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01:04Did somebody mention to me that you were off somewhere exciting?
01:08Oh, well, soon. I'm hoping to go to the Galapagos soon.
01:11That would be amazing.
01:12I think it's well-seasoned when we're going, but we went to Brazil last year specifically for carnival season because that was February.
01:19So I'd love to go to Japan in April, but Brazil in February is absolutely incredible.
01:23Were you in the dancing ranks?
01:25We were in the carnival, yeah.
01:27We had the PVC costume.
01:29And so we got an interesting view of Rio because the whole town's pretty much shut just for the parties.
01:34But everybody's there and everyone's out dressed as a mermaid or dressed in a nappy and partying for days on end.
01:40You love a challenge, but you're both very fit.
01:43You and Pasha, you could dance all night long.
01:45Oh, he wanted to be a carnival queen on top of the cart.
01:48Next year, maybe.
01:50Next year.
01:50All right.
01:51Now, let's see how James is getting on over here.
01:54Look at this.
01:54Four wins, going for five.
01:56Fantastic stuff.
01:57You're a merchandise planning manager from Beckenham, and your job really is to manage the flow of stock.
02:05That's right.
02:06There's a lot of numbers involved.
02:07I bet.
02:08Not a lot of mental arithmetic, though.
02:10Well, you're doing pretty well here with your mental arithmetic.
02:12Yeah?
02:13So far.
02:13So far.
02:13Come on.
02:14You're on four.
02:15That's pretty good.
02:15You're joined now by Birken Chenecan, a university student from Bexley in London studying computer science.
02:23Yeah.
02:23And your parents came over in the 80s from Turkish Cyprus, yeah, and settled in London, and here you are.
02:31But apparently you like to go back to Turkey to the Butterfly Valley.
02:35What's so special?
02:37Well, the Butterfly Valley, it's only accessible by boat because it's surrounded by this great canyon.
02:42Yeah.
02:42So it's pretty much untouched by tourism.
02:45So it's a really natural place.
02:47Well, good luck to you, Birken, and good luck to you, James.
02:50Let's have a big round of applause for our two contestants today.
02:57And over in the corner are, of course, Susie.
03:00And it says here, Shakespeare said, if music be the food of love, play on.
03:05And here's somebody who loves his music and his food.
03:08Jay Rayner, welcome back.
03:10Welcome back, Jay.
03:10Good to be here.
03:11I've also been to Butterfly Valley because it's only just south of Fethiye on the Dalaman coast in Turkey.
03:17And I went to Fethiye for six or seven summers in a row.
03:19And you take the boat, and it really would, only accessible by boat, and you get there.
03:23And it is the most extraordinary place.
03:26Butterflies flying hither and yon.
03:28And as you say, it's just beautiful.
03:30All right.
03:31Now then, James, let's have our letters game.
03:34Could I start with a consonant, please, Rachel?
03:36Thank you, James.
03:36Start with R.
03:38And another.
03:39D.
03:42A vowel.
03:43E.
03:45Another vowel.
03:46A.
03:47A consonant.
03:49R.
03:50Another consonant, please.
03:52D.
03:54A vowel.
03:56E.
03:58A consonant.
04:00F.
04:02And a final vowel, please.
04:04And a final I.
04:06And the countdown clock starts now.
04:09And a final vowel.
04:28And a final vowel.
04:30Yes, James?
04:42Seven.
04:43What's seven, Birkan?
04:44Six.
04:45And your six?
04:46Feared.
04:48Feared and James?
04:49Ferried.
04:51And ferried.
04:52Now then, what's the corner conjured up for us?
04:56We can take you towards something very rarefied.
04:59Eight letters.
04:59Well done, well done.
05:00Anything else, Susie?
05:01There's a feardie, which in Scottish slang is a coward or a timid person.
05:07A feardie.
05:09Or refried, refried beans.
05:11Yeah, well done.
05:12Seven points to James.
05:13And it's Birkan's letters again.
05:16Birkan.
05:16Hi, Rachel.
05:17Hi, Birkan.
05:18Can I start with a vowel, please?
05:19Start with A.
05:21And a consonant.
05:24Q.
05:25And another one.
05:27T.
05:28And another.
05:29T.
05:32And a vowel.
05:34I.
05:35And another.
05:37U.
05:38And another vowel.
