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00:00This programme contains strong language and adult humour.
00:04APPLAUSE
00:31Good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown studio.
00:34Did you read the story the other day about the American
00:38who took a cab and was confronted with a bill for $1,600, Rachel, apparently?
00:46Now, what had happened was that he went off to visit some friends
00:50in West Virginia.
00:52He lived some distance away.
00:54And they had a riotous night out.
00:57And he had a few too many, and he tapped his app for a cab,
01:01which turned up, and he popped into it and promptly fell asleep.
01:05Unfortunately, he didn't put in the address of the little motel
01:10he was meant to be staying at, just round the corner,
01:13but he tapped in his home address, which is in fact 350 miles away.
01:17And he slept through it, woke up with a jolt,
01:20and the chap said, that'll be $1,600, pal.
01:23So he had to pay.
01:25So there's a moral in there somewhere, I think.
01:27Either don't drink too much, or be absolutely sure what you're doing
01:30when you get into a cab if you're slightly tipsy.
01:33How about you?
01:34I can't believe that story.
01:36I was picked up once, I did some work in kind of the Devon area,
01:39and it was too late to get a train back, so they got me a car.
01:42And when the car got there, they said,
01:44I'm really pleased that you're actually getting in this car,
01:46because they're gambling on whether that person's going to be there.
01:49So if they've come from London and you don't want the taxi,
01:51that's just them driving back for no money.
01:53$1,600.
01:55$1,600.
01:56That driver, they must have known what they were doing.
01:58I think possibly so.
01:59Yeah.
02:00I think possibly so.
02:01And he said, listen, pay up, pal.
02:03I mean, who carries that sort of money?
02:04I suppose he had a card.
02:05But cab apps, I don't know about you, but I love it.
02:10They're fantastic.
02:12I love it, and I won't hear anything against them.
02:14Now, Rich, we've got Darren back.
02:17Two good wins for Darren.
02:18How are you feeling?
02:19In good shape?
02:20I'm rocking, Nick.
02:21You're rocking.
02:22I am.
02:23Heavens.
02:24That's good to know.
02:25And you're joined by Steve Harris from Andover in the property business.
02:28Now, Steve, apparently you like looking up into the sky,
02:33and you went out one dark night looking for the International Space Station
02:38with your bins, your binoculars.
02:40What happened?
02:41Yeah, I went out, binoculars in hand,
02:43and I'm waiting around for the space station.
02:46Girlfriend comes round the corner in her car, stops.
02:49What on earth are you up to?
02:50Thinking, I'm peeping Steve.
02:53Peeping Steve, indeed.
02:55Anyway, did you manage to catch hold of the space station?
02:58I did, just for the two minutes that it comes over.
03:01So you have to wait for it?
03:02I just wait for the emails to come through,
03:04and then I wander out and like to see it.
03:06It's an email or an app?
03:07An email.
03:08Yes, kind of.
03:09Yeah.
03:10Very interesting.
03:11Big round of applause for Steve, the train spotter, as it were,
03:15and Darren Findlay.
03:17Big round of applause now.
03:22And over in the corner, Susie, of course,
03:24joined once again by Nina Hossein, newscaster and journalist.
03:27Welcome back, Nina.
03:28Welcome back.
03:34Wonderful.
03:35Darren, off we go.
03:37You know the drill.
03:38I do indeed.
03:39Thanks, Nick.
03:40Could we start with a consonant, please, Rachel?
03:42We can indeed.
03:43Thank you, Darren.
03:44N.
03:45And another?
03:47D.
03:49And another?
03:51R.
03:53And another, please?
03:55D.
03:56And a vowel, please?
03:58E.
04:00And another vowel?
04:02O.
04:03And another?
04:05E.
04:07And a consonant?
04:09Y.
04:11And a final consonant, please?
04:13And a final D.
04:15And the clock starts now.
04:43Well, Darren?
04:50Six.
04:51A six.
04:52Yes, Steve?
04:53Six.
04:54Two sixes.
04:55Darren?
04:56Nodded.
04:57Yes.
04:58Steve?
04:59Eroded.
05:00And eroded.
05:01Any advances on six, Nina?
05:03Susie?
05:04I've got another six.
05:06Droned, is that OK?
05:07Yes, droned on and on.
05:09And sometimes if you are this, you do drone on and on.
05:12The triple D gave us a seven in dodgery.
05:16Dodgery.
05:17Thought you were talking about me for a moment.
