- 24/05/2025
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00:00♪
00:19APPLAUSE
00:31Good afternoon, and welcome to the Countdown studio.
00:33I read an article recently that surprised and shocked me a bit, really.
00:36It was about selfish drivers,
00:38and apparently there's a growing trend for people
00:41to park across two parking bays
00:44rather than confining their vehicle to one.
00:46And this is becoming really quite a thing now.
00:48It's an extraordinarily selfish thing to do.
00:50And people now are apparently taking photographs of the offending vehicle,
00:54which is straddling two parking bays,
00:56and naming and shaming the car and its driver, I guess.
01:00One chap responded by saying,
01:02I do it to prevent my car being damaged by clowns who can't park.
01:07I imagine you're a terribly good parker, aren't you?
01:10I'm all right. You're good? I've had no complaints.
01:14I've got to make an admission
01:17that whilst I am an excellent parker,
01:20with the assistance of an automatic parking assist mechanism,
01:25my dear Catherine, who also has assisted parking on her car
01:30but refuses to learn how to do it
01:32because she considers it to be frightening, is a poor parker.
01:36I'm not going to get involved in this argument.
01:38It's your battle, Nick.
01:40She won't be watching, don't worry.
01:42Now, who have we got?
01:43Geoff Clayton's back, Rachel.
01:45Transport planner from Bournemouth, now on four wins,
01:48having scored 116, which is your top score,
01:51which is pretty hot, I can tell you.
01:53But you're joined today by Martin McGrath,
01:56retired financial adviser from Falkirk,
01:59who broadcasts two internet radio shows.
02:01Is this a fairly new venture?
02:03Yes, it is for me. I've been doing this for about six months now.
02:07All right. Let's have a big round of applause for Martin Mack and Geoff Clayton.
02:11APPLAUSE
02:13And over in the corner, Susie, of course, joined once again.
02:18My word, that's a great colour.
02:20None other than Nina Hussain, of course,
02:23from the news desk to Countdown in one single move.
02:26Brilliant stuff. Welcome back.
02:28APPLAUSE
02:30Fabulous. All right.
02:32Now, Geoff Clayton, let us go.
02:34Thank you, Nick. Hello, Rachel. Hi, Geoff.
02:36Consonant, please. Thank you. Start today with D.
02:40And another.
02:44And a vowel.
02:47And another.
02:51Consonant.
02:55A vowel.
02:59Consonant.
03:03Consonant.
03:05C.
03:07And a consonant, please.
03:09And lastly, N.
03:12And here's the Countdown clock.
03:35CLOCK TICKS
03:45Yes, Geoff? Seven.
03:47A seven and...? A six.
03:50A six. And your six, Martin?
03:52Candle.
03:53Now then, Geoff? Unlaced.
03:55Very good. Unlaced.
03:57Can we beat it, Nina? We can.
03:59We got unlaced and candle.
04:01Very sad quad for a four and a dual,
04:04but no, unlaced is our top one for a seven.
04:07You can actually put a D on candle cos it's there as a verb.
04:11To candle, talking about a poultry breeder,
04:14is to test an egg for freshness or fertility
04:17by holding it up to the light.
04:19Really? Yes. How interesting.
04:21Geoff on seven and Martin, you have to score plenty of time.
04:24It's Martin's letters game now. Afternoon.
04:26Afternoon, Martin. Consonant, please.
04:28Thank you. Start with D.
04:31A vowel.
04:33I.
04:35Consonant, please.
04:37P.
04:39Consonant, please.
04:41R.
04:43A vowel.
04:45E.
04:47Another vowel, please.
04:49A.
04:51A consonant.
04:53V.
04:55And another consonant, please.
04:57T.
04:59And, to finish, I.
05:02Stand by.
05:30MUSIC STOPS
05:34Martin? A seven.
05:36A seven. Geoff? Seven.
05:38Martin? Private.
05:40And? Private.
05:42There we go. Compare notes.
05:44Any more privates?
05:46Yeah, add a D. Privated.
05:48Privated? Yes. Sounds strange.
05:50I know it is quite rare. Adjective meaning kept private or secret.
05:54Thank you. Privated. Anything else?
05:56Diaper for six, if you'd like that one.
05:58Oh, all right, but there's an eight.
06:0014 plays seven. Geoff on 14.
06:03Geoff's numbers game now.
