0:00:04 > 0:00:07These people are amongst the greatest quiz players in Britain.
0:00:09 > 0:00:15Together, they make up the Eggheads, arguably the most formidable quiz team in the country.
0:00:16 > 0:00:19The question is, can they be beaten?
0:00:23 > 0:00:26Welcome to Eggheads, the show where a team of five quiz challengers
0:00:26 > 0:00:29attempt to beat possibly the greatest quiz team in Britain.
0:00:29 > 0:00:32Their quiz pedigree is well-known as they've won some of the country's
0:00:32 > 0:00:35toughest quiz shows. They are the Eggheads.
0:00:35 > 0:00:37And taking on the awesome might
0:00:37 > 0:00:41of the Eggheads, today, are Insight Radio, from Glasgow.
0:00:41 > 0:00:45They are all staff and volunteers who work for the radio station
0:00:45 > 0:00:49for the Royal National Institute for the Blind. Let's meet them.
0:00:49 > 0:00:54Hi. I'm Wilson. I'm 62 and I'm a volunteer broadcaster.
0:00:54 > 0:00:59Hi. I'm Grace. I'm 55 and I am a volunteer broadcaster.
0:00:59 > 0:01:04Hello. I'm Richard. I'm 67 and I'm a volunteer broadcaster.
0:01:04 > 0:01:05Hello. I'm Fiona.
0:01:05 > 0:01:10- I'm 59 and I'm also a broadcast volunteer.- Hi. I'm Alan.
0:01:10 > 0:01:13I'm 37 and I'm a broadcast producer.
0:01:13 > 0:01:16- Wilson and team, hello. - Hello, Jeremy. Good to meet you.
0:01:16 > 0:01:20And you. And great to meet a fellow radio person.
0:01:20 > 0:01:22Tell us about the station.
0:01:22 > 0:01:23It's called Insight Radio.
0:01:23 > 0:01:29We were founded by the RNIB, Royal National Institute of the Blind.
0:01:29 > 0:01:32And we've been running now for about five years.
0:01:32 > 0:01:34We, basically, serve blind
0:01:34 > 0:01:37and partially-sighted people though we've got other listeners as well.
0:01:37 > 0:01:42We provide quite a mix of news, music, features, as I say,
0:01:42 > 0:01:46particularly of interest to people who are blind or partially-sighted.
0:01:46 > 0:01:53- And you measure your audiences? You've got a sense of how needed you are?- Well, we do and...
0:01:53 > 0:01:58our audience has grown over, as I say, something like five years,
0:01:58 > 0:02:04and one measure of that is that 2007 we won a Sony silver award
0:02:04 > 0:02:12- at which they recognised our work. - Fantastic. Well done. And good luck against the Eggheads here.
0:02:12 > 0:02:17Hope you do really well. Every day there's £1,000 worth of cash up
0:02:17 > 0:02:19for grabs for our challengers. However, if they fail to defeat
0:02:19 > 0:02:22the Eggheads, the prize money rolls over to the next show.
0:02:22 > 0:02:26Now, Insight Radio, the challengers won the last game
0:02:26 > 0:02:30which means £1,000 says you can't beat the Eggheads.
0:02:30 > 0:02:35First head to head battle is on the subject of politics.
0:02:35 > 0:02:36Who wants to play politics?
0:02:36 > 0:02:40I think you should go with it, Richard. You're the man for politics.
0:02:40 > 0:02:43Even geography might come up, you think...
0:02:43 > 0:02:47You see, we don't know what's coming up in the other categories so I think
0:02:47 > 0:02:51- we must go with the categories that appear, so you go with it, Richard. - All right.
0:02:51 > 0:02:55- We'll choose Richard. - Now, the tricky bit.
0:02:55 > 0:02:59- It's very difficult but we've decided to play against CJ.- OK.
0:02:59 > 0:03:04Richard, from Insight Radio, against CJ, from the Eggheads. To ensure
0:03:04 > 0:03:09there's no conferring, please take your positions in the question room.
0:03:09 > 0:03:12- So, Richard, you work on the radio station.- I do, indeed.
0:03:12 > 0:03:15And you're doing, I understand, the afternoon show.
0:03:15 > 0:03:18Yes. I do the afternoon show on a Wednesday with Alan and I operate
0:03:18 > 0:03:22from three o'clock till six o'clock in the evening.
0:03:22 > 0:03:25That's fine. It doesn't coincide with my programme.
