Episode 3

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0:00:04 > 0:00:08These people are amongst the greatest quiz players in Britain.

0:00:10 > 0:00:12Together they make up the Eggheads,

0:00:12 > 0:00:15arguably the most formidable quiz team in the country.

0:00:17 > 0:00:20The question is, can they be beaten?

0:00:23 > 0:00:25Hello, welcome to Eggheads,

0:00:25 > 0:00:28the show where a team of five quiz challengers

0:00:28 > 0:00:30pit their wits against possibly the greatest quiz team in Britain.

0:00:30 > 0:00:35You might recognise them as they've won some of the country's toughest quiz shows.

0:00:35 > 0:00:37They are the Eggheads.

0:00:37 > 0:00:41And taking on our quiz champions today are the LEGI Heads.

0:00:41 > 0:00:45The team either work for Leeds City Council or Leeds Chamber of Commerce

0:00:45 > 0:00:48as part of the Local Enterprise Growth Initiative.

0:00:48 > 0:00:53In 2006 some of them won the hotly fought City Council quiz!

0:00:53 > 0:00:56Let's meet them. Hi, I'm Neil.

0:00:56 > 0:00:59I'm 32 and I'm a Local Authority Officer.

0:00:59 > 0:01:02I'm Gillian, I'm 30 and I'm an Operations Manager.

0:01:02 > 0:01:06Hi, I'm Simon. I'm 45 and I'm a Programme Manager.

0:01:06 > 0:01:10Hi, I'm Katie. I'm 31, I'm a Local Government Officer.

0:01:10 > 0:01:14Hi, I'm David. I'm 46 and I'm a Marketing Manager.

0:01:14 > 0:01:17Welcome to you, LEGI Heads.

0:01:17 > 0:01:21I'm working it out, LEGI, Local Enterprise Growth Initiative. Yes.

0:01:21 > 0:01:26So we've got that. Who was on the team that won the quiz in 2006?

0:01:26 > 0:01:28Katie and I were on the team.

0:01:28 > 0:01:32Two of you remaining, the other three are relatively new to quizzing

0:01:32 > 0:01:36or do you do quite a lot of it? Relatively new, I'd say.

0:01:36 > 0:01:39But you do a bit. You say you have these training days

0:01:39 > 0:01:41when you always make sure there's a quiz?

0:01:41 > 0:01:46Yeah, if we have an away day there's always a quiz during lunchtime or whenever.

0:01:46 > 0:01:50You talk about enterprise growth and encouraging economic development.

0:01:50 > 0:01:56Let's encourage you to develop yourselves economically here and win the money off the Eggheads again.

0:01:56 > 0:01:59Every day there's ?1,000 worth of cash up for grabs for challengers.

0:01:59 > 0:02:04However, if they fail to defeat the Eggheads the prize money rolls over to the next show.

0:02:04 > 0:02:08So, LEGI Heads, the challengers won the last time out, proving it can be done,

0:02:08 > 0:02:12but it also means that ?1,000 today says you can't beat the Eggheads.

0:02:12 > 0:02:17Our first head-to-head battle today is going to be on the subject of food and drink.

0:02:17 > 0:02:20So who's the quizzing expert on food and drink, LEGI Heads?

0:02:20 > 0:02:24Katie. Are you good for that, Katie? Are you gonna go?

0:02:24 > 0:02:26OK. Yep. Might as well give it a go.

0:02:26 > 0:02:30Katie, which Egghead? Any one of those lovely Eggheads for you.

0:02:30 > 0:02:34Kevin. Kevin? Yeah, Kevin.

0:02:34 > 0:02:38Kevin. Kevin. Yes, trying to find the Achilles heel

0:02:38 > 0:02:41of our former world quiz champion there.

0:02:41 > 0:02:44OK, let's have Katie and Kevin into the question room please

0:02:44 > 0:02:46to make sure there's no conferring.

0:02:47 > 0:02:53So, Katie, I believe you're the bookworm of the team, and you enjoy reading books and discussing them?

0:02:53 > 0:02:55Yes, that's right. In a book club?

0:02:55 > 0:03:00Yes. I'm in a book group with a group of friends.

0:03:00 > 0:03:02So why then have you gone for food and drink?

0:03:02 > 0:03:07It wasn't one that I'd particularly identified as a strength

0:03:07 > 0:03:11but when we did the audition I seemed to do quite well on that food and drink round

0:03:11 > 0:03:14so I just thought, right, I'll just go for it this time.