05:41A.
05:42A consonant.
05:44M.
05:46And a vowel, please.
05:48And lastly, E.
05:51Goodbye.
05:51Bye-bye.
05:59K ней 3-4-2-8-4-5-4-4-5-4-4-8-4-4-5-5-4-5-5-4-4-5-4-5-4-4-5-6-4-4-5-4-5.
06:01BIRCHAN
06:23BIRCHAN
06:23Five.
06:24Five, James.
06:26Six.
06:27BIRCHAN
06:27Quiet.
06:28Quiet.
06:29Quiet and...
06:30Mutate.
06:32And mutate.
06:33Yeah.
06:34Five, six, any sevens?
06:36Not that we've got.
06:38Mutate was ours.
06:39Nothing else, Susie?
06:40No, that was it, I'm afraid.
06:42Mutate.
06:43All right.
06:43James on 13.
06:44Early lead there, and we turn to our first numbers game.
06:47James.
06:48Could I have two big and four small, please?
06:50You can, indeed.
06:51Thank you, James.
06:52First one of the day.
06:53Four little ones are...
06:54Seven.
06:56Six.
06:57Three.
06:58Ten.
06:59And the large ones, 25 and 50.
07:02And the target, 475.
07:05475.
07:05ищ.
07:06And the target is a number five.
07:15Five.
07:18Two.
07:19Three.
07:19Seven.
07:24Four.
07:25Three.
07:26Five.
07:26Four.
07:27Four.
07:28Five.
07:28Five.
07:28Five.
07:29Five.
07:29One.
07:30Five.
07:30Five.
07:31Five.
07:32Five.
07:33Five.
07:35Yes, James?
07:38475.
07:40And Birkan?
07:40475.
07:42OK, James?
07:4350 times 10.
07:44500.
07:45Less 25.
07:46Yeah, I'll save the paper.
07:48And Birkan?
07:49Did it the same way.
07:51Well done indeed.
07:54It's 23 playing 10.
07:56And we turn to our first tea time teaser, which is Tracy Rees.
08:00And the clue, Tracy Rees landed a job working in an office.
08:03Yes, Tracy Rees landed a job working in an office.
08:25Welcome back.
08:26Warm welcome back.
08:27I left you with the clue, Tracy Rees landed a job working in an office.
08:33As a secretary, secretary, secretary.
08:3723 plays 10.
08:39James on 23.
08:40And it's Birkan's letters game now.
08:42Birkan?
08:43Could I have a consonant, please?
08:44Thank you, Birkan.
08:46X.
08:47And a vowel?
08:49I.
08:50And another vowel?
08:52E.
08:54And another one?
08:56I.
08:56And a consonant.
08:59P.
09:01And a consonant.
09:03C.
09:05And a consonant.
09:07L.
09:09A vowel.
09:12E.
09:14And a consonant, please.
09:16And the last one.
09:18V.
09:19Stand by.
09:19And a consonant.
09:20And a consonant.
09:21And a consonant.
09:21And a consonant.
09:21And a consonant.
09:22And a consonant.
09:22And a consonant.
09:22And a consonant.
09:23And a consonant.
09:23And a consonant.
09:23And a consonant.
09:24And a consonant.
09:24And a consonant.
09:25And a consonant.
09:25And a consonant.
09:25And a consonant.
09:25And a consonant.
09:26And a consonant.
09:26And a consonant.
09:27And a consonant.
09:27And a consonant.
09:28And a consonant.
09:28And a consonant.
09:29And a consonant.
09:29And a consonant.
09:30And a consonant.
09:30And a consonant.
09:31And a consonant.
09:31And a consonant.
09:32And a consonant.
09:33And a consonant.
09:33And a consonant.
09:34And a consonant.
09:35And a consonant.
09:35And a consonant.
09:36And a consonant.
09:37And a consonant.
09:49Burkhan.
09:51Just a five.
09:52A five.
09:53James?
09:54Also five.
09:56Burkhan.
09:57Exile.
09:58Exile and pixel.
10:01Pixel.
10:02Yep.
10:02Pixel.
10:03Where does pixel come from?
10:05It is an abbreviation of picture element.
10:09Pixel and pixelate.
10:10Now, Jay.
10:11We can go one letter better and refer to what's going on underneath this desk with the word pelvic.