0:03:25 > 0:03:29- Indeed, it doesn't. - So recommend everyone listens to it.
0:03:29 > 0:03:32I'm asking you three multiple choice questions, each of you, and whoever
0:03:32 > 0:03:34gets the most right goes through
0:03:34 > 0:03:38to the final round and Richard, you can choose the first or second set.
0:03:38 > 0:03:41I think I'd like to go first.
0:03:43 > 0:03:46Richard, Fiorello LaGuardia
0:03:46 > 0:03:52served three consecutive four-year terms between 1933 and 1945 as Mayor
0:03:52 > 0:03:54of which US city?
0:03:58 > 0:04:02Well, I think that I know this one.
0:04:02 > 0:04:04The answer is New York.
0:04:04 > 0:04:06New York is correct. Well done, Richard...
0:04:06 > 0:04:09because I guess the airport...
0:04:09 > 0:04:12LaGuardia Airport. Yeah.
0:04:12 > 0:04:15OK, CJ, your question. For what does the letter T
0:04:15 > 0:04:20stand in the abbreviation STV, the voting system introduced in Scotland
0:04:20 > 0:04:23in 2007 for local elections?
0:04:27 > 0:04:32One of those questions where I had no idea until the options came up.
0:04:32 > 0:04:34But having seen the options, I think
0:04:34 > 0:04:39it stands for Single Transferable Vote, so I'll try transferable.
0:04:39 > 0:04:41It does. You're right. Well done. One point to you.
0:04:41 > 0:04:43Back to you, Richard. How many police forces are there
0:04:43 > 0:04:46currently in England and Wales?
0:04:50 > 0:04:55Well, I'm not sure about this question at all.
0:04:57 > 0:05:01So I will have a stab and say 34.
0:05:01 > 0:05:05That's wrong, I'm afraid. 43 is the correct answer.
0:05:05 > 0:05:08CJ, your chance to take the lead.
0:05:08 > 0:05:10Which American politician once said
0:05:10 > 0:05:15"I love California, I practically grew up in Phoenix?"
0:05:19 > 0:05:22I simply can't imagine it was Schwarzenegger.
0:05:22 > 0:05:28I can only imagine it was Dan Quayle so let's try him.
0:05:28 > 0:05:32I've not heard the quote before, either. I thought I'd heard all of
0:05:32 > 0:05:37his gaffs. Dan Quayle is correct. Richard, back to you.
0:05:37 > 0:05:42The House of Lords has an absolute veto on any bill introduced
0:05:42 > 0:05:45in the Commons that proposes to do what?
0:05:50 > 0:05:55Well, declare war... not sure about that.
0:05:55 > 0:06:01Extend the life of the Parliament... I wouldn't have thought so.
0:06:01 > 0:06:05I'll go for abolish the monarchy.
0:06:06 > 0:06:11Actually, not. It's extend the life of Parliament.
0:06:11 > 0:06:13That is obviously the one thing that they don't want the politicians
0:06:13 > 0:06:17to do cos they could stay in power forever.
0:06:17 > 0:06:19So, Richard, commiserations.
0:06:19 > 0:06:23You've lost there. CJ will have won the round anyway.
0:06:23 > 0:06:26You were beaten by our Egghead. As a result, you won't be in the final.
0:06:26 > 0:06:32CJ, you will. Do both of you come back, rejoin your teams.
0:06:32 > 0:06:34As it stands, the challengers have lost one brain from the final round.
0:06:34 > 0:06:38The Eggheads have not lost any brains.
0:06:38 > 0:06:40And the next subject is music.
0:06:40 > 0:06:43Music. So who's going to do this one?
0:06:43 > 0:06:46- That was Alan.- Alan. I think we decided before the show.
0:06:46 > 0:06:49- Yes.- It was democratic that you have been volunteered, Alan.
0:06:49 > 0:06:51- OK.- So we'll go with Alan.
0:06:51 > 0:06:55Which Egghead? You've got Barry, Chris, Daphne or Judith.
0:06:55 > 0:07:01We would like to ask Judith to join the music round.
0:07:01 > 0:07:03Judith, feeling musical?
0:07:03 > 0:07:05- You are quite musical. - No. I'm not at all musical.
0:07:05 > 0:07:08I told you the other day, I prefer
0:07:08 > 0:07:10listening to the spoken word rather than to music.
0:07:10 > 0:07:13Yeah but you have a musical sense of...
