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00:00This programme contains strong language and adult humour.
00:04Some scenes may not be suitable for all ages.
00:07Some scenes may not be suitable for all ages.
00:09Some scenes may not be suitable for all ages.
00:11Some scenes may not be suitable for all ages.
00:13Some scenes may not be suitable for all ages.
00:15Some scenes may not be suitable for all ages.
00:17Some scenes may not be suitable for all ages.
00:19Some scenes may not be suitable for all ages.
00:21Some scenes may not be suitable for all ages.
00:23Some scenes may not be suitable for all ages.
00:25Some scenes may not be suitable for all ages.
00:27Some scenes may not be suitable for all ages.
00:30Good afternoon, good afternoon, and welcome to the Countdown Studio.
00:3416th of May, ah, the darling buds of May,
00:37with summer just around the corner.
00:39Those warm days are absolutely on their way,
00:41which means, I guess, that everybody wants to look good
00:44because they're looking forward to their holidays and the beach and so forth,
00:47so they want to be fit and they want to be toned.
00:50And the big thing, apparently, Rachel, up in Scandinavia,
00:53in order to get toned and fit and also to be environmentally conscientious
00:58is plogging.
01:00What's plogging? It's jogging whilst picking up litter.
01:03Brilliant, isn't it?
01:04So you go for a jog and you have a plastic bag with you
01:07and you pick up the litter and pop it in the bag
01:09and you've got fit and toned, but also you've done some good.
01:13And, in fact, in our little local community, people go for walks.
01:17It's a very small community, probably about, how many houses would there be?
01:22Maybe 15?
01:24But there are walks where everybody gets together
01:26and they just walk the lanes and pick up the rubbish,
01:29of which there's far too much.
01:31It's amazing what people...
01:33They go to the trouble to drive into the country
01:36in order to throw their rubbish out.
01:38I don't get it. Anyway...
01:40It's nice that people are doing something about it.
01:42I've seen, as well, there's someone that they go around on paddle boards
01:45called Plastic Patrol and pick out the plastic from canals.
01:48Yeah.
01:49Yeah, because it is disgusting and it goes straight into the sea,
01:52so good for these people.
01:54It's wonderful, though, that actually people really are getting into this.
01:57Now, you don't have any plastic bottles for your water.
02:00You drag around an aluminium can.
02:02I've got an aluminium can and I've got my bottle that I reuse all the time, yeah.
02:05I guess that's the thing with politics at the moment.
02:07A lot of people are so unhappy that it's forcing people
02:10to do things for themselves.
02:12It's one of the good side effects of bad people.
02:15This is one of your bug bears, isn't it?
02:17Absolutely. I hate it.
02:19Who have we got? We've got a five-time winner back, Rachel.
02:22Paul Harper's back. Welcome back, Paul.
02:24Thanks, Nick.
02:25How are you feeling? Five wins, not bad, eh?
02:27Lucky so far, so hopefully we'll carry it on.
02:30I don't think you're lucky at all. You're a good player.
02:33Now you're up against Vincent Clarke,
02:35from Fife, a marketing management student, and a golfer.
02:39You're a young man, you're 18, I think?
02:4118, yeah.
02:42And you're playing off...
02:43Four.
02:44..of four members of the St Andrews Golf Club.
02:47And what do you think you'll do when you've finished your studies?
02:50Not sure exactly what yet, but it's quite a broad course,
02:53so keeping my options open.
02:55Well done. Well, look, good luck to you both.
02:57Have a lot of fun.
02:58And let's have a big round of applause for Vincent and Paul.
03:06And Susie's over in the corner on this lovely May Day.
03:10And sitting next to Susie and back for the second time,
03:13Dr Linda Papadopoulos.
03:18Psychologist and author, and working hard on Netflix,
03:22doing some extraordinary work there, I think,
03:24with...it's An Analysis Of.
03:27Tell us a little bit about that.
