showbiz stories.
13:34And I think you might have another one for us.
13:37I've got a little story which doesn't involve me
13:40but involves a great friend of mine, Martin Jarvis.
13:43Do you remember Martin Jarvis?
13:45I do.
13:46Still a good friend, former client.
13:50And he told me this story
13:52when he was rehearsing a play
13:56that was going to come into London.
13:59He was in the country rehearsing it for a week.
14:02And each night he would come back to the hotel
14:05that he was booked into
14:07and there was a girl behind the reception.
14:10And every night Doris would say,
14:12Oh, good evening, Mr Jarvis, how are you?
14:14And he'd say, I'm absolutely fine, how are you, Doris?
14:17And she'd say, Oh, I'm fine, thank you.
14:19It's so lovely to see you.
14:21And rehearsals went well.
14:23He'd say, Wonderfully well, looking forward to tomorrow.
14:26And that would happen every night.
14:28And then three or four days went by,
14:31sort of day five, the last day of the week
14:35before they headed back to London.
14:38Oh, Mr Jarvis, how are you? Good evening.
14:40Hello, Doris. That's pretty, that frock.
14:43You haven't worn that, have you?
14:45No, it's new.
14:46Oh, you look lovely.
14:48So looking forward to coming to see your play when it opens.
14:51I'll arrange tickets for you.
14:53So Martin goes to his room
14:56and he picks up the phone to ring Ros, his wife,
15:01and the conversation goes like this.
15:03Ros, this play is a nightmare.
15:07I'm absolutely going mad.
15:10None of the actors can act.
15:12The director can't direct.
15:14The theatre is chaos.
15:16It's the most depressing thing I've ever done in my life
15:19and I can't remember a line of it.
15:22And we open in a couple of days' time.
15:25And there was a pause.
15:27Mr Jarvis?
15:29Yes?
15:31This is Doris here.
15:33You have to dial nine for an outside line.
15:36LAUGHTER
15:38Lovely.
15:40APPLAUSE
15:45Perfect. And that sort of thing happens, doesn't it?
15:48True story.
15:49Lovely. He's got a wonderful voice.
15:51He has. He used to be hugely successful in voiceovers.
15:55I made a lot of money out of him in his heyday.
15:59He's a good chap.
16:00Nice man, indeed. 40 plays.
16:0213, Jamie in the lead and it's Jamie's letters game.
16:05Set of a consonant, please, Rachel.
16:07Thank you, Jamie.
16:08L
16:10And another?
16:12T
16:13And a vowel?
16:15I
16:16And another?
16:18O
16:19And a consonant?
16:21R
16:22And another consonant?
16:24X
16:26And a vowel?
16:28I
16:30A consonant?
16:32S
16:33And a final vowel, please.
16:35And a final E.
16:37Countdown.
16:43T
17:08Yes, Jamie?
17:09Seven.
17:10Seven. Gareth?
17:11Seven.
17:12Jamie?
17:13Trixie's.
17:15Trixie's.
17:17Gareth?
17:18Woyter's.
17:20Now, then, what has the corner got for us?
17:22Yeah, a Trixie is a bet consisting of three doubles and one treble.
17:27Probably know that one, Jamie.
17:29And that's absolutely brilliant, yeah, to use the X in there. Not easy.
17:33Anything else, Michael?
17:35Susie, that's it?
17:37We had lots of sevens, yes.
17:39Woyter's and Elixir's is another one using the S.
17:42Oh, I'd like some of that if you've got any spare.
17:44One for potions.
17:46Yeah, Elixir. 47 plays 20.
17:48And Gareth, let us go.
17:51Consonant, please, Rachel.
17:53Thank you, Gareth. M
17:55And a vowel?
17:57A
17:58And a consonant?
18:00N
18:01And another one?
18:03D
18:05And a vowel?
18:07A
18:09Consonant?
18:11T
18:13And another one?
18:15L
18:17And a vowel?
18:19E
18:20And a final consonant, please.
18:22And a final B.
18:24Stand by.
18:37CLOCK TICKS
18:55Gareth.
18:56A seven.
18:57A seven?