06:05Can I have two from each of the second, third and fourth rows, please?
06:08You can, indeed. So, six little ones coming up for you.
06:11For the first time today, they are six, ten, seven,
06:16four, three and five.
06:20And the target, 458.
06:23Four, five, eight.
06:28MUSIC CONTINUES
06:54Geoff? Four, five, six.
06:56Two away. How about Martin?
06:58Four, five, seven.
07:00Martin, then?
07:03Six plus three is nine.
07:05Yep.
07:06Times five.
07:0745.
07:08Times ten.
07:09450.
07:10Plus the seven.
07:11Four, one away. Well done. Four, five, seven.
07:14Well done. Well done, that's a win.
07:16But 458?
07:18It could be done if you say six times ten is 60,
07:23plus five for 65,
07:26times that by seven for 455,
07:29and add on the three for 458.
07:31Oh, well done. Well done, Rachel.
07:33458.
07:35That's the way. But 14 points apiece now.
07:38That's a big win there, Martin. Well done.
07:42Tea time, teaser time?
07:44Let's have one. It's Todd Carter and the clue.
07:47He's always making disparaging remarks about my farming equipment.
07:51He's always making disparaging remarks about my farming equipment.
08:13Welcome back. I left with a clue.
08:15He's always making disparaging remarks about my farming equipment.
08:19And the answer to that one is detractor.
08:22Which I think is rather funny. Detractor.
08:25All right, 14 points apiece, and it's Martin's letters game.
08:30Consonant, please. Thank you, Martin.
08:33H.
08:35Vowel, please.
08:37E.
08:38Consonant.
08:40P.
08:42Consonant.
08:44F.
08:45Vowel.
08:47O.
08:49Another vowel, please.
08:51I.
08:53Consonant.
08:56T.
08:58Another consonant.
09:00S.
09:02And a vowel, please.
09:04And to finish, E.
09:06Stand by.
09:17CLOCK TICKS
09:38Yes, Martin? A six.
09:40A six. Geoff? Five.
09:42And your five? Foist.
09:44Martin? Fetish.
09:46Fetish. Very nice. And fetish, yeah.
09:49Yeah. Very good. Well done.
09:51Into a six-point lead as well. That's pretty impressive.
09:54Now, Nina?
09:56A seven. Poetise.
09:58To write or speak in a poetic style or manner.
10:01And two different spellings of this.
10:03The Oxford way is usually I-Z-E, but you can have it I-S-E.
10:07I-S-E. Poetise. Yes.
10:09Very good. All right. So, Martin on 20, Geoff on 14.
10:13We turn to Geoff for letters again. Geoff?
10:15Consonant, please. Thank you, Geoff.
10:17L.
10:19And another.
10:21R.
10:23And a vowel.
10:25O. And another.
10:27A.
10:29Consonant.
10:31T.
10:33A vowel.
10:35O.
10:37Consonant.
10:39N.
10:42Another A.
10:44And another vowel, please.
10:46And, lastly, E.
10:49Stand by.
11:11MUSIC PLAYS
11:22Geoff? Seven.
11:24A seven, six.
11:26And a six from Martin. Martin?
11:28A toner.
11:30And, Geoff?
11:32Taloner. Well, I'm not going to be very popular
11:34because neither a toner, an atoner, or a taloner
11:38is in the dictionary, I'm afraid.
11:40There are two agent nouns that aren't specified,
11:42which means I can't allow them.
11:44Oh, a little luck. All right.
11:46So, it stays at 20 to 14 in Martin's favour.
11:49But what else have we got in the corner? Nina?
11:51So, they could have had tonal or atonal.
11:55Yes. Yes.
11:57And, last minute, seven.
11:59Also, an autolan.
12:01O-R-T-O-L-A-N.
12:03A small Eurasian songbird, formerly eaten as a delicacy.
12:06Unfortunately, birds in a pie. Autolan.
12:09Autolan, indeed. Thank you.
12:11So, Martin, shall we have a numbers game now?
12:15Two large and four small, please.
12:17Thank you, Martin. Two from the top.
12:19Four little coming up for you for this round.
12:21The small ones are ten, five.
12:24Another ten and seven.
12:26And the big ones, 25 and 75.
12:30And the target, 957.
12:32957.
12:39CLOCK TICKS
13:04Martin, too far away.
13:06Geoff? 957.
13:08Take it away.