05:19I was not.
05:20Six apiece.
05:21And it's Steve we turn to.
05:23Yes, Steve?
05:24Hi, Rachel.
05:25Hi, Steve.
05:26Can I start with a consonant, please?
05:28You can indeed.
05:29Start with H.
05:30Another?
05:32L.
05:33And another?
05:35N.
05:36And another?
05:38L.
05:40And a vowel, please?
05:42O.
05:43And another?
05:45E.
05:47And one more?
05:49O.
05:51And a consonant, please?
05:53T.
05:55And a final consonant?
05:57And a final C.
05:59Stand by.
06:10CLOCK TICKS
06:30Well, Steve?
06:32Five.
06:33And...?
06:34Five.
06:35And five from Darren.
06:37Steve?
06:38Hotel.
06:39Clone.
06:40And clone.
06:42Anything beyond five?
06:44Hmm, I can go one better.
06:47Which is...?
06:48With clothes.
06:50That's it?
06:51But, yes, that is it. It was a really tough one.
06:5611 apiece.
06:57And now, Darren, numbers game.
06:59Thanks, Nick.
07:00Can I have two from the top and four small ones, please?
07:03You can indeed.
07:04Thank you, Darren.
07:05Two large, four little to kick us off.
07:07The numbers are...
07:15And the target, 903.
07:17903.
07:37CLOCK TICKS
07:49Darren?
07:51905.
07:53Steve?
07:54No, I didn't get it.
07:55No?
07:56No.
07:57905, then, Darren?
07:59Ten plus five plus three...
08:0218.
08:03..times the 50...
08:04900.
08:06..the other five for two away. Lovely.
08:08903, though, Rachel?
08:10It was there.
08:11If you say 25 minus five is 20.
08:15Ten divided by the other five is two.
08:18Use those for the 18, and then you can times by 50 again
08:21and you have a three left over for 903.
08:24APPLAUSE
08:28Well done, Rachel, as ever.
08:30Now, the score standing 18-11.
08:33Darren in the lead, and we turn to our first Tea Time teaser,
08:36which is Jim Boyler.
08:37And the clue...
08:41Did mild man used to wear these sort of trousers?
08:54APPLAUSE
08:57APPLAUSE
09:01Welcome back. I left with a clue.
09:03Did mild man used to wear these sort of trousers?
09:07How many sorts of trousers are there?
09:09Well, there are gore-blimey trousers.
09:11Remember the old Lonnie Donegan song, My Old Man's a Dustman?
09:14Gore-blimey trousers.
09:16What do you think, Susie? What's this gore-blimey?
09:18I think it's swearing.
09:20Gore-blimey itself is God blinding it, it's a euphemism.
09:23That's it, thank you.
09:26Now, if you'd like to become a Countdown contestant,
09:29you can email countdown at channel4.com
09:32to request an application form
09:34or write to us at contestantsapplications.
09:37Countdown leads LS31JS.
09:4218 plays 11, Darren on 18, and it's Steve's letters game.
09:47We'll go for a continent, please.
09:49Thank you, Steve. N.
09:51And another?
09:53T.
09:54And another?
09:57R.
09:58And another?
10:00S.
10:01And a vowel, please.
10:03U.
10:04And another?
10:06O.
10:08And another?
10:10I.
10:12And a consonant, please.
10:14N.
10:15And a final consonant.
10:17And a final T.
10:19Stand by.
10:24MUSIC PLAYS
10:50Well, Steve?
10:51Seven.
10:53Darren?
10:54Six.
10:55Your six?
10:56Unions.
10:58Steve?
10:59Tourist.
11:00And tourist.
11:01Yeah, well spotted.
11:02Very good.
11:03Very good.
11:04Can we match that, Nina?
11:05We matched it with Steve's tourist,
11:07but I think that's all we've got.
11:09Yeah, that's all we've got.
11:11Moving on, with a score of 18 apiece,
11:14we look to Darren, letters game, Darren.
11:17Continent, please, Rachel.
11:18Thank you, Darren.
11:20L.
11:21And another?
11:23W.
11:25And another?
11:27G.
11:28And a vowel, please.
11:30O.
11:31Another vowel.
11:33I.
11:34Vowel.
11:35E.
11:37And a consonant.
11:39M.
11:40And another consonant.
11:42Z.
11:44And a final vowel, please.
11:46And a final I.
11:48Stand by.
11:51Stand by.
