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  • 25/05/2025

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00:00This programme contains strong language and adult humour.
00:03APPLAUSE
00:06CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
00:28Good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown studio.
00:31I don't know whether you've stumbled across the same bizarre story
00:34that I stumbled across recently.
00:36It was about a carer that went to a rescue centre in the States.
00:40It was in New Jersey, actually,
00:42where the carer adopted a young blind goat and took it home
00:49and all went well for a couple of days.
00:52But suddenly the goat became very, very nervous
00:55if the carer left the room
00:57and it would run around the room crying, bleating.
01:00And this is very distressing, of course.
01:02For one reason or another, it's not altogether clear why,
01:06but the carer decided to dress up the crying blind goat
01:11in a fancy dress duck outfit.
01:15And much to her surprise, the goat quietened down.
01:19Completely relaxed.
01:21As soon as the outfit was removed, it would be off crying in distress.
01:26It's not extraordinary.
01:28Very bizarre. Very.
01:30I began to think of all the animals that we've had
01:33and I can't actually, candidly, think of anything that any of them did
01:37that was anything extraordinary.
01:39But you had a series of cats. Oh, yes.
01:41Heavyweight cats. Oh, we've had all sorts.
01:43But it's more my mum that that story reminds me of
01:46because she works for a horse charity, Horse and Ponies,
01:49and she frequently dresses up like a horse.
01:52She never runs around the lounge crying or anything like that,
01:55but she is very placid when she's in her horse costumes.
01:58She's got about four different style horse heads
02:02and for Christmas I got her one of those...
02:04It's designed for kids, so when I took it to the tool,
02:07a lady went, oh, that would be great for my nephew.
02:09I said, it's for my mum.
02:10And it goes round the waist and it's got a horse's head here
02:13and the leg's there and you kind of hold it.
02:15What does she do with all this?
02:16Just draws attention while she's trying to raise money and raise awareness.
02:19Ah, right. Well, that makes sense, I believe. Yes.
02:21Well, I hope this little blind goat in New Jersey
02:25gets some psychiatric attention before too long.
02:28Who have we got with us? We've got Geoff Clayton back.
02:30Well done. Today's a big day for you.
02:32Don't relax.
02:34You're on seven wins and if you come through today,
02:37you'll be an OctoChamp and that's a great honour
02:40and a great achievement, actually.
02:42But first of all, you've got to get past Hassit Raja,
02:45an economic researcher from London,
02:48who has climbed Kilimanjaro.
02:50We were talking earlier on,
02:52the number of contestants that come on to Countdown
02:55that have climbed Kilimanjaro is extraordinary
02:58and I think we're going to have to do some analysis.
03:00There must be some sort of correlation between the two.
03:03Where did you do it?
03:04I did it a long time ago in my younger, slimmer days.
03:08It's a mountain which is trekable.
03:12You don't need any climbing skills.
03:15So that's why a lot of people do it
03:17and also it's the highest point in Africa,
03:19so that's what attracts a lot of people.
03:21Well, you're very welcome here.
03:23Let's have a big round of applause for Jeff and Hassit.
03:33And over in the corner on this Monday, we have Susie Dent, of course,
03:36and we've dragged her back,
03:38the wonderful newsreader and journalist Nina Hossain.
03:40Welcome back.
03:46Now, Jeff, you know the score.
03:48You know the score.
03:49Let us go.
03:51Hello, Rachel.
03:52Hi again, Jeff.
03:53Consonant, please.
03:54Thank you. Start the week with T.
03:56And another.
03:58P.
03:59And a vowel.
04:01I.
04:02And another.
04:04E.
04:05A consonant.
04:07M.
04:09Vowel.
04:11I.
04:12Consonant.
04:14Y.
04:16Consonant.
04:19N.
04:21And a consonant, please.
04:22And lastly, T.
04:24And here comes the countdown clock.
04:49CLOCK TICKS
04:57Yes, Jeff?
04:58Five.
04:59A five. Hassit?
05:00Six.
05:01A six?
05:03Let's go to Jeff, then.
05:04Minty.
05:05Minty. Hassit?
05:06Intent.
05:07Erm...
05:09No, not...
05:10You might have misheard an N for an N,
05:12but, yeah, you need two Ns for that. Sorry.
05:14Bad luck. Very bad luck.
05:16What have we got in the corner?
05:18Nina and Susie?
05:20Susie found a seven. Impiety.