0:03:14 > 0:03:16OK, and as a team you've done your research

0:03:16 > 0:03:20and worked out that Kevin has an odd struggle or two with food and drink.

0:03:20 > 0:03:22Look at him, inscrutable there.

0:03:22 > 0:03:26OK, would you like to go first or second, Katie? I'll go first please.

0:03:28 > 0:03:32OK, first set of questions for you and the first question in that set.

0:03:32 > 0:03:36Which spirit is used to cook Bananas Foster

0:03:36 > 0:03:39before the dish is served with ice-cream?

0:03:40 > 0:03:43Which spirit is used to cook Bananas Foster

0:03:43 > 0:03:46before the dish is served with ice-cream?

0:03:48 > 0:03:51I don't think it's vodka.

0:03:51 > 0:03:54I just think that sounds horrible, so I'll take that one out.

0:03:54 > 0:03:57Then it would be between whisky and rum.

0:03:57 > 0:04:03And...I think I'm gonna go for rum on that one.

0:04:03 > 0:04:06Rum. Bananas Foster with rum. You should try Bananas Hughes,

0:04:06 > 0:04:09Chris does them for you, done in lager.

0:04:09 > 0:04:13LAUGHTER Lovely.

0:04:13 > 0:04:15Bananas Foster,

0:04:15 > 0:04:18rum is the spirit. Yes, well done.

0:04:20 > 0:04:25Kevin, the nut Carya illinoinensis,

0:04:25 > 0:04:29native to temperate North America and often used in pastries,

0:04:29 > 0:04:31is more commonly known by which name?

0:04:33 > 0:04:37Two words, Carya, C-A-R-Y-A,

0:04:37 > 0:04:42illinoinensis, I-L-L-I-N-O-I-N-E-N-S-I-S.

0:04:42 > 0:04:45As in the state. I don't think that's walnut.

0:04:45 > 0:04:48So, um...

0:04:48 > 0:04:51I'm inclined towards pecan because that is obviously used

0:04:51 > 0:04:55in various pastries of fruit and such like.

0:04:55 > 0:04:57Pecan, I'm going for pecan.

0:04:57 > 0:04:59Pecan, a North American nut.

0:04:59 > 0:05:02Correct, well done. One all.

0:05:02 > 0:05:06Katie, which term is used in the United States for offal?

0:05:11 > 0:05:14I really don't know the answer to this one.

0:05:17 > 0:05:22I think I'm gonna say choice meat, please.

0:05:22 > 0:05:25Choice meat, offal.

0:05:26 > 0:05:29It's not choice, Katie.

0:05:29 > 0:05:33Wrong choice there. Kevin, do you know of the other two?

0:05:33 > 0:05:36Yeah, usual American use of euphemisms, variety meat.

0:05:36 > 0:05:38Yeah, OK.

0:05:38 > 0:05:41It is variety meat, I'm afraid, Katie, not choice meat.

0:05:41 > 0:05:45So nothing there. Kevin, second question for you.

0:05:45 > 0:05:48Which dessert wine is a famous product of South Africa?

0:05:51 > 0:05:54Tokay is from Hungary.

0:05:54 > 0:05:56Madeira is from Madeira,

0:05:56 > 0:05:59so Constantia, which is an area in South Africa.

0:05:59 > 0:06:01It is indeed. That is the right answer.

0:06:01 > 0:06:04So two to you and you've got to get this, Katie.

0:06:04 > 0:06:08Made from chicken broth, lemon juice and egg yolks,

0:06:08 > 0:06:12the soup called # is from which country?

0:06:17 > 0:06:21Well, it's certainly not familiar, whatever it is.

0:06:21 > 0:06:27I think it doesn't sound Spanish, so I'll take that one away.

0:06:27 > 0:06:29Um...

0:06:29 > 0:06:32I think it doesn't sound particularly Danish either

0:06:32 > 0:06:35although I'm not very well versed with Danish cookery

0:06:35 > 0:06:37so I'm gonna go for Greece. Greece.

0:06:37 > 0:06:40A good way of doing it if you don't know the answer.

0:06:40 > 0:06:43You've eliminated the other two and it's the right answer.

0:06:43 > 0:06:46Yes, well done, Greece. Well done, Katie, you kept yourself in it,

0:06:46 > 0:06:48but Kevin has a chance to win the round.

0:06:48 > 0:06:53Kevin, which seafood is a main ingredient in the sauce Nantua?

0:06:57 > 0:07:00I don't think it's clams.

0:07:00 > 0:07:02I have heard of the sauce.

0:07:02 > 0:07:06I think it's a kind of a tomato base in it.