12:21Darren?
12:22Just a four.
12:24Steve?
12:25Four.
12:26Darren's four.
12:27Mole.
12:28Mole, Steve?
12:29Glow.
12:30A glow mole.
12:33What have we in the corner?
12:34We can beat four, can we?
12:36I got a four.
12:37Ogle.
12:38But you did much better than that, didn't you?
12:40Well, there is a six there.
12:42Gwelo, G-W-E-I-L-O.
12:46It's a south-east Asian term for a foreigner,
12:48especially a westerner.
12:50It's from the Cantonese meaning ghost man.
12:52Gwelo.
12:53I always called it Gwelo in Hong Kong.
12:55Actually, it's a sort of unkind...
12:58Yeah.
12:5922 apiece.
13:00Steve, your numbers again.
13:02Off you go.
13:03One from the top and any other five, please.
13:05Thank you, Steve.
13:06One large, five little coming up.
13:08And for this round, you have nine, four, three, two, five,
13:16and a large on 100.
13:18And the target, 480.
13:20480.
13:49MUSIC STOPS
13:52Yeah, Steve?
13:54Sorry, I've written that down wrong.
13:56Oh, dear. What about Darren?
13:58481.
13:59One away.
14:01Maybe good enough. Off we go.
14:03Five times 100.
14:05500.
14:07Then two times three, plus four, plus nine.
14:1119.
14:13And then take that away from 500.
14:16811 away.
14:18Very well done. But 480, Rachel, is that possible?
14:22Yes, Nick, there are a few ways for this.
14:24You could have said 100 minus 496 and times it by five.
14:30Oh, look at that. Perfect.
14:32APPLAUSE
14:35Thank you, Rachel. 29 to 22.
14:37Darren has taken a sudden lead as we turn to Nina.
14:40Nina, Natasha Kaplinsky once did you a favour.
14:45Yes, she probably saved my job, but she doesn't know it.
14:49Right.
14:50So, um, it wasn't that long ago.
14:53It was an average Monday morning
14:55and I popped to the hairdressers down the road
14:57to get my hair done for the week ahead.
15:00And when I got there, she was there.
15:03So I haven't seen her for quite a while.
15:05So we started chatting, the chat continued, the time ticked away,
15:09my appointment slot was kind of edging away.
15:12And my phone rang and we were deep into a conversation
15:15so I just ignored it.
15:17And we carried on chatting, the phone rang again
15:19and I suddenly thought, oh, it could be one of the children,
15:21something to do with the school, I'd better answer the phone.
15:23And it was work. And work was just, get back, royal.
15:27You've got seven minutes.
15:29OK, what does that mean?
15:31Anyway, just clear the hairdresser, run back to the offices,
15:34run downstairs to the studios.
15:37Something like three minutes to air now.
15:39Got no autocue, no script, my computer wasn't working.
15:43It was the royal engagement, so at this point,
15:46all I know is that Prince Harry is announcing
15:48that he's going to be engaged.
15:50It got to 30 seconds before air.
15:52And I'm thinking, all I know is my producer's in the gallery
15:56and he's going to tell me what the official statement is
15:58from the palace because I've got nothing to read,
16:01nothing to see, nothing to go for.
16:04So at ten seconds to air, everything sprung into life
16:07and there was the official statement from the palace.
16:10But the reason that Natasha Koplinsky saved my job
16:13was if she'd not been in there that morning,
16:16at that point I would have been knee-deep in water,
16:19getting my hair washed and I would have had to run out of the hairdressers,
16:22gone on air with shampoo-laden locks.
16:25It would have been utterly distracting for the viewers
16:28who just wanted me to tell them this rather wonderful news.
16:32Thank you to Natasha. Indeed. What a good story. Imagine!
16:41And now, Darren, it's your letters game.
16:44Thanks, Nick. Start with a consonant, please, Rachel.
16:46Thank you, Darren.
16:48G And another, please.
16:51T And another.
16:55R And a vowel, please.
16:59O And another vowel.
17:02A And another vowel.
17:05E And a consonant.
17:09N And another consonant.
17:13S And a final consonant, please.
17:17And a final M.
17:19Done by.
17:29CLOCK TICKS
17:51Darren? Seven.
17:53A seven. Steve?
17:55Six. Steve?
17:57Grotes. Grotes, indeed. Darren?
18:00Amongst. Amongst?
18:03Anything to match or improve on that? Nina, Susie?