03:29One of the shows I'm doing is called Autopsy,
03:31and it kind of looks at the final days,
03:34right before a very famous death.
03:37But I try and do a psychological autopsy,
03:39so I look at what led up to sort of the choices
03:42that leads up to explaining why people ended the way they did.
03:46Always untimely, I guess. But more about that later on.
03:49Now then, Paul, off we go. Letters game?
03:52Yes. Good afternoon, Rachel.
03:54Afternoon, Paul.
03:55I'll start with a consonant, please.
03:57Thank you. Start today with N.
03:59Second consonant.
04:01K.
04:03Vowel.
04:05A.
04:06Second vowel.
04:08O.
04:09And a third, please.
04:11E.
04:14Consonant.
04:16L.
04:18Consonant.
04:20Q.
04:22Consonant.
04:24R.
04:27And a final consonant, please.
04:29And a final N.
04:31And here's the Countdown Clock.
04:43CLOCK TICKS
05:04Well, Paul?
05:05Just six to start with.
05:07All right. Vincent?
05:09Six.
05:10Paul?
05:11Rankle.
05:12And?
05:13Loner.
05:14And loner.
05:15Very good.
05:16Any more sixes there? Linda and Susie?
05:19Well, we also found lanner, didn't we?
05:21Yes, lanner for another six, which is a falcon
05:23with a dark brown back and a buff cap.
05:25Find it in the Middle East and Africa.
05:27All right. That's it?
05:29That's it.
05:30Thank you. Sixes all round. Vincent. Letters game?
05:33Good afternoon, Rachel.
05:34Hi, Vincent.
05:35Can I start with a consonant, please?
05:37Thank you. Start with R.
05:38And a vowel.
05:40A.
05:41Consonant.
05:43S.
05:44Vowel.
05:46E.
05:47Consonant.
05:49W.
05:50Vowel.
05:52A.
05:54Consonant.
05:56D.
05:58Vowel.
06:00I.
06:01And final consonant, please.
06:03And a final R.
06:05Stand by.
06:11MUSIC PLAYS
06:37No, Vincent.
06:38A six.
06:39Paul?
06:40A seven.
06:42No, Vincent.
06:43Raised?
06:44Raised and?
06:45Rewards.
06:46Rewards.
06:47Very good.
06:49Broken away there. Linda, do we have any sevens?
06:51I found rewards as well.
06:53But we also found an A.
06:55We found airwards.
06:57Yes, airwards.
06:58It means the same as airward, upward, towards the air,
07:01in other words. It's a nice adverb.
07:03Thank you. Airwards.
07:04APPLAUSE
07:06Seawards, I guess.
07:0713 plays six, Vincent on six,
07:09and it's Paul's numbers game.
07:12Paul?
07:13I'll start with one large and five small, please, Rachel.
07:16Thank you, Paul. One from the top row.
07:18Five little ones, and for the first time today,
07:21they are ten, six, five, two, seven,
07:26and the large one, 75.
07:28And the target, 176.
07:30176.
07:32MUSIC PLAYS
07:34MUSIC CONTINUES
08:04Yes, Paul?
08:06177.
08:08Vincent?
08:09176.
08:11Now, then.
08:1275 divided by five is 15?
08:15Yeah.
08:16Add the two?
08:1717.
08:18Times ten?
08:19170.
08:20And add the six?
08:21Nicely done, 176.
08:22Well done.
08:23APPLAUSE
08:26Well done, Vincent.
08:28Puts you in the lead, 16 points to 13,
08:30as we turn now to our first Tea Time teaser,
08:32which is Bison, Pole and the Clue.
08:34You'll have to have a kiss and a cuddle with William
08:37before you get the bird.
08:39You'll have to have a kiss and a cuddle with William
08:42before you get the bird.
08:52CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
08:55CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
08:58Welcome back. Warm welcome back.
09:00I left you with a clue.
09:02You'll have to have a kiss and a cuddle with William
09:04before you get the bird.