05:22Impiety, yes. A lack of reverence.
05:24Or, indeed, piety. Impiety.
05:26Yeah. Lack of piety, indeed.
05:28Jeff on five, and we turn to Hassit.
05:30Letters game, Hassit.
05:31Good afternoon, Rachel.
05:32Afternoon, Hassit.
05:33Can I have a consonant, please?
05:35You can, thank you. Start with N.
05:38Another consonant.
05:40S.
05:41Another consonant.
05:43R.
05:45Vowel.
05:46U.
05:48Vowel.
05:49A.
05:52Vowel.
05:54E.
05:56Consonant.
05:58D.
06:04Consonant.
06:07F.
06:10And vowel, please.
06:11And the last one, O.
06:13Stand by.
06:19MUSIC
06:46Hassit.
06:47Six.
06:48A six, Jeff.
06:49Eight.
06:50And eight. Hassit.
06:51Fonder.
06:52And...
06:53Founders.
06:54Founders.
06:55Very good.
06:56Very good.
06:59Good start, Jeff. Good start.
07:01Nina.
07:02No, we found founders, too, so congratulations, Jeff, on that one.
07:06Anything else?
07:07Fondues.
07:08Oh, fondues.
07:09A lack of fondues.
07:10F for seven.
07:11All right.
07:12And now, Jeff, it's the first numbers game.
07:15Two from each of the second, third and fourth, please.
07:18So, six little ones to start the week.
07:20Thank you, Jeff.
07:21And for the first time, they are six.
07:24Another six.
07:25Four.
07:26Nine.
07:27Two.
07:28And ten.
07:30And the target, 756.
07:32756.
07:34MUSIC
07:44MUSIC
08:05Yes, Jeff?
08:06756, Nick.
08:07And Hassit?
08:08760.
08:09760.
08:10So, Jeff?
08:12Ten plus four is 14.
08:14Yep.
08:15Multiply it by nine for 126.
08:17126.
08:18And multiply that by six.
08:19Perfect. 756.
08:21Yeah, very good. 756.
08:25Good start, there's plenty of time for Hassit
08:27as we turn to our first Tea Time teaser, which is Got Inside?
08:31And the clue, what you've got inside your stomach can help with this.
08:35What you've got inside your stomach can help with this.
08:38MUSIC
08:43APPLAUSE
08:53Welcome back.
08:54I left you with the clue, what you've got inside your stomach
08:57can help with this.
08:59Can help with your digestion.
09:01Digestion.
09:03So, 23 points to Jeff.
09:05Hassit yet to start, but plenty of time, don't panic.
09:09It's your letters game.
09:12Consonant, please, Rachel.
09:14Thank you, Hassit. S.
09:16Another consonant.
09:18W.
09:20Another consonant.
09:22S.
09:24Vowel.
09:26E.
09:28Vowel.
09:30O.
09:32Vowel.
09:34A.
09:37Consonant.
09:39N.
09:43Consonant.
09:45T.
09:47Vowel.
09:49And the last one.
09:51E.
09:53Stand by.
09:55MUSIC
10:10MUSIC
10:23And how many letters did you get?
10:25Seven.
10:26Seven and...?
10:27And seven.
10:28Two sevens. And your word?
10:30Witness.
10:31Witness and...?
10:32Wetness.
10:33And wetness. Suzie?
10:35Oh, unfortunately, there's no I in the selection.
10:38Wetness is absolutely fine, but can't do witness, I'm afraid.
10:41Bad luck, bad luck. Sorry.
10:43Now, Nina.
10:45I got a season, which is nowhere near as good as a seven, obviously,
10:49and we found senates for all.
10:51Yeah, the senates. Yeah, not bad.
10:54All right. So, where shall we go?
10:56Jeff, letters game.
10:58Consonant, please.
10:59Thank you, Jeff.
11:01N.
11:02And another.
11:04S.
11:05And a vowel.
11:07O.
11:08And another.
11:09E.
11:11Consonant.
11:13G.
11:15Vowel.
11:17I.
11:19Consonants.
11:20M.
11:22Consonant.
11:24L.
11:26And a consonant, please.
11:28And lastly, R.
11:30Stand by.
11:31MUSIC
11:38MUSIC
12:01Yes, Jeff?
12:02Eight.
12:03An eight. Hassett?
12:04Seven.
12:05And that seven?
12:06Thank you. Jeff?
12:07Gremlins.