18:06An eight garments.
18:09Yeah, that's very good.
18:11Yep, there's another eight. Angstrom.
18:13A-N-G-S-T-R-O-M.
18:16It is a unit of length equal to one hundred millionth of a centimetre,
18:19so it's used in wavelengths. Tiny.
18:22But there is a nine there. Oh, no.
18:25If you add an O to garments, you can have garmentos.
18:29People who work in the fashion industry,
18:31especially in fields regarded as being unglamorous. Garmentos.
18:35Really nice. Well done.
18:40Well done, Susie. That's extraordinary. Garmentos, indeed.
18:44Steve, your letters game. Start with a consonant, please.
18:47Thank you, Steve.
18:49S And another.
18:53C And another.
18:56S And another.
18:59P And a vowel, please.
19:02A And another.
19:05U And another.
19:09A Another.
19:12E And a final consonant, please.
19:16And a final R.
19:19Stand by.
19:23STAND BY
19:25MUSIC
19:50Steve?
19:52Seven.
19:54Darren?
19:55Seven.
19:56Steve?
19:57Saucers.
19:58Darren?
19:59Saucers.
20:01Do you want to pass it across to Steve so we can all...
20:05Lovely, thank you.
20:06..be sure.
20:07Now, then.
20:08Nina?
20:09Yeah, saucers, so a triple, a three-way snap there.
20:12But Susie got something.
20:14Oh, it's a nice French there. Still a seven.
20:16But aperçu is there.
20:18A-P-E-R-C with a cedilla, U-S.
20:20Comments or brief references.
20:22So if you make an entertaining or an illuminating point,
20:24you make an aperçu.
20:26But it hasn't got the cedilla.
20:28No, it's fine, we don't worry about accents often.
20:31You don't worry about it?
20:32We don't worry about them.
20:33Oh, right.
20:34We like cedillas, though.
20:35OK.
20:36And now, Darren, it's your numbers game.
20:38Thanks, Nick.
20:40Two large and four small, please.
20:42Thank you, Darren.
20:43Two from the top row, four not from the top row.
20:46And the four small ones are six, six, nine and four.
20:51And the large, 50 and 75.
20:54And this target, 300.
20:57Three, zero, zero.
21:16MUSIC PLAYS
21:31And, Darren?
21:32300.
21:33Yes, Steve.
21:34300.
21:35Let's get this over with fairly quickly.
21:37Darren?
21:38Six times 50.
21:40I didn't think I'd need this, yep.
21:42Well done.
21:43And?
21:4475 times four.
21:45Covered all bases.
21:47So, Darren will lead 53 to Steve's 39
21:50as we turn to our second tea time teaser,
21:52which is City, Sense and the Clue.
21:55It's most definitely required, said the bear.
21:58It's most definitely required, said the bear.
22:02MUSIC PLAYS
22:10CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
22:16I left you with the clue.
22:18It's most definitely required, said the bear.
22:21And the answer to that is...
22:24necessity.
22:26Necessity, the bear, necessities.
22:2853 to 39, Darren on 53.
22:31Steve, your letters again.
22:33Consonant, please.
22:35Thank you, Steve. S.
22:36And another?
22:38Q.
22:40And another?
22:42L.
22:43And another?
22:46R.
22:47And a vowel, please.
22:49O.
22:51And another?
22:52E.
22:53And another?
22:55O.
22:57And another?
22:59E.
23:01And a final consonant.
23:03And a final W.
23:06Countdown.
23:07MUSIC PLAYS
23:14MUSIC CONTINUES
23:37Well, Steve?
23:39Six.
23:41Darren?
23:42Six.
23:43Steve?
23:44Slower.
23:45And?
23:46Lowers.
23:47And lowers.
23:50Nina's nodding her head. Nothing more?
23:52No, exactly those, yeah.
23:54Those two.
23:55Beyond six.
23:56No bad thing.
23:5759 to 45.
23:58And now, Darren, it's your letters again.
24:00Consonant, please, Rachel.
24:01Thank you, Darren.
24:03S.
24:04And another?
24:06T.
24:08And another, please?
24:10R.
24:11And a vowel?
24:12O.
24:14And another vowel?
24:15A.
24:17Another vowel, please?
24:19E.
24:21And a consonant?
24:23D.
24:25And a consonant?
24:27P.
24:29And a final consonant, please.
24:32And a final N.
24:34Countdown.