10:18Really?
10:19Thanks for letting us in on that.
10:20Yeah, I'm pelvic.
10:22It's where all the action is.
10:25Pelvic.
10:25All right.
10:2628, please.
10:2615.
10:27And James, you're back.
10:29Consonant, please, Rachel.
10:30Thank you, James.
10:32R.
10:34And a vowel.
10:36O.
10:38Consonant.
10:39B.
10:41Another consonant.
10:43S.
10:45A vowel.
10:47U.
10:47Consonant, please.
10:50T.
10:52Consonant.
10:54R.
10:55Vowel.
10:57A.
10:58And a final vowel, please.
11:01And a final E.
11:04And the clock starts now.
11:17Gents, seven, a seven per can.
11:40I'll try an eight.
11:42Gents, boaster, a boaster and...
11:46Robusta.
11:48Robusta?
11:49It's supposed to be in the dictionary, so very good.
11:51Oh, very good.
11:55Yeah.
11:57Thanks.
11:57Very good.
11:58All right.
11:59So, James on 28, and you're on 23.
12:02Only five points in it, Burkhan, and it's your numbers game now.
12:05Could I have one large five small, please?
12:07You can, indeed.
12:07Thank you, Burkhan.
12:08One from the top, five carefully selected little ones.
12:11And for this round, your numbers are 10, 8, 5, 4, 3, and 100.
12:21And the target, 251.
12:242, 5, 1.
12:56Birkhan.
12:57250.
12:58250, one away. James?
13:00250.
13:02Both of you Birkhan to start.
13:04I did 8 divided by 4.
13:068 divided by 4 is 2.
13:08Times 100.
13:09200.
13:10And then 10 times the 5.
13:1410 times the 5.
13:15And 250, one away.
13:17And James?
13:18Yeah, very similar.
13:19100 times the 3.
13:21300.
13:22And then 5 times 10.
13:25Take it away.
13:27One away.
13:29Well done.
13:30Well done.
13:31But not quite perfect.
13:33For that we turn to Rachel in the hope that she'll be able to crack it.
13:352, 5, 1?
13:36Yeah, I think there are a few ways.
13:38The first way I saw it was 100 times 10 is 1,000.
13:43Add 4 for 1,004.
13:47And then 5 minus 3 is...
13:50What am I doing?
13:52It's 2.
13:528 over 2 is 4.
13:55And then divide it.
13:56You get 2, 5, 1 eventually.
13:57Oh, well done.
13:58Amazing.
13:59Very good.
14:02Never lets us down.
14:03Never lets us down.
14:04All right.
14:04So 35 to 30.
14:06Still that 5 point difference as we turn to Jane Jay.
14:09Your book, The Ten Food Commandments.
14:12You told us earlier in your visit here about eating with your fingers and other, you know, scents to be used.
14:20But there's also a section about leftovers.
14:23You're very keen on leftovers.
14:25I am very keen on leftovers, not least because they're a modern invention.
14:29The word leftover, you'll love this, the word leftover doesn't really appear.
14:33The first reference I've ever found to it is in the title of a book published by a refrigeration company,
14:39McRae Refrigeration Company, in 1910.
14:41Because prior to that, the idea that you would put your dinner away and take it out three days later looking exactly the same didn't exist.
14:48You had to find other ways to preserve food.
14:50So prior to the modern notion of the leftover, there was just dinner.
14:53So if you go back to Tudor England, the nobleman would fill his table with food as a mark of status, but it didn't go to waste.
15:00It was sent out to the rest of the estates, a kind of edible almsgiving.
15:04And we've relegated the food that we didn't eat at the first meal to sort of the ugly stepsister of gastronomy,
15:11when it doesn't deserve that at all, partly because of refrigeration, partly because food has become too cheap.
15:16In 1900, we spent 50 percent of our income on food, and now it's about 10 percent.
15:21So when you spend so little, you think, well, I'll just throw it away.
15:24But the main thing is that if you take the things you didn't eat at the first meal, you can do brilliant things with them the next day.
15:31You know, your leftover chicken becomes an Asian salad.
15:33Your leftover braised lamb does wonderful things when you start throwing it into a frying pan.
15:38I think you're missing a trick if you don't really get into the food that was left behind from the first meal.