09:06What sort of bird would that be, I wonder?
09:08Maybe it would be a spoonbill.
09:10Spoonbill it is.
09:11Now, if you'd like to become a Countdown contestant,
09:14you can email countdown at channel4.com
09:17to request an application form
09:19or write to us at contestantsapplications.
09:22Countdown leads LS31JS.
09:27So, 16 plays 13, Paul on 13.
09:30Vincent, your letters again.
09:32Consonant, please, Rachel.
09:34Thank you, Vincent. T
09:36And a vowel.
09:38E
09:39Consonant.
09:41R
09:42Vowel.
09:44U
09:45Consonant.
09:47H
09:48Vowel.
09:50A
09:52Consonant.
09:54L
09:55Vowel.
09:57O
09:58And a consonant, please.
10:00And the last one, T.
10:02Stand by.
10:21MUSIC PLAYS
10:34Well, Vincent?
10:36I'll stick with a six.
10:38A six. Paul?
10:39A seven.
10:41Nah, Vincent.
10:42Letter.
10:43And...?
10:44A loather.
10:46You can indeed be a loather.
10:48Yes, if you detest something enough, you are a loather.
10:50I'll stick with a seven.
10:52Linda and Susie. Linda?
10:54I found lather, which was one half of loather.
10:57Yeah, that's good.
10:59A whole to otherwise and a gram of fat, but loather was our top as well.
11:02OK, Paul, your letters again.
11:05I'll start with a consonant, please, Rachel.
11:07Thank you, Paul. N
11:09And the second, please.
11:11C
11:14Vowel.
11:15I
11:17Second vowel.
11:20And the third.
11:22E
11:24Consonant.
11:26M
11:28Consonant.
11:30G
11:32Consonant.
11:34T
11:36And a consonant.
11:38And lastly, W.
11:40Stand by.
11:42MUSIC PLAYS
11:49MUSIC STOPS
12:12Well, Paul?
12:14Just a six.
12:16Vincent? Six.
12:19Mawing.
12:21And Cumming?
12:23Sixes.
12:25Can we beat it, I wonder? Linda?
12:27We can. We got genomic, which is related to the human genome,
12:32and emoting, which, as a psychologist, I speak about a lot,
12:35showing emotion.
12:37Emoting, indeed. Thank you for that.
12:3926 to 22. Paul's back in the lead.
12:41And now, Vincent, it's your numbers game.
12:44Can I have six more, please, Rachel?
12:46I'm a strong mathematician here.
12:48Let's see how you do with the six more ones, which are...
12:515, 10, 6, 4, 3 and 1.
12:56And your target?
12:58670.
13:00670.
13:02MUSIC PLAYS
13:16MUSIC STOPS
13:31Vincent?
13:33670.
13:35And Paul?
13:37Yeah, 670.
13:39Now, Vincent.
13:413 x 5 is 15.
13:433 x 5 is 15.
13:453 x 5 is 66.
13:47Add 1.
13:4867.
13:49Times it by 10.
13:50Very well done. 670. Lovely.
13:52And Paul?
13:53Completely different.
13:556 x 4, 24.
13:57Yep.
13:58Multiply by 3, 72.
14:01It is.
14:02Deduct a 5, 67.
14:04There we go.
14:05Multiply by 10.
14:06Very well done, both. 670.
14:08APPLAUSE
14:11Paul on 36 and four points behind we have Vincent,
14:14as we turn to Dr Linda.
14:16Now, at the top of the show we were talking about toning,
14:18which I guess is all about body image,
14:20but you've got something to talk to us about, body image,
14:23and an experiment that you're interested in.
14:26Yeah, this is one of, I guess, my favourite experiments ever spoken about.
14:30An early professor told me about this study.
14:33It was quite famous.
14:34So what they did is they took a group of people,
14:36they wanted to look at the effect of facial disfigurement,
14:38and they said to them,
14:40we're going to get you to go outside and hand out leaflets.