18:58A seven.
18:59Yes, Gareth.
19:00Vaulted.
19:01Vaulted and?
19:02Untamed?
19:04Untamed.
19:05Very nice.
19:06Vaulted?
19:07Yes.
19:08Anything for the corner?
19:09Nothing better.
19:10Mantled is there as well.
19:12Sort of cloaked.
19:14The valleys can be mantled in fog.
19:16And actually, a very old meaning, which is quite nice,
19:18is to glow with a blush.
19:20So it talks of her face mantling with emotion, which is quite nice.
19:23Very nice.
19:25Very good. 54 plays 27.
19:27Jamie.
19:29Numbers, games, come round again.
19:31One from the top and any five of us, please, Rachel.
19:34One large, five little.
19:37And this time around, the numbers are 5, 2, 7, 6, 1 and 100.
19:45And the target, 904.
19:47904.
20:05CLOCK TICKS
20:18Jamie.
20:19904.
20:21904, Gareth?
20:22904, I think.
20:24Jamie.
20:25Seven plus two.
20:26Nine.
20:27Times 100.
20:28900.
20:29And five minus one for the four.
20:31Yep. Lovely. 904.
20:33Gareth.
20:34Same way.
20:37There we go.
20:41Well done.
20:4264 plays 37 as we turn to our second tea time teaser,
20:46which is bat ratio.
20:48And the clue, the animals don't want to cross the finishing line here.
20:53The animals don't want to cross the finishing line here.
20:56CLOCK TICKS
21:04APPLAUSE
21:11Welcome back.
21:12I left with the clue, the animals don't want to cross the finishing line here.
21:17And that would be the abattoir.
21:19The abattoir, certainly not.
21:2164 to 37, Jamie in the lead, Gareth.
21:25Letters time.
21:26Consonant, please, Rachel.
21:28Thank you, Gareth. R.
21:30And a vowel.
21:32A.
21:33And a consonant.
21:35Z.
21:37A vowel.
21:39U.
21:41A consonant.
21:43S.
21:44And another one.
21:46R.
21:48And another.
21:51N.
21:53And a vowel.
21:55E.
21:57And a final consonant, please, Rachel.
21:59And a final P.
22:01Stand by.
22:32Gareth.
22:33Just a five.
22:34A five. How about Jamie?
22:36A six.
22:38Gareth.
22:39Pause.
22:40And?
22:41Prunes.
22:43Always make you smile, prunes, don't they?
22:45You can actually add the other R and have pruners.
22:48So you can have pruners which are shears in the garden.
22:51Sure.
22:52Pruning trees.
22:53Pruners.
22:55Pruning shears, yeah.
22:56All right, thank you.
22:57So, Jamie on 70, Gareth on 37, and it's Jamie's letters game.
23:01Jamie.
23:02Can I have a consonant, please, Rachel?
23:04Thank you, Jamie. L.
23:06And another.
23:08R.
23:09And a vowel.
23:11O.
23:12And another.
23:14A.
23:15And a consonant.
23:16D.
23:17And another.
23:19N.
23:20And another.
23:22G.
23:24And a vowel.
23:26I.
23:28And another vowel, please.
23:29And the last one.
23:31E.
23:32Stand by.
23:57Yes, Jamie?
23:59A nine.
24:00A nine, Gareth?
24:02A nine.
24:03Jamie?
24:04Reloading.
24:05Reloading and?
24:06Reloading.
24:07Well done.
24:08Just for that.
24:09Well done.
24:10APPLAUSE
24:13Satisfying, that, isn't it?
24:15Yeah.
24:16And what have we got in the quarter?
24:18Reloading.
24:19Reloading, too.
24:20Well done.
24:22And what have we got in the quarter?
24:24Reloading.
24:25Reloading, too.
24:26Well done.
24:27So that's the three of us.
24:28Excellent.
24:29Very good.
24:30You can turn it round and have a lovely-sounding word,
24:32a girandole, which is G-I-R-A-N-D-O-L-E,
24:37and it's a support for candles or other lights,
24:39one of those branched supports.
24:41That is a girandole.