0:07:06 > 0:07:10I'm slightly torn between the other two but...

0:07:13 > 0:07:16I'm not sure. I'm not sure between the other two.

0:07:16 > 0:07:18I'm going to go for crayfish.

0:07:18 > 0:07:20You're not sure. You seem pleased, Daphne.

0:07:20 > 0:07:23It's the right answer!

0:07:23 > 0:07:26It is the right answer. Kevin, you've won the round.

0:07:26 > 0:07:29You're through to the final round. Bad luck, Katie,

0:07:29 > 0:07:34just the one incorrect, so often is the case in this game.

0:07:34 > 0:07:36And Kevin playing very solidly in this round.

0:07:36 > 0:07:39It means you won't be playing in the final round, Katie.

0:07:39 > 0:07:41Come back and join your teams.

0:07:42 > 0:07:46So, as it stands, one LEGI Head gone, all the Eggheads still there.

0:07:46 > 0:07:50Now we play our next subject today, this one is music.

0:07:50 > 0:07:53Who'd like to play this? It can't be Katie, any of you other four.

0:07:53 > 0:07:55One of you two. Go on, Gillian, you do it.

0:07:55 > 0:07:59Shall I do it? Yep. That'll be me, Dermot. Gillian.

0:07:59 > 0:08:02OK, now which Egghead would you like to play, but it can't be Kevin.

0:08:02 > 0:08:04I'd like to play Barry, please.

0:08:04 > 0:08:09OK, let's have Gillian and Barry into the question room, please.

0:08:11 > 0:08:13So, Gillian, I believe

0:08:13 > 0:08:16geographically you crossed the great Pennine divide, did you?

0:08:16 > 0:08:20I did, yes. I moved over to Leeds about seven years ago

0:08:20 > 0:08:23and it gets worse, previously to that I actually lived in Manchester!

0:08:23 > 0:08:27Ooh! So how do you get on with these Yorkshire folk?

0:08:27 > 0:08:29The Yorkshire folk I can live with, they're all very nice.

0:08:29 > 0:08:33I'm engaged to a Yorkshire man so I can't complain too much.

0:08:33 > 0:08:35It can't be all bad then, can it?!

0:08:35 > 0:08:37Would you like to go first or second?

0:08:37 > 0:08:39I'd like to go first please, Dermot.

0:08:41 > 0:08:45Best of luck. Music. First question to you, Gillian.

0:08:45 > 0:08:47Which singer's albums include

0:08:47 > 0:08:50Diva, Medusa and Songs of Mass Destruction?

0:08:55 > 0:08:58I don't think it's Cyndi Lauper.

0:08:58 > 0:09:03I don't know why but my gut tells me that it's not her,

0:09:03 > 0:09:06which would leave me with Annie Lennox and Chrissie Hynde.

0:09:06 > 0:09:11I seem to remember Diva was something to do with Annie Lennox.

0:09:11 > 0:09:14That's my first instinct so I'll go with Annie Lennox.

0:09:14 > 0:09:17The answer is Annie Lennox, well done. A good start.

0:09:19 > 0:09:21OK, so one to you, Katie.

0:09:21 > 0:09:26Barry, which band had their first UK number one hit single in 1964

0:09:26 > 0:09:28with It's All Over Now?

0:09:32 > 0:09:35I remember dancing, or what passed for dancing, to this song.

0:09:35 > 0:09:38Amazing. It's the Rolling Stones.

0:09:38 > 0:09:42Bet you would've given Mick Jagger a run for his money then.

0:09:42 > 0:09:44Possibly not in economics though.

0:09:44 > 0:09:48Is this a reference to that he was at the London School of Economics?

0:09:48 > 0:09:51LSE, yes. I'm trying to stay with you there, Barry.

0:09:51 > 0:09:55Clinging on to the coat tails. The Rolling Stones is correct.

0:09:55 > 0:09:59Their first UK number one. OK, Katie, second question.

0:09:59 > 0:10:03Which note is usually called an eighth-note in the United States?

0:10:06 > 0:10:07I'm not sure about this.

0:10:07 > 0:10:11I'm afraid my classical music knowledge isn't what it should be.

0:10:11 > 0:10:14Um...

0:10:14 > 0:10:18I'm gonna go for quaver

0:10:18 > 0:10:24just because the other two don't really ring any bells with me.

0:10:24 > 0:10:27So I'll have a stab in the dark and go for quaver.

0:10:27 > 0:10:29Quaver for the eighth-note.

0:10:29 > 0:10:32Eggheads, do you know?