13:1075 plus 25, 100.
13:12Yep.
13:14Minus five is 95.
13:16It is, indeed.
13:18Multiply by ten for 950.
13:20And add seven.
13:22957. Well done.
13:24APPLAUSE
13:26Well done.
13:28Well done, Geoff. And much needed, too.
13:30So, you're four ahead now as we turn to Nina.
13:33Nina, you work on live television.
13:36It's a huge television, all right?
13:38Now, this is a scary place to be.
13:40And not too much room for a slip-up.
13:44Yeah, sometimes the most stressful moments
13:47are actually not on live TV.
13:49If you're in a live environment, what happens on live TV
13:52happens on live TV, and you have to get on with it.
13:54There's the build-up to the programme.
13:56So, one of the main programmes I do
13:58is the London News that goes on air at six o'clock.
14:01So, one of the worst moments recently,
14:04and it's about 5.15pm.
14:06And we share a studio with the National News as well.
14:11And we've got a live trail coming up.
14:14So, we've got to do the live trail.
14:17I've got a pre-recorded interview with Forrest Whitaker,
14:20the A-list actor he's in to talk about the new Star Wars film
14:23at the time.
14:25And on top of that, so, two deadlines
14:27and a live programme to do at six o'clock,
14:30and the evening news team coming in at 6.30pm,
14:33an unusual occurrence where we're sharing the studio
14:35with a charity group, the Disasters Emergency Committee,
14:39a really important charity appeal.
14:41And they're in with a multitude of people
14:44to film a very short charity appeal.
14:47In walks in Martin Clunes,
14:49who's going to be the face of said appeal,
14:51and the director's screaming in my ear
14:53and the floor manager's ear,
14:54right, they've got two minutes.
14:55We've got this live trail coming up.
14:57We can't miss the trail.
14:58We've got Forrest Whitaker waiting in the wings.
15:00I'm afraid, guys, you've only got two minutes.
15:02So Martin Clunes, ever the professional,
15:04clearly he's seen the script but not on autocue,
15:07but he says, oh, just go for it, it'll be absolutely fine.
15:09And he nails it in one take.
15:11He's just pitch perfect and gets every word absolutely brilliantly.
15:15The director's like, right, great, it's a wrap.
15:17And the director that's directing him on the floor is like,
15:20no, I need another few takes, once more with feeling.
15:23You know how he goes.
15:24The director's screaming, we're going to lose Forrest Whitaker.
15:26He's going to go to his next interview.
15:28We've got a live trail coming up.
15:29You've got one minute.
15:30You can do one more take.
15:31You've got one minute.
15:32So Martin Clunes composes himself and starts talking.
15:35The tension is incredible.
15:37All these people with different priorities having to do their thing.
15:40And all of a sudden, there's this noise around the studio
15:46and it's the Benny Hill theme music.
15:48I'm sure you all remember that.
15:50You can hear it.
15:51You'll have it in your head for the rest of the day.
15:53And Martin Clunes, suddenly he goes red and he pauses
15:59and then he starts to giggle and he says, I'm really sorry, guys.
16:03Not only is that my phone, but that's my ringtone.
16:06And that's the moment Benny Hill saved me from a very, very,
16:10very stressful day in the studio.
16:12Brilliant.
16:13Everybody just collapsed, I guess.
16:15Everyone just, the tension just disappeared in that moment,
16:18thanks to Benny Hill.
16:20Saved by Benny.
16:21Well done.
16:25Very good.
16:26Very good.
16:2724 points to 20.
16:28And now, Geoff, it's letters time.
16:31Consonant, please.
16:32Thank you, Geoff.
16:33T
16:35And another.
16:37D
16:38And a vowel.
16:40U
16:41And another.
16:43E
16:44Consonant.
16:46W
16:48A vowel.
16:50A
16:51Consonant.
16:53R
16:55Consonant.
16:57G
17:00And a vowel, please.
17:01And, lastly, U.
17:04Stand by.
17:28MUSIC STOPS
17:36Yes, Geoff?
17:37Six.
17:38And, Martin?
17:39A five.
17:40Your five?
17:41Wager.
17:43Geoff?
17:44Grated.
17:45Grated.
17:46Nina? Susie?
17:47Susie's got a seven, haven't you?
17:49Yes.
17:50Orgared. As in, not orgared well.
17:52Yeah.