24:42A girandole.
24:43Yeah.
24:4588 plays 55.
24:46And, Susie, your origins of words now, today?
24:51Well, I've been thinking about words for fisticuffs recently.
24:56I'm not quite sure why,
24:58except I came across a wonderful old Scottish dialect word
25:01the other day, Nick, which was a collieshangle,
25:03which is a fight, a small skirmish, if you like,
25:06or a stramash, as they might say in Scotland these days,
25:09or a fracker, as Jeremy Clarkson liked to put it.
25:12But another word that means coming to fisticuffs
25:15is to be at loggerheads with someone,
25:17which is quite a curious term when you think about it.
25:20And it's got a slightly curious twisting story.
25:23First of all, you have to go to the singular word loggerhead,
25:27which you will still find today in many different contexts,
25:30a species of turtle, a bird, even a place name.
25:34But originally a loggerhead was none of these.
25:37It was used with the meaning of a stupid person, a blockhead.
25:40Shakespeare used it in that way in Love's Labour's Lost.
25:44I can't read that one out
25:45because it includes a very rude word,
25:47but he used it as a big insult to somebody.
25:50You were born to do me shame, and he calls them a loggerhead.
25:53So a loggerhead in that sense was literally a blockhead,
25:57and that makes sense because a logger was a thick block of timber
26:00and it was fastened to a horse's leg
26:02to prevent it from straying or roaming.
26:05But if you move on a century or so,
26:08a loggerhead was also an iron instrument,
26:11this is the definition,
26:12with a long handle used for melting pitch and for heating liquids.
26:16One of those liquids that was heated was balderdash,
26:20which is a fantastic word meaning nonsense today.
26:23But originally it was a mixture of beer, wine, milk
26:27and occasionally all sorts of strange ingredients,
26:30including, and I know I've mentioned this on the show before,
26:32pigeon dung was sometimes thrown in.
26:35Don't ask me why.
26:37But this was all the rage.
26:39This is quite a heady brew, apparently,
26:42if not a very unappetising one.
26:44But the key thing here is it was stirred occasionally
26:46with a long poker-like instrument that was also called a loggerhead.
26:51And the phrase at loggerheads today,
26:53coming to fisticuffs with somebody,
26:55is thought to be because of inebriated people
26:57drinking that posset, that balderdash,
27:00would sometimes wield this poker-like instrument at each other.
27:03Hence they came to literal loggerheads,
27:06because that's what they were brandishing at the time.
27:08Brilliant.
27:14That's very good. Excellent.
27:1688 to 55.
27:18Gareth, let us go.
27:20Consonant, please, Rachel.
27:22Thank you, Gareth. B.
27:24And a vowel, please.
27:26I.
27:28And a consonant.
27:30F.
27:31And another one.
27:33S.
27:35And another one.
27:37H.
27:38And a vowel.
27:40O.
27:42And a consonant.
27:44T.
27:47And a consonant.
27:49P.
27:50And another vowel, please.
27:51And the last one.
27:53E.
27:54And here's the Countdown Clock.
28:07CLOCK TICKS
28:28Gareth.
28:30A risky six.
28:32Yes?
28:33Just a five.
28:34A five. You're five, Jamie.
28:36Now then, Gareth.
28:38B.
28:40B. Absolutely fine, yes. Very good.
28:42Very good.
28:43And the corner. Can we match it?
28:47Yes.
28:48Bishop.
28:49Bishop, yep. Posty is in there.
28:52And also, for seven, a phobist.
28:55Somebody who has a particular phobia about something is a phobist.
28:59Very good.
29:01Thank you. Thank you, Michael.
29:03And it's Jamie's letters game. Final one of the day.
29:07A consonant, please, Rachel.
29:09Thank you, Jamie.
29:10F.
29:12And another.
29:14D.
29:15And a vowel.
29:17A.
29:18And a consonant.
29:20G.
29:21And another consonant.
29:23H.
29:24And a vowel.
29:26U.
29:27And another vowel.
29:29A.
29:31Consonant.
29:33R.
29:34And a final vowel, please.
29:36And a final O.