0:10:35 > 0:10:38Confounded the Eggheads. Defied them and got the right answer.

0:10:38 > 0:10:41Well, done, Gillian, quaver. They didn't know that.

0:10:41 > 0:10:42Barry, second question to you.

0:10:42 > 0:10:47What type of music is the piece entitled Tales From the Vienna Woods

0:10:47 > 0:10:48by Johann Strauss the Younger?

0:10:51 > 0:10:54Well, if it's Strauss, it's indubitably a waltz.

0:10:54 > 0:10:57You hear Strauss and you say waltz?

0:10:57 > 0:11:01He did write other things but he's most famous for writing waltzes.

0:11:01 > 0:11:04We're learning some basic quizzing techniques here, are we?

0:11:04 > 0:11:07Strauss, waltz, you're generally correct

0:11:07 > 0:11:09and this time you are as well. OK, two each.

0:11:09 > 0:11:12Waltz is the right answer. Gillian, third question.

0:11:12 > 0:11:16Jonny Buckland, Guy Berryman and Will Champion

0:11:16 > 0:11:18are all members of which band?

0:11:18 > 0:11:24Jonny Buckland, Guy Berryman and Will Champion

0:11:24 > 0:11:26are all members of which band?

0:11:26 > 0:11:31I feel like this is one that I should know and I really, really don't.

0:11:31 > 0:11:35Um... I don't think it's Coldplay,

0:11:35 > 0:11:38which leaves me with Travis and Radiohead.

0:11:38 > 0:11:42I also don't think it's Travis,

0:11:42 > 0:11:46so I will go for Radiohead.

0:11:46 > 0:11:49OK, Jonny Buckland, Guy Berryman and Will Champion

0:11:49 > 0:11:52are members of...Coldplay.

0:11:52 > 0:11:55Oh. Oh, the one you got rid of first,

0:11:55 > 0:11:57which means Barry

0:11:57 > 0:11:59can take the round.

0:11:59 > 0:12:03Jascha Heifetz was one of the 20th century's leading soloists

0:12:03 > 0:12:04on which instrument?

0:12:06 > 0:12:08It certainly wasn't trumpet

0:12:08 > 0:12:12and I'm reasonably certain I have some music by him in my collection

0:12:12 > 0:12:14so I'm going to go for violin.

0:12:14 > 0:12:17Violin for Jascha Heifetz.

0:12:17 > 0:12:20Just looking at the other Eggheads. Yes. Nodding sagely.

0:12:20 > 0:12:23It's correct, yes, violin, Jascha Heifetz.

0:12:23 > 0:12:26Which means we bid you farewell, Gillian, I'm sorry to say.

0:12:26 > 0:12:31You won't be in the final round. Barry, you'll be there. Come back and join your teams.

0:12:33 > 0:12:38So, two LEGI Heads gone as it stands and all the Eggheads still there.

0:12:38 > 0:12:43We move on to our next subject today. This is history. Who'd like to play this?

0:12:43 > 0:12:46It's either Neil, Simon or David.

0:12:48 > 0:12:50Simon, do you want to?

0:12:50 > 0:12:54I'll give it a go, yeah. All right, yeah. OK, I'm gonna have a go, yeah.

0:12:54 > 0:12:59OK, Simon, and who would you like to play from the Eggheads? Judith, Chris or Daphne?

0:12:59 > 0:13:03It's a lottery. Judith, I'll have a game with Judith.

0:13:03 > 0:13:05Have a game with Judith? Yeah.

0:13:05 > 0:13:08She'll be glad of it. Let's play the round.

0:13:08 > 0:13:11OK, Judith and Simon, into the question room, please.

0:13:13 > 0:13:17I'm getting confused by you, LEGI Heads, and your tactics.

0:13:17 > 0:13:21Katie was the book-lover and played food and drink.

0:13:21 > 0:13:24We've got Simon in there, the music lover

0:13:24 > 0:13:27let Gillian play the music round. Why didn't you play music, Simon?

0:13:27 > 0:13:31Well, I only know music from before about 1975

0:13:31 > 0:13:34so usually what I find in quiz programmes

0:13:34 > 0:13:37is I don't have a clue because it's all too modern for me.

0:13:37 > 0:13:41OK, so before '75, that's about 30 or 40 years before Chris anyway.

0:13:41 > 0:13:43Let's see how you do on this one, history.

0:13:43 > 0:13:45Would you like to go first or second?

0:13:45 > 0:13:49I'm gonna go second, see if we can get change of luck.

0:13:50 > 0:13:53Change of luck, put Judith in.