12:08Gremlins. Oh, yes.
12:10Gremlins in the works.
12:12Great words.
12:18And Nina?
12:19Yeah, we got the gremlins.
12:20We get them in the TV studios all the time, don't we?
12:22Indeed.
12:23And Susie, you got...?
12:25Re-souling. Not as nice as gremlins.
12:27Re-souling, all right.
12:28Thank you. All right.
12:30And now, Hassett, it's your numbers game.
12:33Can I have one large and five small d's?
12:36You can indeed, thank you, Hassett.
12:38One big one, five little ones coming up,
12:40and they are...
12:42Eight, nine, six, another six,
12:46four and 100.
12:48And the target...
12:50404.
12:51404.
12:53MUSIC
13:04MUSIC
13:23Hassett?
13:24404.
13:25404 and...?
13:26404.
13:27Thank you. Hassett?
13:28606 is one.
13:30Yep.
13:31Add to the 100.
13:32101.
13:33Times four.
13:34Perfect. 404.
13:36Thank you, Geoff.
13:37The same.
13:38There we go.
13:39All right, well done.
13:44Very good. 48 plays 10.
13:46And now we turn to Nina.
13:47Nina, I hear you've got a big sporting challenge coming up.
13:50Yeah, I mean, it pales into insignificance
13:52if you compare it to Hassett climbing Kilimanjaro,
13:55an amazing feat that I'm going to try later this month
13:58to run the London Marathon.
14:00This is a biggie for me because I'm not a natural-born runner
14:04and what I'm going to attempt to do is schlep round the course.
14:07But I've managed to get a posse of friends at work and at home
14:10to do it at the same time.
14:12And my real big motivation is my husband has signed up to do it.
14:16He's never run 10K more than that before,
14:19so we're at the same kind of level when we started.
14:22And we're going to run it just one year
14:24and try to get to the end of the course.
14:26Have you done it?
14:27No.
14:28Will you do it with me?
14:30There's time.
14:31I'd love to. I'll do it in my head.
14:34But I don't think I could possibly do it.
14:36Who is proving to be the better long-distance runner
14:39between you and your husband?
14:41Well, so far, me,
14:43but I am sure on the day he will just smash it
14:46and I'll be left behind doing my schlepping.
14:48Is that even a word?
14:49Schlep, yeah.
14:50Schlep is a proper word, says Susie.
14:52But I'm doing it for a very important charity,
14:54which I must just mention.
14:56I'm doing it for Whiz Kids,
14:58which is a charity that gets state-of-the-art wheelchairs
15:01for children, gives them a real sense of autonomy and independence.
15:05And often they have to wait years sometimes
15:07for a wheelchair on the NHS.
15:09So this is a brilliant little charity
15:11who provides that independence for children and teenagers
15:14across the UK.
15:16Good luck to you and good luck to Whiz Kids.
15:19All right, well done.
15:20APPLAUSE
15:23Well done.
15:25Now, 48 plays ten and it's Geoff's letters game.
15:29Geoff.
15:30Consonant, please, Rachel.
15:32Thank you, Geoff.
15:33T
15:34And another.
15:36J
15:37And a vowel.
15:39E
15:40And another.
15:42A
15:43Consonant.
15:45R
15:47A vowel.
15:49E
15:50Consonant.
15:52C
15:54Consonant.
15:56L
15:58And consonant.
15:59And the last one.
16:00T
16:01And the clock starts now.
16:20MUSIC PLAYS
16:34Geoff.
16:35Eight.
16:36An eight, how's it?
16:37Eight.
16:38Thank you, Geoff.
16:39Raclette.
16:40Now, raclette as well.
16:42There we go.
16:43Very good.
16:44Well done.
16:45What news, Nina?
16:46What news?
16:47I don't think we got to the heady heights of an eight.
16:49We got a seven with clatter, a noisy clatter.
16:52Yes.
16:53A treacle is also there.
16:55But love, raclette.
16:56Very good.
16:5756 plays 18 now and it's Hassett's turn again with the letters.
17:02Hassett.
17:03Consonant, please, Rachel.
17:05Z
17:06N
17:07Consonant, please.
17:10Z
17:12Consonant.
17:14D
17:16Vowel.
17:17Vowel.
17:19O
17:21Vowel.
17:23U
17:25Vowel.
17:27I
17:29Consonant.
17:31B
17:33Consonant.
17:35L
17:40Consonant, please.