15:43We were talking the other day, I think, Rachel, about a little restaurant.
15:47I can't remember exactly where it was, but they actually use food that's been thrown away, that's been left over, in a sense,
15:54to then create dishes that people come and pay to eat.
15:57Well, here's one of the great secrets.
15:59All restaurants actually do that, because every time a restaurant throws away any ingredient that wasn't used,
16:05they're throwing away their profits.
16:06So if, let's say, they've got a braised beef dish on one day, funnily enough,
16:11there will be a special of, you know, braised beef croquettas the next day.
16:16Sure.
16:16And they're very special because they're using up all the leftovers so they make sure their profits aren't being thrown away.
16:21Yeah. Sound business.
16:23Sound business.
16:24All right. Well done, Jay. Thank you very much.
16:26With the score, 35 to 30, just five points in it.
16:29And now, James, it's your letters game.
16:31Can I have a consonant, please, Rachel?
16:33Thank you, James.
16:34C.
16:35And another.
16:37S.
16:38And a third.
16:40J.
16:41A vowel.
16:43I.
16:45Another vowel.
16:46E.
16:47A consonant.
16:49D.
16:51Another consonant.
16:53L.
16:55A vowel.
16:57A.
16:59And a final vowel, please.
17:01And a final O.
17:04Done by.
17:04A vowel.
17:32Yes, James.
17:36It's a six.
17:37A six.
17:38Birkan.
17:39Six.
17:40James.
17:41Jailed.
17:42And Birkan?
17:43Closed.
17:44Closed.
17:45And, Jay?
17:46Uh, we've got a one-six, scaled.
17:49Yep.
17:50And then, um, I think this is Australian for a cold can of beer, which is coldies.
17:55You've got some coldies.
17:57A coldie and a tinny?
17:59Cold tinnies, in other words.
18:00Cold tinnies.
18:01Chilled tinnies.
18:01Very good.
18:02All right.
18:0341 to 36, and it's Birkan.
18:06Birkan's back.
18:08Letters again.
18:08Consonant, please.
18:09Thank you, Birkan.
18:11M.
18:12And another.
18:14S.
18:15And a vowel.
18:17E.
18:18And another vowel.
18:20U.
18:22And another vowel.
18:24E.
18:25And a consonant.
18:27N.
18:29Consonant.
18:30M.
18:30M.
18:32M.
18:33Vowel.
18:35O.
18:37And a consonant, please.
18:39And lastly, B.
18:41Countdown.
18:42And a consonant, please.
18:45If you heard the.
18:47And a consonant, please.
19:00And another vowel.
19:04The vowel.
19:05And a consonant, please.
19:07Again.
19:07The enjoyment.
19:08And a consonant, please.
19:09Please be back in the shade.
19:09Below.
19:09One.
19:10And a consonant, please.
19:10First exhale.
19:11And another one, please.
19:11Birkham?
19:14Six.
19:16A six. James?
19:17Only five.
19:19You're five.
19:20Menus.
19:21Now, Birkham?
19:22Bemuse.
19:24Bemuse.
19:25Bemuse, very good. Very nice.
19:27Very good.
19:28Pops you ahead of James by a point as well, which can't be bad.
19:32Now, Jay?
19:33We've got one seven, which is umbonies,
19:36which is a sort of novel protuberance on something.
19:40Oh, really?
19:41It is.
19:41All right. Anything else, Susie?
19:44As in on the cap of a mushroom or toadstool, for example.
19:47Yes.
19:47Yeah, or on a shield, indeed.
19:49But, no, that was our best for seven.
19:50All right.
19:51The plural of umbo.
19:52Well done.
19:53So, James, on 41, Birkham has shot ahead to 42,
19:58and it's a numbers game for James.
20:00Now then, James.
20:02Two large enforcement, please.
20:04Thank you, James.
20:05No reason to panic, sticking with what you know.
20:06Two large, four little.
20:08And they are six, seven.
20:11Another six, four.
20:13And the big one's 50.
20:14And 25.
20:16And the target, 242.
20:18Two for two.
20:19We'll see you next time.
20:49Yes, James?
20:52I've run out of time.
20:54No?
20:55No.
20:56Birkin?
20:572, 4, 2.
20:58Wow.
21:00Yes, Birkin?
21:0050 times 4.
21:024, the 200.