0:13:53 > 0:13:56OK, Judith, first question is yours then.

0:13:56 > 0:13:58Ned Kelly was a famous rural outlaw

0:13:58 > 0:14:00in the 19th century in which country?

0:14:03 > 0:14:07He came from Australia, or he was in Australia.

0:14:07 > 0:14:11Australia? Yeah. Notorious criminal, wasn't he?

0:14:11 > 0:14:13Notorious criminal. And Mick Jagger played him.

0:14:13 > 0:14:16A link there with what Barry was saying.

0:14:16 > 0:14:18A relative of yours, I'd guess.

0:14:18 > 0:14:20Who, of mine? Mmm. Why?

0:14:20 > 0:14:24Criminal background. Oh, Dermot. Sorry, Judith.

0:14:24 > 0:14:27Ned Kelly... I don't quite see the link.

0:14:27 > 0:14:31..famous rural outlaw. Well, you know...

0:14:31 > 0:14:34What's my criminal background? Where do you get that link?

0:14:34 > 0:14:36That's very far-fetched.

0:14:36 > 0:14:39Well, they always do say about the aristos, don't they?

0:14:39 > 0:14:40No they don't!

0:14:40 > 0:14:43Somewhere there's some dark deed gone on there, hasn't there?

0:14:43 > 0:14:46Mine didn't get there that way. Didn't they? No. No?

0:14:46 > 0:14:47OK. We won't continue.

0:14:47 > 0:14:51Ned Kelly is, yes, Australia.

0:14:51 > 0:14:53First question to you then, Simon.

0:14:53 > 0:14:57Which royal house came to power in England in 1485?

0:15:00 > 0:15:05Which royal house came to power in England in 1485?

0:15:05 > 0:15:081485.

0:15:09 > 0:15:13Right. Let's have a think about this.

0:15:13 > 0:15:16Um...

0:15:20 > 0:15:21I'm...

0:15:23 > 0:15:28I think the Stuarts are a bit later than that

0:15:28 > 0:15:31and the Hanovers definitely are. So I'm going to go Tudor.

0:15:31 > 0:15:36It's the Tudors, yes. So it's one-all. Second question each.

0:15:36 > 0:15:39Judith, who started as a wig-maker in the 18th century

0:15:39 > 0:15:44but moved into textiles and patented the water frame for spinning cotton?

0:15:48 > 0:15:50I always get very muddled up with these.

0:15:50 > 0:15:54I think it's Richard Arkwright.

0:15:54 > 0:15:58Hudson must've been Hudson and furs in Canada,

0:15:58 > 0:16:01and Matthew Boulton I think was later,

0:16:01 > 0:16:05an industrialist of some kind. I think it's Richard Arkwright.

0:16:05 > 0:16:07Richard Arkwright.

0:16:07 > 0:16:09Water frame for spinning cotton.

0:16:09 > 0:16:11Eggheads? Yeah.

0:16:11 > 0:16:15It's the right answer. Well done, Judith. Two to you. OK, Simon,

0:16:15 > 0:16:19the abbey at St Albans was the home of which monk,

0:16:19 > 0:16:21whose writings are an important source

0:16:21 > 0:16:23of 13th-century European history?

0:16:27 > 0:16:32Right, the Venerable Bede was a Geordie, wasn't he?

0:16:32 > 0:16:34So it's not him.

0:16:34 > 0:16:39Matthew Paris or Piers Langtoft.

0:16:43 > 0:16:48I think it was Piers Langtoft.

0:16:48 > 0:16:51Piers Langtoft, the abbey at St Albans.

0:16:53 > 0:16:56It's not the right answer. Judith, do you know? Is it Matthew Paris?

0:16:56 > 0:16:58It's Matthew Paris, yes.

0:16:58 > 0:17:0113th century European historian and monk at St Albans.

0:17:01 > 0:17:04So it means, Judith, you win the round if you get this question.

0:17:04 > 0:17:08The so-called Addled Parliament met for only eight weeks

0:17:08 > 0:17:10during the reign of which English monarch?

0:17:14 > 0:17:18The so-called Addled Parliament met for only eight weeks

0:17:18 > 0:17:21during the reign of which English monarch?

0:17:21 > 0:17:23Oh, Lord.

0:17:23 > 0:17:29I don't think there was a formal parliament in Edward I's reign. Yet.

0:17:29 > 0:17:34The Addled Parliament, I don't know.

0:17:34 > 0:17:38I'm going to have to guess between James I and George I.

0:17:38 > 0:17:40It might be George I.