17:41And the last one.
17:42P
17:44Stand by.
17:45MUSIC PLAYS
17:48MUSIC CONTINUES
18:15Hassett.
18:16Hassett.
18:17A five only.
18:18A five and?
18:19And five.
18:20Hassett.
18:21Bound.
18:22And pound.
18:23Bound and pound.
18:24Yes.
18:25Did you do better?
18:26A silky six.
18:28Dupion.
18:29Dupion.
18:30Yeah.
18:31A rough, slubbed silk fabric woven from the threads of double cocoons.
18:37Brilliant.
18:3861 playing 23.
18:40And now, Geoff, it's your numbers game.
18:43Could I have an inverted L, three large?
18:45You can indeed.
18:46Three from the top and three little ones.
18:49Thank you, Geoff.
18:50And this time your small ones are nine, five and ten.
18:54And the big three, 50, 100 and 75.
18:59And your target, 981.
19:02981.
19:03MUSIC PLAYS
19:15MUSIC CONTINUES
19:34Yes, Geoff?
19:35980.
19:36980, Hassett.
19:37980 as well.
19:38Both of you. OK.
19:40Geoff?
19:41Nine times 100 is 900.
19:44Nine times 100, 900.
19:4775 plus five is 80.
19:49Yep.
19:50And add those on.
19:51And you are one away.
19:53Hassett?
19:54I did it the same way.
19:55Same way.
19:56And so we turn to Rachel to get us out of this muddle.
19:59981, Rachel?
20:00Eventually found one way.
20:02If you say 50 divided by five is ten,
20:05and then it falls out, times 100 for 1,000,
20:08and take away the ten and the nine.
20:10There we go. Well done.
20:14APPLAUSE
20:16Always spot on, always spot on.
20:18Now it's time for our second Tea Time teaser, which is Ben Arthur
20:21and the clue, Ben and Arthur both suffered from indigestion.
20:25Ben and Arthur both suffered from indigestion.
20:29MUSIC
20:38CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
20:44Welcome back. I left with the clue,
20:47Ben and Arthur both suffered from indigestion.
20:50In fact, they suffered from heartburn,
20:53a form of indigestion. Heartburn.
20:56So there we are, 68 playing 30,
20:58Geoff on 68, Hassett's letters game.
21:01Consonant, please, Rachel.
21:03Thank you, Hazard.
21:05R.
21:06Consonant.
21:08L.
21:09Consonant.
21:11S.
21:13Vowel.
21:15E.
21:16Vowel.
21:17A.
21:20Vowel.
21:22U.
21:25Consonant.
21:27M.
21:31Consonant.
21:33S.
21:35And vowel, please.
21:36And the last one.
21:38E.
21:39E.
21:40And the clock starts now.
21:42MUSIC
22:10BUZZER
22:13Hassett.
22:14Seven.
22:15A seven, Geoff?
22:16Seven.
22:17Waller's.
22:18And Geoff?
22:19Waller's.
22:20Are we happy?
22:23And Nina and Susie?
22:25We got an eight, measures, and you got another 47.
22:29Yes.
22:30Seamer's.
22:31Seambowler's in cricket.
22:33Indeed, a seamer, yeah.
22:34Yeah.
22:35Very good.
22:36Seamer's, 75, playing 37.
22:38Hassett doing well there.
22:40And it's Geoff's letters game.
22:42Consonant, please.
22:44Thank you, Geoff.
22:45Q.
22:46And another.
22:48D.
22:49The vowel.
22:51O.
22:52And another.
22:53U.
22:54Consonant.
22:56S.
22:58Vowel.
23:00E.
23:02Consonant.
23:03K.
23:04A.
23:06Consonant.
23:08R.
23:09And a consonant, please.
23:10And the last one, S.
23:13Stand by.
23:14MUSIC
23:34MUSIC
23:44Well, Geoff?
23:45Seven.
23:46A seven. Hassett?
23:47Seven.
23:48Geoff?
23:49Douser's.
23:50Yes.
23:51Douser's as well.
23:52Me too.
23:53And over in the corner, Nina and Susie will have produced
23:56something rather more special, perhaps.
23:58Well, first of all, I just have to disallow douser.
24:01You're spelling it with a U, it's actually with a W.
24:03No.
24:04No?
24:05Yes.
24:06But if you're dousing a flame...
24:08Yes, if you're dousing a flame, you are D-O-U-S-E,
24:12but it's just not there as an agent now, I'm afraid.