17:53To portend, predict a good or a bad outcome.
17:55So you can use the two U's.
17:56A-U-G-U-R-E-D.
17:58Orgared well, yeah.
17:59Orgared.
18:00All right.
18:0130 plays 20.
18:02And what shall we do?
18:03Martin?
18:04Letters again.
18:05Consonant, please.
18:06Thank you, Martin.
18:07R
18:09A vowel.
18:11E
18:12And a consonant.
18:15D
18:16Another consonant, please.
18:19S
18:20A vowel.
18:22I
18:24Consonant.
18:26T
18:28Consonant.
18:30G
18:32A vowel.
18:35U
18:36And a consonant, please.
18:38And, lastly, C.
18:40And the clock starts now.
18:54CLOCK TICKS
19:13Martin?
19:14Eight.
19:15And eight. And, Geoff?
19:16Eight.
19:18Martin?
19:19Creditors.
19:20And, Shem?
19:21Or creditors.
19:24Creditors.
19:27Can we beat it?
19:28More of the same over here. More chopped vegetables.
19:31Yeah. That's it?
19:32That's it for us, yes.
19:34All right, thank you. Raw carrots.
19:36And it's ten points now, 38-28,
19:40as we turn to Geoff for the next numbers game.
19:43Capital T, please, Rachel. Three large.
19:45Thank you, Geoff. Half and half.
19:47Three big, three little.
19:49And the three little ones are eight, eight, six.
19:53And the large ones, 100, 50 and 75.
19:58And the target, 873.
20:00873.
20:20CLOCK TICKS
20:33Geoff? 873.
20:35And Martin?
20:36873.
20:38Thank you, Geoff.
20:39100 times eight is 800.
20:41Yep.
20:42Add the 75, 875.
20:44Then the other eight. Minus six is two.
20:47Lovely. 873.
20:49And Martin?
20:50Same way.
20:51Yes, it is.
20:52There we are. All right.
20:57Well done. 48 plays 38.
21:00Still a ten-point lead for Geoff
21:02as we go into our second tea time teaser,
21:04which is half glint.
21:06And the clue, there's half a glint coming through the curtains.
21:09It's getting dark.
21:10There's half a glint coming through the curtains.
21:13It's getting dark.
21:15APPLAUSE
21:30Welcome back. I left you with the clue.
21:32There's half a glint coming through the curtains.
21:34It's getting dark.
21:35And the answer to that one is nightfall.
21:38Nightfall.
21:39So, 48 plays 38.
21:41Geoff in the lead and it's Martin's letters game.
21:44Martin.
21:45Consonant, please.
21:46Thank you, Martin.
21:47N.
21:48Vowel.
21:50I.
21:51Another consonant, please.
21:53R.
21:54Vowel.
21:56E.
21:57Consonant.
21:59B.
22:01Consonant.
22:03L.
22:05Consonant.
22:07X.
22:09Vowel.
22:11I.
22:13And a consonant, please.
22:15And the last one.
22:16F.
22:17Countdown.
22:43MUSIC
22:49Martin.
22:50Five.
22:51A five, Geoff?
22:52Five.
22:53Martin.
22:54Fibre.
22:55And?
22:56Fixer.
22:57And fixer.
22:58Can we do better?
23:00A six.
23:01Elixir.
23:02One of those beautifully sounding and meaning words as well.
23:05Yes.
23:06It looks gorgeous and it sounds gorgeous.
23:08You're right.
23:09Magical or medicinal potion.
23:10Goes back to the alchemists.
23:13And their experiments with certain powders.
23:15It's related to Xerox, in fact, meaning dry in Greek.
23:19All right.
23:20So, 53 plays 43.
23:22Geoff on 53.
23:23Geoff, your letters again.
23:25Consonant, please.
23:26Thank you, Geoff.
23:28L.
23:29And another.
23:32W.
23:33And a vowel.
23:35A.
23:36And another.
23:38E.
23:39Consonant.
23:40S.
23:42Vowel.
23:44O.
23:46Consonant.
23:48R.
23:50Consonant.
23:52T.
23:54And a vowel, please.
23:55And the last one.
23:57A.
23:59Stand by.
24:10MUSIC PLAYS
24:32Geoff?
24:33Six.
24:34A six.
24:35Martin?
24:36A six also.
24:37Geoff?
24:38Waters.