0:17:40 > 0:17:42Or it could be James I.

0:17:42 > 0:17:44No lights going up.

0:17:44 > 0:17:47You make it sound as if I've got the button here.

0:17:47 > 0:17:51I think you might have under your desk. I might ask for it, actually.

0:17:51 > 0:17:53Um...

0:17:56 > 0:17:59I don't know. I'm going to have to guess.

0:18:01 > 0:18:05I think I'm going to say James I after all.

0:18:05 > 0:18:08OK, you've gone for James I. I've got to go for one or the other.

0:18:08 > 0:18:12Eggheads, first, why Addled Parliament, were they drunk?

0:18:12 > 0:18:15No. It was a chaotic state of affairs with the handover

0:18:15 > 0:18:19from Elizabeth I finally dying and the Stuarts coming in.

0:18:19 > 0:18:21It was just a mess basically.

0:18:21 > 0:18:24Addled was simply because they didn't pass any legislation

0:18:24 > 0:18:26during the whole time they sat. I see.

0:18:26 > 0:18:30All right, they have confirmed that you got the right answer.

0:18:30 > 0:18:33James I, the Addled Parliament met for only eight weeks

0:18:33 > 0:18:36during the reign of James I.

0:18:36 > 0:18:39And it means then, looking at the scores,

0:18:39 > 0:18:42Judith, you've won the round, you're in the final round.

0:18:42 > 0:18:46Bad luck, Simon, you won't be there I'm afraid. Come back and join your teams.

0:18:48 > 0:18:51Well, three LEGI Heads bitten the dust so far and no Eggheads.

0:18:51 > 0:18:53Last chance to knock one of them out

0:18:53 > 0:18:56in our last head-to-head before the final round.

0:18:56 > 0:18:58This one is arts and books.

0:18:58 > 0:19:03Who'd like to play, Neil or David? One for me, I think.

0:19:03 > 0:19:07Yeah. Who you gonna have? Who do you think we should take?

0:19:07 > 0:19:10Er... Daphne or Chris?

0:19:10 > 0:19:14Chris, we'll take Chris. Chris.

0:19:14 > 0:19:17Let's have you both into the question room then please, David and Chris.

0:19:19 > 0:19:21OK, David, what do you want to do?

0:19:21 > 0:19:23Simon decided to switch the order

0:19:23 > 0:19:25and take the second set of questions.

0:19:25 > 0:19:29Do you want to do the same or go first again? I'm gonna go second.

0:19:29 > 0:19:33Hopefully Chris will trip himself up and I can overtake him.

0:19:37 > 0:19:39OK, Chris, first question for you on arts and books.

0:19:39 > 0:19:43Which term is used for words that are the same in sound and spelling

0:19:43 > 0:19:47but different in meaning - acronym, paronym or homonym?

0:19:47 > 0:19:50This is the Greek root, isn't it? Homonym.

0:19:50 > 0:19:52Homonym is the right answer.

0:19:52 > 0:19:56Good start, Chris. OK, David, first question for you.

0:19:56 > 0:20:01The art of decoupage involves decorating an object with what?

0:20:06 > 0:20:10OK. I don't think it's beads.

0:20:10 > 0:20:13My partner's father has a jewellery business

0:20:14 > 0:20:17and I don't remember anybody

0:20:17 > 0:20:20buying goods from him for decoupage.

0:20:20 > 0:20:24Coloured wax doesn't ring any bells with me

0:20:24 > 0:20:28so I'm gonna go for paper cut-outs.

0:20:28 > 0:20:32OK. Decoupage is paper cut-outs.

0:20:32 > 0:20:35That's the right answer. One each.

0:20:35 > 0:20:42Chris, the novel Quentin Durward, set in 15th-century France

0:20:42 > 0:20:43and Burgundy is a work by whom?

0:20:47 > 0:20:49It's by Walter Scott.

0:20:49 > 0:20:52You've gone for Walter Scott.

0:20:52 > 0:20:55It's the right answer. Yep, two to you.

0:20:55 > 0:20:59OK, David, second question for you then.

0:20:59 > 0:21:01Chris not tripped up yet.

0:21:01 > 0:21:03In which Charles Dickens novel

0:21:03 > 0:21:05is brimstone and treacle famously served?

0:21:09 > 0:21:15OK. I must admit Charles Dickens is not my favourite author.

0:21:15 > 0:21:20It's a very long time since I've read any of these.

0:21:20 > 0:21:25Oliver Twist would be just too easy.

0:21:25 > 0:21:29Nicholas Nickelby, I'm not sure.