24:15It's rotten luck.
24:16Sorry.
24:17What can we have? Nina?
24:19I think last week we had the word wastrel,
24:21and today we've got a douser.
24:24I said douser.
24:25Douser.
24:26LAUGHTER
24:28Anything else, Susie?
24:29No, we'll leave it at douser's.
24:3275 to 37, therefore we come back to Susie
24:37and ask her for her origins of words.
24:40Well, you have to forgive me today,
24:42because I'm going to talk a pile of pants, quite literally,
24:45because I'm going to talk about the word brief,
24:47and underpants will come into it.
24:50But all editors rely on a good brief,
24:53and that word brief has travelled a very long way
24:56since it passed into English and French way back in the Middle Ages.
25:00So, the editor's brief today, Nina will know well,
25:03is a short summary of what's required for a particular job.
25:07And short is key here,
25:09so brief is rooted ultimately in the Latin word brevis, meaning short.
25:12And a brev, for the Romans,
25:14was a short summary of an official document,
25:17or it could also be a note or a dispatch.
25:19So it was the Roman equivalent, if you like, of a message by telegram.
25:22And from then on, whether we're talking the musical note brev,
25:26the process of abbreviation,
25:28shortness and brief have gone together.
25:31And, of course, briefs as underpants
25:33are particularly short versions of underwear.
25:36But in the course of its lifetime, underwear apart,
25:39and before landing firmly on the editorial, the journalistic desk,
25:42brief came to embrace a whole host of meanings.
25:45If you look in the Oxford English Dictionary,
25:47you will find many, many meanings and senses for the very word brief.
25:52So they include a royal mandate or a letter from the Pope
25:55on matters of discipline,
25:57less ample and a bit less solemn than a bull, a papal bull,
26:00a short letter of credentials given to mendicant friars
26:03who would go around begging with this sort of piece of card,
26:07and cameo stint as a pawnbroker's ticket,
26:09a cabbie's licence and a policeman's warrant card.
26:13And in law, of course, a brief can mean two things,
26:16the summary of the facts of the case,
26:18or it can be the lawyer who you instruct on that case.
26:21So the brief is carrying the brief in a briefcase.
26:24And barristers once traditionally carried a green cloth
26:27that brings the other sense of brief into it,
26:29and I'm afraid that we're coming across underpants again,
26:31because barristers once traditionally carried a bag of green cloth
26:35in which to carry their briefs.
26:37Now, today's lawyers are heartily sick of that joke,
26:40but one slang dictionary from the 18th century notes about lawyers,
26:43these gentlemen carry their clients' deeds in a green bag,
26:46and it's said when they have no deeds to carry,
26:48frequently fill them with an old pair of breeches
26:51to give themselves the appearance of business.
26:54So, knickers and pawnbrokers, cabbies, criminals,
26:57a very prosaic word,
26:59but briefs have had a surprisingly adventurous ride.
27:02Well done. Very good.
27:09Very good. 75 playing 37, Jeff in the lead.
27:13Hassett.
27:15Lettuce game for you.
27:17Vowel, please. Thank you, Hassett.
27:19U
27:21Vowel
27:23A
27:25Consonant
27:27L
27:29Consonant
27:31M
27:33Consonant
27:35T
27:40Consonant
27:42H
27:45Vowel
27:48Consonant
27:50D
27:53And...
27:55Consonant.
27:57And lastly, another H.
27:59And it's Countdown.
28:17T
28:33Yes, Hassett?
28:35Only four.
28:37Four, yes, not easy. And, Jeff?
28:39I can do five. You can do five, Hassett?
28:41Dual.
28:43Now then, Jeff. Adult.
28:46Can we beat five, Nina and Susie?
28:49It stumps me, but you've got a good one.
28:52There's just the US rap spelling, if you like, of mother.
28:57M-T-U-H-A, but really tricky. Five was as fast as we could do.
29:01Very tricky, yeah. Mother.
29:03All right. I don't think we like that very much.
29:0580 playing 37, final letters game for Jeff Clayton.
29:11Consonant, please. Thank you, Jeff.
29:14G
29:16And another.
29:18F
29:20And a vowel.
29:22I
29:24And another.
29:26A
29:28Consonant.
29:30R
29:32Vowel.
29:34E
29:36Consonant.
29:38X
29:40Consonant.
29:42And the last one.