24:36MUSIC PLAYS
24:41MUSIC CONTINUES
25:07Yes, Darren?
25:08An eight.
25:09An eight, Steve?
25:11A seven.
25:12And a seven. Your seven?
25:13Pardons.
25:15No, Darren.
25:16I've messed up. Sorry.
25:18Oh, dear.
25:19Nina, what do you think?
25:22We got a few eights.
25:24Notepads.
25:26Padronis.
25:28Members of the Mafia.
25:30Lots of Mafia godfathers, really.
25:32Pronated.
25:34The countdown favourite.
25:36Yes.
25:37Quite a few eights.
25:38Padronis?
25:39Yeah.
25:40OK. Thank you.
25:4159 to 52.
25:43Steve, you're still well in touch there.
25:45Let's pause for a second
25:47whilst Susie takes us on a wonderful Origins of Words trip.
25:52I had an email, Nick, from Kan Chan in Manchester
25:55who asked why we call the offspring of cats and dogs litters.
25:59And it's a good question.
26:01And you have to go back to the...
26:03Well, right back to the beginning.
26:06..the medieval meaning of litter, which was a bed,
26:09which is also preserved in French.
26:12You talk about bed as lily, so you'll find the same link there.
26:16And it goes all the way back to the Latin lectus,
26:19ultimately meaning the same thing.
26:21Now, it's generally to the modern sense of rubbish
26:24lying around in a public place.
26:26So that kind of litter took many centuries to develop.
26:29But the link is bedding that was made of straw and rushes
26:34by poorer people who would then discard it in the morning
26:37because they would consider it soiled and it would be thrown away.
26:40And we think that's where the idea of things that are disused
26:43and then put aside, that sort of modern sense of litter, came from.
26:48But to the animals, litter of animals, such as kittens,
26:51probably gets its name simply from the mother giving birth
26:54in a sheltered sleeping place that the cat makes its bed.
26:57So the link throughout is the ly in French, the bed.
27:01Beds turn up in other ways in English too
27:03and canopies that we might be offered at a drinks party
27:05also have beds at their heart.
27:07Because it all goes back to a Greek word, konopeion,
27:10which was an Egyptian couch with mosquito curtains.
27:13And that comes from konops, which is mosquito, or a gnat, indeed.
27:17And that word gave us canopy, of course, the same idea.
27:21But because the appetisers at those parties
27:23look a little bit like miniature beds with coverlets,
27:26if you like, the ingredients sitting on top,
27:28we decided to call them canopies,
27:30which have that link with canopy and the bed.
27:33And the word bastard, as in an illegitimate child,
27:36is probably from figuebaste in French,
27:38which meant a pack-saddle son,
27:40meaning a child that is conceived on an improvised bed
27:43because saddles were often used as makeshift beds while travelling.
27:46That's where that one comes from.
27:48And finally, two of my favourite words in the English language,
27:51because I use them quite a lot.
27:53Disania is the inability to get up in the morning, should you need it,
27:57and cleanomania is the irresistible urge to lie down.
28:02APPLAUSE
28:08Thank you. 59-52. Steve, let us go.
28:12Can I have a consonant, please?
28:14Thank you, Steve. V
28:16And another?
28:19T
28:20And another?
28:22G
28:23And another?
28:26V
28:27A vowel, please.
28:29I
28:30And another?
28:32E
28:33And another?
28:35A
28:38A consonant, please.
28:40D
28:41Another?
28:43And lastly, M.
28:45Stand by.
28:57CLOCK TICKS
29:17Yes, Steve?
29:19Five.
29:21Darren?
29:22Six.
29:23So, Steve, your five?
29:25Mated.
29:26Mated and...?
29:27Midget.
29:28And over in the corner, Nina, what do you reckon?
29:30We got baited.
29:32Yes.
29:33And a word we heard the other day, megabit, the return of megabit.
29:36Ah, megabit's back in all this glory.
29:3965-52.
29:41Darren, final letters game.
29:44Start with a consonant, please, Rachel.
29:46Thank you, Darren. X
29:48And another?
29:50K
29:51And another?
29:53S
29:55And another, please.
29:57F
29:59And a vowel, please.
30:00O
30:02Another vowel?
30:03E
30:04And another vowel?
30:06I
30:08And a consonant, please.
30:10D
30:12And a final consonant, please.
30:15And a final F.
30:17Stand by.
30:23CLOCK TICKS
30:49Well, Darren?
30:50Just a five.