0:21:29 > 0:21:32I'm gonna go for David Copperfield.

0:21:32 > 0:21:35David Copperfield, brimstone and treacle.

0:21:35 > 0:21:40Oliver Twist, well, he wanted more but it wasn't brimstone and treacle.

0:21:40 > 0:21:43No. It was some kind of gruel.

0:21:43 > 0:21:47Not Oliver Twist, but it's not David Copperfield, it's Nicholas Nickelby.

0:21:47 > 0:21:51Dotheboys Hall. Dotheboys Hall. Brimstone and treacle.

0:21:51 > 0:21:54What's brimstone then? It's an often-used phrase.

0:21:54 > 0:21:58Sulphur. Sulphur. Which means Chris hasn't tripped up.

0:21:58 > 0:22:01David has and Chris takes the round if he gets this.

0:22:01 > 0:22:05Chris, which Renaissance artist was the son of the painter

0:22:05 > 0:22:08and writer Giovanni Santi?

0:22:15 > 0:22:18I don't know. It's not Michelangelo.

0:22:21 > 0:22:23Hang on, wasn't that Raphael's family?

0:22:23 > 0:22:24Yeah, Raphael.

0:22:24 > 0:22:26Renaissance artist,

0:22:26 > 0:22:30the son of the painter and writer Giovanni Santi...

0:22:30 > 0:22:33is Raphael. It's correct, Chris.

0:22:33 > 0:22:35You have taken this round

0:22:35 > 0:22:38and a clean sweep for the Eggheads in the head-to-heads.

0:22:38 > 0:22:43Which means, David, I'm sorry, you won't be playing in the final round. Come back and join your teams.

0:22:45 > 0:22:49So this is what we've been playing towards, it's time for the final round.

0:22:49 > 0:22:51Which, as always, is general knowledge.

0:22:51 > 0:22:54But I'm afraid those you who lost your head-to-heads

0:22:54 > 0:22:56won't be allowed to take part in this round.

0:22:56 > 0:23:00So, Gillian, Simon, Katie and David from the LEGI Heads,

0:23:00 > 0:23:03would you leave the studio please?

0:23:04 > 0:23:07So, Neil, you're playing to win the LEGI Heads ?1,000.

0:23:07 > 0:23:10Daphne, Chris, Barry, Judith and Kevin, you're playing for

0:23:10 > 0:23:14something which money can't buy, the Eggheads' reputation.

0:23:14 > 0:23:17As usual I'll ask each team three questions in turn.

0:23:17 > 0:23:21This time the questions are all general knowledge, Neil.

0:23:21 > 0:23:23And you are allowed to confer, Eggheads.

0:23:23 > 0:23:25That doesn't apply to Neil on his own there.

0:23:25 > 0:23:29Neil, the question is, is your one brain better than the Eggheads' five?

0:23:29 > 0:23:33Neil, what do you want to do, would you like to go first or second?

0:23:33 > 0:23:36I think I'll get it over and done with, I'll go first.

0:23:38 > 0:23:42It didn't quite work out for Simon and David, going second there.

0:23:42 > 0:23:46But you never can tell. You've decided to go first and get it over with.

0:23:46 > 0:23:49Well, let's hope you've got it over with by winning it.

0:23:49 > 0:23:53You could be just two or three questions away from that money. Here's your first question.

0:23:53 > 0:23:54Best of luck, Neil.

0:23:54 > 0:23:56What is the first name of

0:23:56 > 0:24:00the younger brother of rugby international Gavin Hastings,

0:24:00 > 0:24:02who also played more than 50 times for Scotland?

0:24:05 > 0:24:08You've given me three quite Scottish names to choose from.

0:24:08 > 0:24:12I did suspect it was Scott before you gave me the options

0:24:12 > 0:24:13so I'm gonna go with Scott.

0:24:13 > 0:24:16So you're saying in this case the options

0:24:16 > 0:24:18have probably been less use to you

0:24:18 > 0:24:20than if it had been a sudden death question.

0:24:20 > 0:24:22Well, you've stayed firm and got the right answer.

0:24:22 > 0:24:24Scott Hastings, brother of Gavin,

0:24:24 > 0:24:28capped more than 50 times for Scotland.

0:24:28 > 0:24:32So, first question for you, Eggheads. The Canadian-born actress

0:24:32 > 0:24:36Linda Thorson played the character of Tara King

0:24:36 > 0:24:38in which 1960s TV series?

0:24:42 > 0:24:44That's The Avengers.

0:24:44 > 0:24:46The Avengers? Yes.