0:07:13 > 0:07:14- Do I? Well, that's kind of you. - Maybe not.
0:07:14 > 0:07:19It's Alan, from Insight Radio then, against Judith, from the Eggheads.
0:07:19 > 0:07:24So there's no conferring, please take your positions.
0:07:24 > 0:07:26So, Alan, you're a radio man, too.
0:07:26 > 0:07:28Yes. I am.
0:07:28 > 0:07:30And producing, presenting, what are you doing on the station?
0:07:30 > 0:07:35I present a show six days a week and I do some co-production, as well.
0:07:35 > 0:07:37Oh, my goodness. You are busy.
0:07:37 > 0:07:41- Very much so. Yeah.- Well, good luck in taking on Judith here.
0:07:41 > 0:07:43Three questions on music.
0:07:43 > 0:07:46And Alan, you can choose the first or second set.
0:07:46 > 0:07:50I think I'll go with ladies first.
0:07:53 > 0:07:59Judith, which singer had a UK top-ten hit single, With Games Without Frontiers, and Sledgehammer?
0:08:03 > 0:08:07I think that was...
0:08:11 > 0:08:14- Paul Young.- Paul Young.- Yes.
0:08:14 > 0:08:18- It was Peter Gabriel... actually. Not Paul Young.- Oh, right.
0:08:18 > 0:08:21Peter Gabriel was in Genesis and then went solo and all that.
0:08:21 > 0:08:24Sorry, Judith.
0:08:24 > 0:08:28Here's your question, Alan. In the 1980s, Johnny Marr,
0:08:28 > 0:08:34Andy Rourke and Mike Joyce were all members of which group?
0:08:43 > 0:08:48If memory serves me correct, I'm sure Johnny Marr was a guitarist.
0:08:48 > 0:08:56And I'm positive I was listening to this band on the way down here on the train. I think it's The Smiths.
0:08:56 > 0:09:00The Smiths is absolutely correct, Alan. Well done.
0:09:00 > 0:09:04Missing out just Morrissey, there.
0:09:04 > 0:09:06Judith, your question.
0:09:06 > 0:09:08Which group released the album...
0:09:08 > 0:09:12"The Circus" in December 2008?
0:09:15 > 0:09:18Now, this is something I've read.
0:09:18 > 0:09:22Can I remember it?
0:09:23 > 0:09:25I know Girls Aloud have got
0:09:25 > 0:09:29a hit of some kind and Take That. So which is it?
0:09:29 > 0:09:33Would Girls Aloud do something called The Circus?
0:09:33 > 0:09:37I think it's wrong. Take That.
0:09:37 > 0:09:39No. Take That is right. Well done.
0:09:39 > 0:09:42Hooray. At last.
0:09:42 > 0:09:45Over to you, Alan. Here is your question.
0:09:45 > 0:09:50How many white keys are there on a standard grand piano?
0:09:57 > 0:10:02Not very good at playing instruments,
0:10:02 > 0:10:05like the guitar, as my neighbours will probably testify.
0:10:05 > 0:10:08I think I'm going
0:10:08 > 0:10:11to go with 44.
0:10:13 > 0:10:1644 is your answer, straight down the middle.
0:10:16 > 0:10:19I'll try your teammates. Is he right?
0:10:19 > 0:10:21I think it might be 52.
0:10:21 > 0:10:24It could be. There's a lot of white notes on the piano.
0:10:24 > 0:10:28One way of thinking of it! I'm afraid it's more, Alan, than 44.
0:10:28 > 0:10:30It is 52.
0:10:30 > 0:10:33So, back to you, Judith.
0:10:33 > 0:10:39What is the commonly used French term for a cradle song or lullaby?
0:10:44 > 0:10:47Well, aubade, that sounds like something to do with the dawn
0:10:47 > 0:10:50and barcarolle sounds something to do with boats.
0:10:50 > 0:10:55And berceuse is the cradle.
0:10:55 > 0:10:57Berceuse.
0:10:57 > 0:10:59- Is that your answer?- Yeah. - You're right. Well done.
0:10:59 > 0:11:01Got it.
0:11:01 > 0:11:05Alan, you get this right, we go to sudden death.
0:11:05 > 0:11:09If you don't, you won't be in the final. Here we go.
0:11:09 > 0:11:15The surrealist Elisabeth Lutyens once dismissed British pastoral
0:11:15 > 0:11:20composers such as Vaughan Williams with which derogatory phrase?