21:03And then 7 times 6, 42.
21:05Yes, I think James is busy kicking himself.
21:08Well done indeed.
21:12Birkin, you've got the Lord ahead.
21:1552 to James is 41.
21:16As we go into our second tea-time teaser, which is Carol Moss.
21:21And the clue, Carol Moss went to my school.
21:23In fact, we sat next to each other.
21:25Carol Moss went to my school.
21:27In fact, we sat next to each other.
21:29Welcome back.
21:47I left you with a clue.
21:48Carol Moss went to my school.
21:50In fact, we sat next to each other.
21:51And the answer to that one is Classroom.
21:55Classroom.
21:57So, 41 for James.
21:59Birkin on 52.
22:01Birkin, you're storming away.
22:03It's your letters game.
22:05Could I have a vowel, please?
22:07Thank you, Birkin.
22:08A.
22:09And a consonant.
22:11T.
22:13And another consonant.
22:15P.
22:15And another consonant.
22:19N.
22:20And a vowel.
22:22E.
22:23And another vowel.
22:26A.
22:27And a consonant.
22:30T.
22:31A consonant.
22:34S.
22:36And a vowel, please.
22:39And the last one.
22:40O.
22:41Stand by.
22:42For the first time.
22:43I will put you in.
22:46I will get you in.
22:48Bye.
22:51Bye.
22:51Bye.
22:51Bye.
22:52Bye.
22:58Bye.
23:04Bye.
23:09Bye.
23:11Bye.
23:12Yes, Birkin?
23:14Just a five.
23:15A five, James?
23:16Seven.
23:18Birkin?
23:19Paste.
23:20Paste and?
23:21Teapots.
23:23Of which you have one.
23:25Well done.
23:26What else have we got there?
23:27Jay?
23:28Susie?
23:29Well, if you've got a brilliant idea, you want to protect it,
23:32so you would have to take out a number of patents.
23:34Indeed you do.
23:36Yeah.
23:36As well you know.
23:37Yeah.
23:37Now, Susie, anything else?
23:38No, I'm sticking with teapots.
23:40Teapots.
23:41All right.
23:41Yeah.
23:4148 plays 52.
23:44James has closed it up a bit, and it's James's letters game.
23:47James?
23:48Consonant, please.
23:50Thank you, James.
23:51Z.
23:52Another consonant.
23:55N.
23:56A vowel.
23:58A.
23:59Another vowel.
24:01O.
24:02Consonant.
24:04L.
24:06Consonant.
24:09N.
24:10A vowel.
24:11I.
24:13I.
24:15Another vowel, please.
24:17E.
24:18And a consonant.
24:20And lastly, D.
24:23Stand by.
24:23Here.
24:27Unrai.
24:30Okay.
24:32ed.
24:33I.
24:33No.
24:33I haven't.
24:35I.
24:36I.
24:37There.
24:45No.
24:46Do.
24:46No.
24:46I.
24:47I.
24:47I.
24:48I.
24:48No.
24:49No.
24:50I.
24:50I.
24:51I.
24:51James.
24:56Seven.
24:57Burkhan?
24:58Six.
24:59And your six?
25:00Denial.
25:02Denial, James.
25:04Anodise.
25:06Anodise?
25:06Anodise, very good, yes.
25:09To cope with a protective oxide layer, metal.
25:12Very, very good.
25:13And Jane, Susie?
25:14Loned is in there, I think, is it?
25:16Loned is in there.
25:17Yeah.
25:18As is lindane, which is an insecticide.
25:21OK.
25:22And also nodalise, which is used of something that is nodal in form or arrangement.
25:29So concentrated in particular points.
25:31I see.
25:32And that's neat.
25:33Thanks, Susie.
25:34So 55 to 52, James has edged ahead again as we turn to Susie for her wonderful origins of words.
25:42What have you got for us today, Susie?
25:44I'm going to tell a story that will be familiar to many, but it's worth remembering this story, I think,
25:50because it lies behind an object that many of us use every single day of our lives, usually on our phones.
25:57I'm going to talk about the camera.
25:59Once used to capture landscapes, now very much used to capture faces.
26:03We've come a very long way since the early box-like creations that was the early camera, thanks to modern technology.
26:12But the English word camera comes from the same Latin word, which actually meant a vaulted room.