0:24:46 > 0:24:49Yes, Linda Thorson, Tara King, right answer.

0:24:51 > 0:24:54Neil, second question for you. Well negotiated that first one.

0:24:54 > 0:24:58Let's see if you can keep it up. Who played the character Ward Abbott

0:24:58 > 0:25:03in the films The Bourne Identity and The Bourne Supremacy?

0:25:06 > 0:25:09Have you seen them, Neil? I have seen them.

0:25:09 > 0:25:11Good. That's a start, right.

0:25:11 > 0:25:15I don't remember seeing Anthony Hopkins

0:25:15 > 0:25:17or Ben Kingsley in them.

0:25:17 > 0:25:20I'm just trying to think, is Ben Kingsley in there somewhere?

0:25:20 > 0:25:24I don't know who Brian Cox is but he's gonna be my answer.

0:25:24 > 0:25:28Good old elimination technique again, it's the right answer.

0:25:28 > 0:25:31Brian Cox takes the role of Ward Abbott

0:25:31 > 0:25:34in the Bourne Identity and Supremacy. So two to you.

0:25:34 > 0:25:40Eggheads, which writer is know for his series of books started in 1951,

0:25:40 > 0:25:41on The Buildings of England?

0:25:46 > 0:25:48That's Nikolaus Pevsner.

0:25:48 > 0:25:50Pevsner. Yes.

0:25:50 > 0:25:53Still pretty standard reference books, aren't they?

0:25:53 > 0:25:58Still going, yes. They're gradually being updated by later writers

0:25:58 > 0:26:00but yeah, still the standard work.

0:26:00 > 0:26:03Pevsner is the right answer. Well identified, Eggheads.

0:26:03 > 0:26:05Two each and a good round.

0:26:05 > 0:26:10Well done, Neil, two good answers, let's make it a third.

0:26:10 > 0:26:14In 2004 John Scarlett became the head

0:26:14 > 0:26:17of which of these security and intelligence services?

0:26:23 > 0:26:25I haven't got an idea.

0:26:25 > 0:26:29It's gonna be a total guess. Um...

0:26:32 > 0:26:36For some reason I don't think it's MI6.

0:26:36 > 0:26:39I'm going to go with MI5.

0:26:39 > 0:26:41OK, MI5.

0:26:41 > 0:26:45Not GCHQ, not MI6. A guess, says Neil.

0:26:45 > 0:26:48MI5, Eggheads?

0:26:48 > 0:26:49MI6.

0:26:49 > 0:26:53MI6, which I bet you were toying with because you mentioned it.

0:26:53 > 0:26:56The difference between MI5 and MI6, Eggheads?

0:26:56 > 0:26:59MI5 is within the UK, MI6 is abroad.

0:26:59 > 0:27:03There we are. John Scarlett, head of MI6 appointed in 2004.

0:27:03 > 0:27:06Which means that's the third question,

0:27:06 > 0:27:09therefore if you get this correct, Eggheads, you've won the game.

0:27:09 > 0:27:15Eggheads, Ponta Delgada is the largest city in which group of islands?

0:27:20 > 0:27:22That would be the Azores.

0:27:23 > 0:27:24(Sorry.)

0:27:24 > 0:27:28It's the right answer. Ponta Delgada means Eggheads, you've won.

0:27:35 > 0:27:37Bad luck, Neil, and all the LEGI Heads there.

0:27:37 > 0:27:40You ran into the Eggheads after they'd suffered a loss.

0:27:40 > 0:27:42Sometimes they wobble after that

0:27:42 > 0:27:45but I could see a steely determination in them today

0:27:45 > 0:27:49not to falter and to re-establish that reputation again.

0:27:49 > 0:27:53So thanks very much for playing to you, Neil, and all the LEGI Heads.

0:27:53 > 0:27:56Such a valiant performance there, Neil, in the final round.

0:27:56 > 0:27:58It wasn't to be on the day.

0:27:58 > 0:28:00The Eggheads have done what comes naturally to them.

0:28:00 > 0:28:03They reign supreme over quiz land once again.

0:28:03 > 0:28:08You won't be going home with the money which means it rolls over to the next show.

0:28:08 > 0:28:11Eggheads, congratulations. Who will beat you?

0:28:11 > 0:28:15Join us next time to see if a new team of challengers have the brains to defeat the Eggheads.

0:28:15 > 0:28:19?2,000 says they don't. Until then, goodbye.

0:28:25 > 0:28:29Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd

0:28:29 > 0:28:32E-mail subtitling@bbc.co.uk