0:11:25 > 0:11:27Pastoral.
0:11:27 > 0:11:31I would... Cowpat, I don't think.
0:11:31 > 0:11:38That doesn't sound right. Wriggling, I suppose, is quite insulting.
0:11:40 > 0:11:46Perhaps C is quite a bit of a put-down.
0:11:46 > 0:11:50I think I'll go with C then as my final answer.
0:11:50 > 0:11:53- You're going with Mad Wriggling. - Yeah.
0:11:53 > 0:11:56I don't know the background to this at all but she apparently dismissed
0:11:56 > 0:11:58it as the The Cowpat School.
0:12:00 > 0:12:04Could have been any answer as far as I'm concerned. Anyone know the background to this?
0:12:04 > 0:12:06Wasn't it Benjamin Britten who described Vaughan Williams' music
0:12:06 > 0:12:09as "cow looking over a gate" music?
0:12:09 > 0:12:14Alan, I'm sorry. You've been beaten by our Egghead there so you won't be in the final round.
0:12:14 > 0:12:17Judith, you will be, you won on music.
0:12:17 > 0:12:20I know, that's a first.
0:12:20 > 0:12:23Please, both of you, come back to the studio.
0:12:23 > 0:12:26As it stands, the challengers have lost two brains from the
0:12:26 > 0:12:29final round. The Eggheads have lost no brains so far. Still time.
0:12:29 > 0:12:31And you can still win.
0:12:31 > 0:12:34The next subject is food and drink.
0:12:34 > 0:12:37Which of you wants this?
0:12:37 > 0:12:38Food and drink...
0:12:38 > 0:12:41Fiona, I think. I'm afraid you're going to be volunteered.
0:12:41 > 0:12:43Am I the one that has to go? Right.
0:12:43 > 0:12:49We all enjoy food and drink but it's just the questions on it, if you don't mind taking them on, Fiona.
0:12:49 > 0:12:50I'll see what I can do.
0:12:50 > 0:12:53Fiona against...
0:12:53 > 0:12:57- We'd like to go up against Chris. - There's definitely a plan here.
0:12:57 > 0:13:00Fiona, from Insight Radio, versus Chris, from the Eggheads,
0:13:00 > 0:13:04please go to the question room now.
0:13:04 > 0:13:08So I will ask each of you three questions on food and drink in turn.
0:13:08 > 0:13:11And Fiona, would you like the first or second set?
0:13:11 > 0:13:13I think I'd like to go first, please.
0:13:15 > 0:13:18Very good. Here we go with food and drink. Good luck. What colour
0:13:18 > 0:13:21is the shell of a European lobster before it is cooked?
0:13:29 > 0:13:31A European lobster.
0:13:31 > 0:13:34I don't think it's dark blue.
0:13:34 > 0:13:39Let me think. Pale yellow.
0:13:39 > 0:13:43Well, I think...
0:13:43 > 0:13:46it's probably not right but I'll have to try...
0:13:46 > 0:13:47pale yellow.
0:13:47 > 0:13:51Pale yellow is wrong. Eggheads...
0:13:51 > 0:13:53Dark blue.
0:13:53 > 0:13:56Dark blue.
0:13:56 > 0:13:59There we are. Fiona, I'll move to Chris.
0:13:59 > 0:14:05Which constituent makes up nearly 90% of the white of a chicken's egg?
0:14:08 > 0:14:11Well, it's not fat cos that's all in the yolk.
0:14:14 > 0:14:18And I don't think there's that much protein in the white of an egg.
0:14:18 > 0:14:20So it's probably water.
0:14:20 > 0:14:23I've had some very watery eggs in my time so it's water.
0:14:23 > 0:14:26Water is correct.
0:14:26 > 0:14:28Fiona, back to you.
0:14:28 > 0:14:34Which diet, popularised by George Ohsawa after World War Two
0:14:34 > 0:14:38aims to balance the yin and yang elements in food?
0:14:43 > 0:14:48Well, the name itself would make you think it was rice diet.
0:14:48 > 0:14:52I'm pretty sure it's not the Cambridge Diet.
0:14:52 > 0:14:57But the balancing makes me think it might be macrobiotics.
0:14:57 > 0:15:01So I have to choose between those two.
0:15:01 > 0:15:06It was after the Second World War.
0:15:06 > 0:15:11No. Maybe I should go back to the rice diet and hope for the best.