26:18And I was reminded of this because my youngest asked me about the Radcliffe camera in Oxford, which is the most beautiful, beautiful building, circular library, the very first example of one in Britain.
26:30She was wondering why it was called a camera and what's that got to do with the apparatus that we use to take pictures.
26:35And this is why, because the word camera goes back to the Greek camara, a vault or arch.
26:42And over the years, the Latin word gradually lost its vaulted sense and it became just a room.
26:48And that same route that gave us camera is behind chamber.
26:51It's behind chum.
26:52A chum was originally a chambermate.
26:55It's behind comrade as well.
26:57Again, originally a bedfellow or a chambermate too.
27:01But on to the modern use of the words camera in English.
27:03And that comes from the expression camera obscura.
27:05That was a dark chamber or a dark room, which eventually came to be applied to a black box with a lens fixed on one side, able to produce images, as we know, of external objects.
27:15And then when photography really came into its own in the 19th century, the word camera, the shortening of it, was given to the box which formed those pictures.
27:24It's a hugely long way from a secular library, a vaulted arch and a vaulted room, to the tiny little thing on our phones today.
27:32Very, very long history.
27:34But one I think is worth remembering.
27:36Fascinating.
27:37Thank you so much.
27:38Well done.
27:40And camera.
27:43All right.
27:44Well done.
27:4455 to Birkin's.
27:4652 Birkin.
27:47Letters came.
27:48Consonant, please.
27:49Thank you, Birkin.
27:51K.
27:52And a vowel.
27:53A.
27:55A consonant.
27:57N.
28:00And a consonant.
28:02R.
28:04And a consonant.
28:07F.
28:09A vowel.
28:11E.
28:12A vowel.
28:15U.
28:17A consonant.
28:20D.
28:20D.
28:23And a consonant, please.
28:25And lastly, M.
28:28Stand by.
28:28O.
28:29Two 조금씩.
28:30abm.
28:35C curvature.
28:43And a consonant.
28:43Put it in.
28:46And a consonant.
28:47And a consonant.
28:47And a consonant.
28:48Eilot.
28:48And a consonant.
28:48In a consonant.
28:48And a consonant.
28:48And a vowel.
28:49And a consonant.
28:50And a半shaped.
28:53And a consonant.
28:54And a blueberry.
28:57Next.
28:57Birkin.
29:01Eight.
29:02An eight, James.
29:04Eight as well.
29:05Birkin.
29:06Unmarked.
29:07Unmarked and the same unlocked.
29:10There we are.
29:11Yeah.
29:12Well done.
29:13Jay?
29:14I've got franked, as you would do with a stamp, but that's a seven,
29:18so I think unmarked is the way to go.
29:22Yeah.
29:22There's maunder, which I quite like to talk in a rambling manner.
29:26Oh, yeah, maundering on.
29:27Stop maundering on.
29:27Stop maundering on.
29:3063 to 60.
29:32Birkin just three points in it, and it's James' letters game now.
29:37James.
29:38A consonant, please, Rachel.
29:39Thank you, James.
29:40G.
29:41Another consonant.
29:44R.
29:45And another.
29:47H.
29:48A vowel.
29:50O.
29:51Another vowel.
29:53I.
29:54Consonant.
29:55T.
29:57T.
29:58Another consonant.
30:00L.
30:02A vowel.
30:05U.
30:06And a final vowel.
30:07And a final I.
30:11Counter.
30:11A vowel.
30:12A vowel.
30:13A vowel.
30:13A vowel.
30:13A vowel.
30:14A vowel.
30:14A vowel.
30:14A vowel.
30:15A vowel.
30:15A vowel.
30:15A vowel.
30:15A vowel.
30:16A vowel.
30:16A vowel.
30:17A vowel.
30:17A vowel.
30:17A vowel.
30:17A vowel.
30:17A vowel.
30:18A vowel.
30:18A vowel.
30:18A vowel.
30:18A vowel.
30:19A vowel.
30:19A vowel.
30:19A vowel.
30:19A vowel.
30:20A vowel.
30:20A vowel.
30:21A vowel.
30:21A vowel.
30:22A vowel.
30:23A vowel.
30:23A vowel.
30:25A vowel.
30:25A vowel.
30:26A vowel.
30:26A vowel.
30:27A vowel.