24:39And?
24:40Trolls.
24:41Trolls, absolutely fine.
24:42Yep.
24:43Can we take it further?
24:44Nina?
24:45We can.
24:46A seven.
24:47Trowels.
24:48Yeah.
24:49And a second seven.
24:50I think you said this is a lovely word.
24:52Wastrels.
24:53Not such a good thing to be, a wastrel.
24:55Complete wastrel.
24:56Good for nothing.
24:57Yeah.
24:58That's it?
24:59That's it.
25:00All right, well done, you two.
25:01And it's 59 to 49, still ten points in it,
25:03as we turn to Susie and her origins of words.
25:06Susie?
25:07Well, I'm going to look back to a single word
25:10which, for the Romans, meant daytime
25:12and how that spread out into various words in our own language, in English.
25:17And you may remember, Nick,
25:19that dismal goes back to the Latin dies mali,
25:23which meant bad days.
25:25And these were two days of each month
25:28that the Romans singled out as being particularly unlucky,
25:32so they would never plan any important days
25:34on that particular day in the calendar, date in the calendar.
25:38It was all based on ancient calculations of Egyptian astrologers,
25:41so even they were looking right back to predictions made before them.
25:46But dies mali were the bad days,
25:48and that gave us the word dismal today.
25:52But from dies came diurnalis, which meant during the day.
25:56Of course, diurnal means very much the same thing today.
26:00And diurnal, over the years,
26:03as so often happens in English through change,
26:05actually became journal.
26:08Journal was first applied to a book listing the times of daily prayers,
26:13daily being key here because it goes back to that idea of a day.
26:17And then the use of the word to mean a personal diary,
26:21diary again goes back to that ultimate root,
26:23which, in theory, you filled in every day,
26:26came in at about the beginning of the 17th century in English.
26:30And journal, meaning a daily newspaper,
26:32which actually was an account of public events
26:34rather than just the personal ones that you would record in your diary,
26:38came a little bit later.
26:40But again, they were the events of the day,
26:42and journalists record the events of that particular day,
26:45again going all the way back to that Latin word dies.
26:48A journey as well, if we undertake a journey,
26:51originally in medieval times, that would last just one day,
26:55so people would talk about a day's journey, for example.
26:59And journeymen were used today as well for a worker or a sports player
27:03who is reliable, perhaps not particularly outstanding,
27:06they are considered to be journeymen.
27:08This goes back to the Middle Ages,
27:10and it was the name for someone who'd served their apprenticeship
27:13but wasn't yet a master or highly skilled in their craft.
27:16They still worked for someone else.
27:18They got their name from the fact that they too were paid by the day.
27:21APPLAUSE
27:24Very good.
27:28Excellent, Susie, thank you. Wonderful.
27:3059-49, Geoff's in the lead, and what shall we do?
27:33Martin, letters again.
27:35Consonant, please.
27:36Thank you, Martin.
27:38S
27:39Vowel.
27:42I
27:43Another consonant, please.
27:46L
27:47Another consonant.
27:50M
27:51A vowel.
27:53O
27:54Consonant.
27:56P
27:58Consonant.
28:00B
28:02Vowel, please.
28:04I
28:06And a consonant.
28:08And, lastly, L.
28:11And here's the Countdown Clock.
28:23CLOCK TICKS
28:45Yes, Martin?
28:46A five.
28:47A five. Geoff?
28:48Five.
28:49Martin?
28:50Boils.
28:51And...?
28:52Poles.
28:53And poles.
28:55Can we go beyond five?
28:57We had limboes, the limbo dances, but...
29:00Yeah.
29:01..that was it for six.
29:02Limboes, you can pluralise it?
29:04You can, yes. The plural is just simply OS.
29:07Limboes.
29:08Yeah.
29:09Hmm, all right.
29:10If you insist. 64-54.
29:12And, Geoff, final letters game for you.
29:15Consonant, please.
29:18P
29:19And another.
29:21R
29:22And a vowel.
29:24E
29:25And another.
29:27O
29:28A consonant.
29:31N
29:32A vowel.
29:34I
29:36Consonant.
29:38N
29:40Consonant.
29:42Z
29:45And a consonant, please.
29:47And, lastly, another M.
29:49Stand by.
30:20Geoff?
30:21Seven.
30:22A seven? Martin?
30:24I'll try a seven.
30:26Geoff?