14:42But before we do, we're going to get in a makeup artist
14:45who's going to put a scar on your face.
14:46Now, you're not going to see yourself,
14:48but we want you to go out and hand out these leaflets
14:50and come back and report how you feel.
14:52So they go out, they hand out leaflets,
14:54and they come back, and they're like, well, what happened?
14:56They're like, it was awful.
14:57People wouldn't stand near us, they wouldn't make eye contact,
15:00I could barely hand out half of them.
15:02It was a really awful experience being out there with this scar.
15:05They said, okay, what we're going to do now
15:07is we're going to get the makeup artist back in
15:09to remove this scar.
15:10Again, you're not going to see yourself,
15:11but you're going to go outside,
15:13trying to hand out these questionnaires,
15:15but with your normal appearance.
15:16They said, brilliant.
15:17So they went out, they did that, they came back,
15:19they said, how was it?
15:20They said, brilliant.
15:21I handed them all out, I got a couple of phone numbers,
15:23people spoke to me, they looked at me in the eye.
15:25They said, great, now we need to tell you something.
15:27You looked exactly the same both at time one and at time two.
15:31We lied.
15:32You never had a scar on your face.
15:33And to me, that epitomizes what body image is
15:36because body image isn't an objective perception of how we look.
15:40Rather, it's a subjective notion of how we think we're perceived by others.
15:44So when I work with people with body image disorders,
15:47what we try very much to do is look at those self-fulfilling prophecies.
15:52If I expect you to not like me because of the way that I look,
15:55then I probably will act in such a way so as to bring it about.
15:58And this is what was happening in this study.
16:00They were looking down, they were covering their hair,
16:02they were mumbling.
16:03As soon as they felt they looked good,
16:04they stood up, shoulders back, they smiled.
16:07And so one of the most powerful things I think we can do for ourselves
16:11as individuals and parents out there for their kids
16:14is to teach this idea of having this sense of confidence in who you are
16:19because if you can find something you like in yourself,
16:21then that's what you'll project.
16:23Fascinating. How extraordinary.
16:25APPLAUSE
16:28Is that the first time I've heard of this?
16:31I was a professor back in Canada.
16:34Again, that was one of the reasons I got into the area.
16:37This idea of subjectivity around it is fascinating, and this is it.
16:41I worked in this area for years, and some of the facial cancer patients I see
16:45have better body image than some of the models that I see
16:48because it's about what I think I should be, what I ought to look like.
16:51And again, we live in a world where the visual is so important.
16:54We're constantly taking pictures of ourselves and posting them
16:57that I think we've got such a ridiculous idea of having to reach this perfection
17:01that we forget to kind of just savour who we are.
17:04I seem to remember I was a bit self-conscious and I had the braids
17:07and I felt better, but I still can't smile.
17:10Is that right? Yeah.
17:11Oh, we need to get you practising to do that.
17:13I can't smile. People say, you know, they want to say...
17:16Rachel understands and Susie.
17:18I can't smile.
17:20With showing teeth. With showing teeth.
17:22You're still conscious of it.
17:23But this is it, and the thing is if you don't challenge that,
17:25you never get out of those patterns of behaviour.
17:28So a big part of getting out of them is coming out of your comfort zone.
17:31Well, we'll speak at the break. I'll get you smiling after.
17:33I'll make an appointment. I'll make an appointment.
17:35Brilliant.
17:36Thank you. 36-32.
17:38And Paul, your letters game.
17:41I'll start with a consonant, please, Rachel.
17:43Thank you, Paul.
17:44V.
17:45And a second.
17:47G.
17:49Vowel, please.
17:51U.
17:53Another vowel.
17:55O.
17:57And a third.
17:59E.
18:02Consonants.
18:04B.
18:06Consonants.
18:08S.
18:10A vowel.
18:13U.
18:15And a final consonant.
18:17And a final X.
18:19Stand by.
18:23STAND BY
18:25STAND BY
18:52Well, Paul?