30:52Steve?
30:53Five.
30:54And Darren's five.
30:56Foxed.
30:57Foxed, Steve.
30:58Foxes.
30:59And foxes.
31:02Very good.
31:04Now, Nina and Susie?
31:07So, we got foxed.
31:09Offies, is that right or is that slang?
31:12It's slang, there's a lot of slang in the dictionary.
31:14So, off licenses, offies, absolutely fine for six.
31:17And there was a seven there as well.
31:19Offside.
31:21Offside.
31:22The offside drew a 70, plays 57.
31:24Steve, final numbers game for you.
31:27One from the top and any other five, please, Rachel.
31:30One from the top, five small, no worries.
31:32And you need this to stay in the game.
31:34Thank you, Steve.
31:35Final numbers of the day are 6, 9, 10, 9, 2 and 75.
31:43And the target, 580.
31:45580.
31:50Well, Steve?
31:51Well, Steve?
31:52Well, Steve?
31:53Well, Steve?
31:54Well, Steve?
31:55Well, Steve?
31:56Well, Steve?
31:57Well, Steve?
31:58Well, Steve?
31:59Well, Steve?
32:00Well, Steve?
32:01Well, Steve?
32:02Well, Steve?
32:03Well, Steve?
32:04Well, Steve?
32:05Well, Steve?
32:06Well, Steve?
32:07Well, Steve?
32:08Well, Steve?
32:09Well, Steve?
32:10Well, Steve?
32:11Well, Steve?
32:12Well, Steve?
32:13Well, Steve?
32:14Well, Steve?
32:15Well, Steve?
32:16Well, Steve?
32:17Well, Steve?
32:18Well, Steve?
32:20No, I've gone wrong.
32:22Oh, dear.
32:23Darren?
32:24I lost it too, I'm afraid.
32:26Rachel?
32:27I only hope.
32:29580?
32:30Open goal.
32:31Yes, if you say 9 plus 2 plus 6 is 17.
32:3675 minus 17 is 58.
32:40And then just times it by 10.
32:42Yeah, not exactly an open goal.
32:46But beautifully executed for all that.
32:5072-57.
32:51Darren in the lead as we go into the final round.
32:54So, fingers on buzzers, gentlemen.
32:57Let's roll today's Countdown Conundrum.
33:04Darren?
33:05Humouring?
33:07Humouring, he said.
33:08Is he right?
33:10Here we go.
33:11Humouring, it is right.
33:13Well done.
33:17Well done, Darren.
33:18Three good wins.
33:20Took you a while to draw away, but you did in the end.
33:23And you got to 80.
33:24So, well done, Steve, for holding him back.
33:27Good man.
33:28Yeah, you played very well indeed.
33:29So, back to Andover with your goodie bag.
33:32And good luck with your spotting.
33:34Are you just interested in this International Space Station,
33:37or do stars and comets and all the rest of it interest you too?
33:41Yeah, I'm working my way through a few National Geographics
33:43at the moment on it.
33:45So, yeah, it's just a bit of an interest at the moment.
33:48Yeah, I think it's fascinating.
33:49Yeah.
33:50Excellent stuff.
33:51Well, travel safely.
33:52Thank you very much.
33:53And, Darren Findlay, well done.
33:55Three wins.
33:56We will look forward to seeing you again tomorrow.
33:58Thank you very much.
33:59Well done.
34:00Thank you very much.
34:01Nina, you're coming back tomorrow, aren't you?
34:02I am indeed.
34:03Now we're going to have to release you, sadly,
34:05until you can come back again.
34:06But let's make the most of it tomorrow again.
34:08Thank you so much.
34:09And Susie, of course, see you tomorrow.
34:10I'll be there.
34:11See you tomorrow, Rach.
34:12I want to know what website you have to sign up with
34:14to get those emails.
34:15Yeah, you just go onto the NASA website,
34:17but don't go out with your binoculars.
34:19I'll get myself a prop one.
34:21I think she's allowed, actually.
34:22We're allowed now.
34:23She's allowed.
34:24We'll see you tomorrow.
34:25See you tomorrow.
34:26Same time, same place, you'll be sure of it.
34:28A very good afternoon to you.
34:30Contact us by email at countdown at channel4.com,
34:34by Twitter at C4Countdown,
34:36or write to us at Countdown, Leeds, LS3, 1JS.
34:40You can also find our web page at channel4.com forward slash countdown.
35:06NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology

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