29:38Stand by.
30:01MUSIC PLAYS
30:10Yes, Jamie?
30:11Just a five.
30:12A five. Gareth?
30:13A five again.
30:15A gad.
30:16Gad and...?
30:17Rough.
30:18Rough.
30:19Rough, rough.
30:20Yeah.
30:21Michael, Susie, anything else?
30:24No, couldn't get any better than five.
30:26And that's that.
30:27Three plays 66.
30:29Gareth, final numbers game.
30:31Two large and four small, please, Rachel.
30:33Thank you, Gareth.
30:34Two, large, four, little for the final one of today's game.
30:38And these numbers are two, two, one, eight.
30:42And the large, two, 75 and 50.
30:45And the target, 616.
30:48616.
30:50MUSIC PLAYS
30:58MUSIC CONTINUES
31:21Gareth?
31:22I think I've got it, but I've probably not.
31:24How about Jamie?
31:26Gareth?
31:2875 plus two.
31:3175 plus two, 77.
31:34Times eight.
31:35Yeah, you have got it. Well done.
31:37616.
31:39Well done. And...
31:40Same way.
31:41There we go. You happy, Gareth?
31:43APPLAUSE
31:46Two good players.
31:48103 and 76.
31:50Gareth on 76 as we turn to the final round.
31:54Conundrum time. Fingers on buzzers.
31:57Let's roll today's countdown conundrum.
31:59MUSIC PLAYS
32:01MUSIC CONTINUES
32:25Wow, Jamie.
32:26Mentalist?
32:28Mentalist. Let's see whether you're right.
32:31Here it comes. Wow, well done.
32:33APPLAUSE
32:35Very good.
32:38113. That's great stuff. Well done.
32:41We turn now to Gareth. Gareth, well played, actually.
32:44Good score.
32:46But he seems to have got a little bit of a knack with the maths
32:49and with his conundrums, too.
32:51So thank you very much for coming.
32:54Good luck when you go back to New York
32:56for your fifth wedding anniversary.
32:58It will be, yeah.
32:59And you take this goodie bag with you.
33:01Well, you don't have to take it to New York,
33:03but you can certainly take it home to fence in Lancashire
33:06with our very best wishes.
33:07Thank you very much. Thanks for coming.
33:09Thanks for having us. All right.
33:10And we shall see you tomorrow.
33:12Yeah. Well done. Well done indeed.
33:14Now, before we say goodbye to you, you're looking tanned.
33:18I hear you've been on the deep blue sea recently.
33:21Have I? Yeah.
33:23Oh, yes. That's right.
33:26I don't know a woman at all who likes travelling.
33:30I don't like travelling.
33:33But anyway, she said, why don't we go on a cruise?
33:36And she found this cruise which went to Bermuda
33:40and we went to Cuba, sadly, on the same day
33:44as President Obama went with his entourage,
33:48so it was a bit crowded.
33:50And then we had a lovely time in Bermuda
33:53where I bought a couple of jackets.
33:55I've never seen one of those jackets.
33:57You haven't, and you may even be seeing it again.
34:01LAUGHTER
34:02Well, we'll see you tomorrow. Brilliant.
34:04Thanks, Michael. And Susie, too. See you tomorrow.
34:06See you, darling. All right.
34:07Rachel? Yep.
34:08See you tomorrow. See you tomorrow.
34:09Same time tomorrow, you be sure of it.
34:11A very, very good afternoon to you.
34:14Contact us by email at countdown at channel4.com,
34:18by Twitter at C4Countdown,
34:20or write to us at Countdown, Leeds, LS3, 1JS.
34:24Or visit our web page at channel4.com forward slash countdown.
34:30Well, just days before we find out if Jeremy Corbyn
34:32has retained his leadership,
34:33Dispatches goes undercover to investigate Momentum,
34:36the battle for the Labour Party tonight at twenty-five past seven.
34:39At nine, with more vehicles on the road,
34:41what are the challenges our emergency services are coming up against?
34:44It's a bit of an eye-opener in 999.
34:46Watch your emergency.
34:47Next, though, we're looking for a place in the sun.

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