29:44D
29:46Stand by.
30:12MUSIC STOPS
30:18Jeff? Six.
30:20A six, Hassett? Six.
30:22Well done. Jeff? Grades.
30:24And? Third.
30:26Third. Can we get a six, I wonder?
30:28We can get a seven. It looks like a six, but it's a seven. Fridges.
30:32Fridges? Fridges.
30:34Simple, simple word. Fridges.
30:36Very good. Susie and Nina?
30:38Right, that was the top. That'll do. That'll do very nicely.
30:42And now, Hassett, it's the final numbers game. Off you go.
30:46One large and five small again, please.
30:48Thank you, Hassett. One from the top row,
30:50five little for the final time today.
30:52And this selection is six,
30:54two, four,
30:56seven, eight
30:58and 50.
31:00And the target, 537.
31:02Five, three, seven.
31:04MUSIC PLAYS
31:11MUSIC CONTINUES
31:34Hassett? Five, 38.
31:36Five, three, eight. And Jeff?
31:38Five, three, seven, not fully written down.
31:40Don't worry about that. Let's see how you managed it.
31:43OK. Eight plus four is 12.
31:46Eight plus four, 12.
31:48Er...
31:5050 minus six is 44.
31:54Yeah.
31:5644 times 12 is 528.
32:01And seven and two.
32:04Seven and the two. Yeah.
32:06Five, three, seven. Well done.
32:08Very well done.
32:12Well done. Well done.
32:14So, Jeff nudging 196 against Hassett's very creditable 43.
32:19We go into the final round, gentlemen.
32:21Fingers on buzzers.
32:23Let's reveal today's countdown conundrum.
32:28BELL RINGS
32:30Jeff? Deploying.
32:32Deploying. I wonder whether you're right.
32:34You probably are, actually. Let's see.
32:36Deploying. Here we go. Yes!
32:38CHEERING AND APPLAUSE
32:44Another gravure performance, if I may say so.
32:48But I'm going to come and sort of congratulate you properly in a second.
32:52But in the meantime, I'm going to say to Hassett Russia, you did OK.
32:55Because you're up against an OctoChamp.
32:57In fact, and I'll let you know this first,
33:00you're up against our number one seed for the finals.
33:03So, getting 43 is pretty good.
33:05So, thank you for coming.
33:07Take this goodie bag back to London
33:09and your job as an economic researcher.
33:12No, Jeff, that was a terrific performance.
33:14Again, over 100. Again, only one of the eight, you failed.
33:19I did. Well, we enjoyed that.
33:22But there you are. Once again, over 100.
33:24And we shall see you at the finals in June.
33:26Terrific stuff.
33:28He's good. He's very good, isn't he?
33:30Formidable. Brilliant.
33:32Now, this is one of the sad times, of course,
33:34because we've got to say cheerio to Nina,
33:36because, Nina, you've been a real pleasure,
33:38great pleasure having you here.
33:40I hope you'll come back and see us soon.
33:42And good luck with all that you're doing.
33:44Good luck with your marathon. Thank you.
33:46Beat your husband, soundly.
33:48One quick question. Yes.
33:50When I go, can I take Jeff and Susie with me
33:52to help me with my script writing and, crucially, the spelling,
33:55which I'm still... I'm OK, you don't mind?
33:58No. Lovely. See you tomorrow.
34:00See you tomorrow, Susie. See you tomorrow.
34:02Brilliant stuff. Wow, he's good, isn't he?
34:04You know his secret, why he's so good?
34:06He's an old Southendian. Is he?
34:08Yeah, I went to Southend Girls, Jeff went to Southend Boys.
34:11Well, there we are. Yep. Yep.
34:13It's a good town. Something in the water.
34:15Very good town. Well, see you tomorrow.
34:17See you tomorrow. All right. Join us then.
34:19Same time, same place. You'll be sure of it.
34:21A very good afternoon.
34:23Contact us by email at countdown at channels4.com,
34:27by Twitter at c4countdown,
34:29or write to us at countdown leads ls31js.
34:33You can also find our web page at channel4.com forward slash countdown.
34:40It's his pledge to put America first.
34:42President Trump, how scared should we be?
34:45Channel 4 dispatches tonight at 8.
34:47And at 9 we're at St George's in Tooting for 24 hours in A&E.
34:52Up next, 15 to 1, and it's Dog Eat Dog
34:54as Sandy introduces a wedding organiser with a difference.

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