18:53Just six.
18:54Five.
18:55And you're five.
18:56Vogues.
18:58And...
18:59Vogues.
19:00Vogues, indeed, yeah.
19:01Yes.
19:02Same over there?
19:03Yes.
19:04Anything else?
19:05No, we were having a discussion as to whether it's a noun or a verb
19:08and we were preferring the verb sense.
19:10All right.
19:1142-32.
19:12Paul on 42.
19:14And it's Vincent's letters game now.
19:16Good luck, Vincent.
19:18I have a consonant, please.
19:19Thank you, Vincent.
19:20L.
19:21And a vowel.
19:23E.
19:24Consonant.
19:26N.
19:27Vowel.
19:29A.
19:30Consonant.
19:32F.
19:33Vowel.
19:35E.
19:36Consonant.
19:38D.
19:40Another consonant, please.
19:42S.
19:44And another consonant.
19:46And the last one, R.
19:48Stand by.
19:54THEY CONTINUE TO PLAY
20:19Vincent.
20:20Seven.
20:21Paul?
20:22Yes, seven as well.
20:24Vincent.
20:25Lenders.
20:26And?
20:27Yes, same word, lenders.
20:28Lenders.
20:30Linda?
20:31We just got a seven as well, slander.
20:34Slander and?
20:35Slender and, yes, learned.
20:38They were our sevens.
20:40All right.
20:4149-39.
20:42Ten points in it.
20:43Paul, your numbers game.
20:44I'll have an inverted T, please.
20:46Thank you, Paul.
20:47Back to one from the top and five little ones for you.
20:50And this time around they are eight, one, five, six, nine,
20:56and at large on 100.
20:58And this target, 717.
21:01717.
21:20THEY CONTINUE TO PLAY
21:34Paul?
21:36Just 715, two away.
21:39Vincent?
21:40717.
21:42Yes, Vincent?
21:43Six plus one is seven.
21:44Six plus one is seven.
21:46Times 100.
21:47Yep, 700.
21:48And add the nine and the eight.
21:50Very good.
21:51Well done, Vincent.
21:55So, 49 apiece.
21:56Let's have a tea time teaser, shall we?
21:58It's itch, hold and the clue.
22:00His hands start to itch if he holds this too long.
22:03He needs rubber gloves.
22:04His hands start to itch if he holds this too long.
22:08He needs rubber gloves.
22:10BELL
22:20APPLAUSE
22:26Welcome back. I left with the clue.
22:28His hands start to itch if he holds this too long.
22:31He needs rubber gloves.
22:33If he holds the dishcloth too long, it gets itchy.
22:3849 apiece. Well done there, Vincent.
22:41And it's your letters game now.
22:43Consonant, please, Rachel.
22:44Thank you, Vincent. G.
22:46And a vowel?
22:48Consonant.
22:50P.
22:51Vowel.
22:53E.
22:54Consonant.
22:56M.
22:57Vowel.
22:59U.
23:00Consonant.
23:02J.
23:04Another consonant.
23:06R.
23:08And a vowel, please.
23:10And lastly, E.
23:13Countdown.
23:18ELECTRONIC MUSIC PLAYS
23:20ELECTRONIC MUSIC CONTINUES
23:47Vincent.
23:49Paul.
23:50Six.
23:51Six?
23:52A jumper.
23:53A jumper.
23:54Vincent.
23:55Pre-game.
23:56It is there, both as an adjective and a noun.
23:59So you might talk about pre-game ceremonies, for example.
24:02Very well done.
24:03The pre-game team chat.
24:05Yes.
24:06Not bad, Vincent.
24:07Linda, what have you got?
24:09We just found meagre. That's the other two.
24:12Yeah, the same.
24:13Thank you. That's it.
24:14Pre-game was the best, yes.
24:1649 plays 56. Vincent's ahead.
24:19And it's Paul's letters game now. Yes, Paul.