30:27Pommier.
30:28And...?
30:29Pommier.
30:32Now, then, how do we get on?
30:34Say it's funny. P-O-M-M-I-E-R.
30:36Not there, I'm afraid.
30:39Pommie, Australian term for us, is actually capitalised,
30:43so you can't have that, and there's no pommie as an adjective, I'm afraid.
30:46Sorry.
30:47I'd like... Nina, what can we have, I wonder?
30:49Well, we can have my zen for a pathetic three.
30:54That's a good word, though.
30:56A lovely state of what I'm not in right now.
30:59A prime.
31:00Yeah.
31:01Not in that state either, personally, for a five.
31:04The best we could do, Nick, was mopier for six.
31:07Moping around. Mopier than thou.
31:10All right.
31:1164 to 54, into the final numbers game.
31:15Martin?
31:16One large and the rest small, please.
31:18Thank you, Martin.
31:19And a possible crucial conundrum coming up, we shall see.
31:22One large, five small are...
31:244, 2, 3, another 4, 1,
31:29and the large, 175,
31:31and the target, 665.
31:34665.
31:46MUSIC PLAYS
32:07Martin?
32:08666.
32:10666, Geoff?
32:12666.
32:13Both of you, Mark of the Beast.
32:1675 minus 1, 74.
32:204 plus 3 plus 2 is 9.
32:23Yep.
32:24Multiply them together.
32:26666, one away.
32:28And Geoff?
32:29Same method.
32:30Same way?
32:31Yep.
32:32All right.
32:33And Rachel, 665?
32:34Yeah, a couple of ways.
32:35If you get the nine a different way,
32:37with 4 minus 1 is 3,
32:39times by 75, 225,
32:42then you can take away 4 for 221,
32:45times by the other 3 for 663,
32:49and you have a 2 left over.
32:51665.
32:52Right down the bottom.
32:53Well done.
32:54APPLAUSE
32:56Well done, Rachel.
32:58So here we are indeed, 71 to 61,
33:00which means only one thing,
33:02that we're about to go into a crucial countdown conundrum.
33:05Fingers on buzzers.
33:06Let's roll that crucial countdown conundrum.
33:10BELL RINGS
33:11Wow, Geoff.
33:12Appointed.
33:13Appointed. Let's see whether you're right.
33:16Appointed. Well done.
33:18APPLAUSE
33:23Well done.
33:25Fantastic.
33:26But I've got to tell you, Martin McGrath,
33:28you know, you held him up.
33:30You held him up.
33:32And you took the lead for a while as well.
33:34So he's not best pleased with himself.
33:36He's not best pleased with himself.
33:3861 to 81, 20 points in it.
33:40He's always scored over 100,
33:42so you did a magnificent job there.
33:45Back to Falkirk with you, back to your radio show,
33:47taking this goodie bag with you,
33:49and our very best wishes and congratulations.
33:52All right.
33:53Nonetheless, Geoff Clayton, that's five wins.
33:56Well done, well done, well done.
33:58You had a few worrying moments.
34:01There will be a thorough investigation.
34:03Oh, dear, well, don't be too hard on yourself.
34:05All right, well done. We'll see you tomorrow.
34:07See you tomorrow, Nick.
34:08See you tomorrow.
34:09And we'll see Nina tomorrow, and Sue's yours, of course.
34:12See you then.
34:13All right, we look forward to it.
34:14Good game, very good game.
34:16Rachel, what do you reckon?
34:17I like it, cos we're not just picking one big,
34:19we've got a whole array of number selections.
34:21Thank you, Geoff.
34:22Well done.
34:23See you tomorrow.
34:24See you tomorrow.
34:25Same time, same place, you'll be sure of it,
34:27a very good afternoon.
34:28APPLAUSE
34:29You can contact the programme by email at countdown at channel4.com,
34:32by Twitter at c4countdown,
34:34or write to us at countdownleads ls31js.
34:38You can also find our webpage at channel4.com forward slash countdown.
34:45Views to take the monarchy forward.
34:47Will they make or break the dynasty?
34:49Where's it all going for the Royal House of Windsor?
34:51That's at nine.
34:52And they swap Glasgow for Spain.
34:54Well, it's definitely warmer, you have to admit,
34:56but now they want another change.
34:58Sun, sea and selling houses, weekdays at four.
35:0215-1 next.
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