30:27A vowel.
30:28A vowel.
30:29A vowel.
30:29A vowel.
30:30A vowel.
30:31James.
30:43Only five.
30:45Burkhan?
30:46Also five.
30:47And James, guilt.
30:50Guilt indeed.
30:51Burkhan?
30:52Rough.
30:53Rough?
30:53Rough guilt.
30:56And Jay?
30:57Which would lead you into a bit of a trough for six.
31:00Indeed.
31:01A trough.
31:03Trough of despair.
31:05Susie and the Elsie?
31:06No, I was thinking the same thing.
31:07All right, well done.
31:08All right.
31:09So, that three points still splits James and Burkhan as we go into the final numbers game.
31:15Burkhan?
31:16One large five small, please.
31:18Sticking with one large five small.
31:20See how that goes.
31:21Hopefully you have a crucial conundrum.
31:22We'll see.
31:23The last one of the week.
31:24Two.
31:25Eight.
31:27Five.
31:28One.
31:29Six.
31:30And 50.
31:32And a target.
31:33Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:34Four six four.
31:35Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:36Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:37Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:38Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:38Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:39Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:40Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:40Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:40Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:41Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:41Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:41Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:42Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:42Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:43Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:44Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:45Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:46Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:47Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:48Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:49Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:50Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:51Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:52Four hundred and sixty-four.
31:53Berkhan.
32:074-6-4.
32:084-6-4, James.
32:104-6-4.
32:11Right.
32:12Berkhan.
32:13I did 5 times 2.
32:155 times 2, 10.
32:16Minus 1.
32:179.
32:18Times it by 50.
32:204-50.
32:20And then add the 8 and the 6.
32:22Yep.
32:22Well done.
32:23I haven't used those.
32:24And James.
32:25I did 50 plus 6 plus 2.
32:2758.
32:28Times 8.
32:29Straight there.
32:29Well done.
32:30There we go.
32:31Well done.
32:33Well done.
32:34So we do indeed have your very first, I think I'm right in saying, crucial conundrum, James.
32:43Fingers on buzzers.
32:45Let's roll today's crucial countdown conundrum.
32:49Berkhan.
32:50Berkhan.
32:50Berkhan.
32:50Integrity.
32:51Integrity.
32:52Integrity.
32:52Integrity.
32:53Has he won it?
32:55Has Berkhan won?
32:58Integrity.
32:58Integrity.
33:07Integrity.
33:08Integrity.
33:10Has he won it?
33:12Has Berkhan won?
33:13Integrity.
33:14He has.
33:15Well done.
33:23Well done.
33:23Young Mr.
33:24Berkhan.
33:25Berkhan.
33:25Can.
33:26Well done indeed.
33:29There we go.
33:30You did very well, James.
33:31You went on four good wins.
33:33Four good wins.
33:34There's always somebody steeding up on the inside.
33:36Very good player.
33:36And on this occasion, it was Berkhan Celican.
33:39Fantastic.
33:40So we shall see you on Monday.
33:44All right.
33:44So take it easy.
33:46Take it easy.
33:47A good win against a very good player.
33:49Excellent stuff.
33:50And we're sending James back to his little daughter, Cora.
33:54And your son.
33:55Kit.
33:56Well done.
33:57You take this with you.
33:58And your teapot as well.
33:59Yes.
34:00Fantastic.
34:00Real pleasure having you here.
34:01It's been really, really good.
34:02And we've enjoyed having you.
34:03Well done.
34:04All right.
34:04And we shall see you on Monday, Jay.
34:07All right.
34:07I'll be here.
34:08We look forward to it.
34:09We look forward to it.
34:10And see you too, of course.
34:11Have a great weekend.
34:12All right.
34:13So.
34:14We lost Mr. Qualto.
34:16Good player.
34:17Very good player.
34:18Nice guy.
34:18Yes.
34:18I'd like to have a crucial conundrum.
34:19Very nice.
34:20So join us on Monday.
34:22Berkhan Celican will be back.
34:25And a new contestant too.
34:27So join us then.
34:27Same time.
34:28Same place.
34:28You be sure of it.
34:29A very good afternoon to you all.
34:32You can contact the program by email at countdown at channel4.com, by Twitter at C4Countdown, or write to us at Countdown Leeds LS3 1JS.
34:43You can also find our webpage at channel4.com forward slash countdown.
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