24:21I'll start with a consonant, please, Rachel.
24:23Thank you, Paul. D.
24:25And a second.
24:27L.
24:29A vowel.
24:30O.
24:32Second vowel.
24:33E.
24:35And a third.
24:37I.
24:39A consonant.
24:40N.
24:42Consonant.
24:43T.
24:44T.
24:46Consonant.
24:48F.
24:50And a final vowel.
24:52And a final E.
24:54Stand by.
25:15WHISTLE BLOWS
25:26Yes, Paul.
25:28Eight.
25:29Vincent.
25:30Try an eight.
25:32Paul.
25:33Deletion.
25:34Oh. Sorry, I don't write it down.
25:37Oh, that is bad luck.
25:39Oh, that's cruel.
25:41Well done, Paul. All right.
25:43Anna.
25:44The same. We found deletion.
25:46Same thing? Yeah.
25:47All right.
25:48So, Vincent's lost his lead, but only by a point.
25:5157 to 56.
25:53And now to Susie.
25:55And your wonderful origins of words.
25:57Susie.
25:58Thanks, Nick.
25:59Well, I'm going to talk about the words with very ancient origins,
26:02in fact, and slightly surprising ones.
26:04We know when farmers want to draft animals to work together,
26:07they will often harness them together with a bar, a wooden frame,
26:11which is a bit of a rend for the animal's head.
26:13Quite basic, if you think about it, and it is indeed very, very old.
26:17In English, of course, this device is known as a yoke.
26:20And the ancient Romans did exactly the same thing.
26:23They used the same method, and they called it a yugum,
26:26and that was from their verb yungere, which meant to join.
26:30That gave us junction and joint.
26:32And when the Romans began conquering other nations,
26:36they, in turn, looked for a way of punishing the people
26:40and also symbolising Roman dominance
26:43and indeed humiliation of their enemy.
26:46And they thought about these yokes that they used for the cattle,
26:49and they adapted it, really, for the defeated troops.
26:53And what they did is they would assemble all the troops
26:55that they had then conquered,
26:57and they would put two spears upright in the ground
26:59and lay a third across them,
27:01so it looked pretty much like the yokes that the animals were carrying.
27:04And the conquered army, the soldiers,
27:06were each forced to pass under this yoke,
27:10symbolically acknowledging, really, that in order to stoop low,
27:13they were slaves to their conquerors.
27:16As I say, a very old practice that actually went back
27:19even before the Roman times,
27:21and it was used in the beginning to show redemption of sins.
27:24So, for example, to avoid capital punishment
27:27if somebody had committed a murder,
27:29they too would be forced to pass below the yoke
27:32in order to remove their murder guilt.
27:35And then from this expiation of sins,
27:37it became the ritual removal of authority, I suppose,
27:42for these conquered soldiers,
27:44who would then, as I say, have to pass below it.
27:46But from an English point of view, for us today,
27:49that process, horrible as it sounds, really,
27:52had an enduring effect, because the Romans termed
27:54the humiliating experience subiugum,
27:57which meant under the yoke,
27:59and it's from that that we get the verb subjugate today.
28:02Very good.
28:04Very good.
28:09Now, so one point in it,
28:11Paul in the lead by a point, 57-56.
28:14Vincent, now then, letters game.
28:16Consonant, please, Rachel.
28:18Thank you, Vincent. D
28:20And a vowel.
28:22I
28:23Consonant.
28:25V
28:26Vowel.
28:27E
28:28Consonant.
28:30S
28:31Vowel.
28:33O
28:34Consonant.
28:36D
28:38Vowel.
28:40I
28:42And a consonant, please.
28:44And lastly, M.
28:46Countdown.
29:01MUSIC PLAYS
29:19Well, Vincent?
29:21Stoke River, seven.
29:23And Paul?
29:24Yes, seven.
29:25Yes, Vincent.
29:26Divides.
29:27Yep.
29:28Yeah, same word.
29:30It divides all round, do you think, Linda and Susie?
29:33Yeah, yeah, we found... I found devoid, but that's only six,
29:36but Susie found...
29:38Middies, plural of a middie with a Y, midshipman, let's see.
29:42Oh, really? Yeah.
29:44A middie, all right.
29:4664-63, still just one point in it.
29:49Paul?
29:50I'll start with a consonant, please, Rachel.
29:52Thank you, Paul. P
29:54And a second.
29:56T
29:58And a third.
30:00R
30:02A vowel.
30:04A
30:05Second vowel.
30:07E
30:09Third vowel.
30:11U
30:13Consonant.
30:15C
30:17A vowel.
30:19E
30:21And a final consonant.
30:23And a final Y.
30:25Standby.
30:27BUZZER
30:29BUZZER
30:56Yes, Paul?
30:58Nick?
30:59And Vincent? Seven.
31:01Paul? A capture.
31:03Capture, too.
31:06Both captured and... Linda?
31:08Yes, well, we found teacup for a six.
31:10Yes.
31:12Yes, and capture was our best as well for seven.
31:1671-70.
31:18Heading towards a crucial conundrum, if we're not careful.
31:20Vincent, your numbers game.
31:22Five, six more, again, please.
31:24Same again, see if you can make it four from four.
31:26OK.
31:28These last ones of the day are five, ten, six, nine, three, and seven.
31:35And the target...
31:37339.
31:39339.
31:57BUZZER
32:09Well, Vincent?
32:11339.
32:13Paul? Yes, 339.
32:15Vincent?
32:17Five times six is 30.
32:19Five, six is 30.
32:2133.
32:23Times ten?
32:25Paul?
32:27Yep, exactly the same way.
32:29APPLAUSE
32:31So there we have it.
32:33Two very good players, Paul and Vincent,
32:36are going into a crucial countdown conundrum.
32:39Gentlemen, good luck to you both.
32:41Fingers on buzzers.
32:43Let's roll that crucial countdown conundrum.
32:50Paul, so fast.
32:52Exuberant.
32:54Could it be possible? Let's have a look.
32:57So fast.
32:59Exuberant.
33:05I doubt that was over a second.
33:0891 plays 80.
33:10Well done, well done. I'll come to you in a minute.
33:12Vincent, you played like a champ, frankly.
33:15You got all the numbers, you played really, really well.
33:18You had that one thing, that one slip.
33:21It's a terrible thing, isn't it?
33:23When you suddenly forget to write it down, you've got it.
33:26Travel safely back to Fife, take this goodie bag with you.
33:30And, um...
33:32Cry all the way, really. That was really bad luck.
33:35Well done. Cracker. Fantastic.
33:37Look at that. Six good wins. Well done.
33:39Thanks, Nick. Well done.
33:41And they don't go any faster than that.
33:43Is it a second? Maybe a second and a half?
33:45Excellent. Thanks.
33:47So there we are.
33:49Dr Linda and Susie.
33:51That was a close-run thing.
33:53We'll see you tomorrow. Have a pleasant evening.
33:55All right. What do you reckon?
33:57Oh, it's normally a good secret weapon, the six small,
33:59but Paul was definitely a match there.
34:01Very good at the numbers as well, so good contest.
34:04Excellent. We'll see you next time.
34:06See you tomorrow. Join us then, same time, same place,
34:08you'll be sure of it, a very good afternoon.
34:11Contact us by email at countdown at channel4.com,
34:16by Twitter at c4countdown,
34:18or write to us at countdownleadsls31js.
34:22You can also find our webpage at channel4.com forward slash countdown.
34:31A rollercoaster of emotions tonight,
34:33life's ups and downs, tears of joy, pain and laughter
34:36in the brand-new series of 24 hours on A&E at 9,
34:39then at 10 our gender quake season continues
34:41as Munro Bergdorf asks,
34:44What makes a woman?
34:45Next today though, shades on for A Place in the Sun.

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