0:15:11 > 0:15:17Rice diet. You're clenching your teeth as you say that.
0:15:17 > 0:15:19I am. Absolutely. And my fingers.
0:15:19 > 0:15:24- It was macrobiotics.- Oh, no. - I'm so sorry.
0:15:24 > 0:15:27I was willing you towards that. Sorry. Rice diet is wrong.
0:15:27 > 0:15:30Macrobiotics is right. Chris, your question.
0:15:30 > 0:15:34If you get this right, I do believe you have won the round.
0:15:34 > 0:15:37What type of food is a gurnard?
0:15:37 > 0:15:42G-U-R-N-A-R-D. What type of food is a gurnard, Chris?
0:15:47 > 0:15:50It's an extremely ugly, rather bony but quite tasty sea fish.
0:15:51 > 0:15:53Is he right? Anyone?
0:15:53 > 0:15:56He's right. It is sea fish.
0:15:56 > 0:15:58So, congratulations, Chris.
0:15:58 > 0:16:01Fiona, I'm afraid you were beaten by our Egghead.
0:16:01 > 0:16:04As a result, you won't be able to help your team in the final round.
0:16:04 > 0:16:07Do, both of you, come back to us now.
0:16:07 > 0:16:10As it stands, the challengers have lost three brains.
0:16:10 > 0:16:13That's going to make it harder. The Eggheads have lost
0:16:13 > 0:16:16no brains at all, so far.
0:16:16 > 0:16:18But we still have another round before the final round.
0:16:18 > 0:16:20It's arts and books.
0:16:20 > 0:16:22Which of you wants this one?
0:16:22 > 0:16:24- Grace?- Me. Yes.
0:16:24 > 0:16:31- Could be Wilson? No?- No. I'm being held back from any of the rounds.
0:16:31 > 0:16:34- The secret weapon. - Well, it's now out in the open.
0:16:34 > 0:16:36What am I saying?
0:16:36 > 0:16:41I've blown the whole strategy. OK. Grace against who?
0:16:41 > 0:16:42Barry, please.
0:16:42 > 0:16:47Right. It's Grace, from Insight Radio, versus Barry, from the Eggheads and to ensure there's
0:16:47 > 0:16:52no conferring, please take your positions in the question room.
0:16:52 > 0:16:55So, Grace, I'm going to guess that you're at the radio station as well.
0:16:55 > 0:16:58I am, indeed. Yes. I do two shows.
0:16:58 > 0:17:02I do the early morning on Thursday, the first edition news show
0:17:02 > 0:17:06and then I do on a Monday lunchtime, I do the daily lunch.
0:17:06 > 0:17:07- It's more of a magazine show. - So we have something in common then.
0:17:07 > 0:17:10We do, indeed.
0:17:10 > 0:17:15- An allotment in your spare time. - Yes. I absolutely love it.
0:17:15 > 0:17:18Just got it last year. Had my name down on the waiting list.
0:17:18 > 0:17:23So I'm a complete novice but great fun. Absolutely terrific.
0:17:23 > 0:17:25Great fun. Great exercise.
0:17:25 > 0:17:29Meet lots of good, nice people and I can eat my own vegetables.
0:17:29 > 0:17:31Yeah. Wonderful. OK.
0:17:31 > 0:17:33Three questions. Arts and books.
0:17:33 > 0:17:35Grace, you can choose first or second.
0:17:35 > 0:17:37I think I'll go first please, Jeremy.
0:17:39 > 0:17:45So, what name is given to the method of painting with opaque watercolours
0:17:45 > 0:17:50that have been ground in water and mixed with gum and white pigment?
0:17:55 > 0:17:57I'm really not sure.
0:17:57 > 0:17:59I was hoping for a book question...
0:18:02 > 0:18:05but tempera seems to be...
0:18:05 > 0:18:11jumping out at me but it's a shot in the dark. Tempera.
0:18:11 > 0:18:13Tempera's jumping out at me as well.
0:18:13 > 0:18:17- It's wrong though. It is gouache.- Right.
0:18:17 > 0:18:20- What is tempera, Eggs?- Eggs.
0:18:20 > 0:18:23- What, it's eggs?- Using eggs as the binding agent for the paint powder.
0:18:23 > 0:18:27It was what was used before oil painting came along.
0:18:27 > 0:18:30- So it was the right territory, Grace.- Yeah.
0:18:30 > 0:18:33Barry, your question.
0:18:33 > 0:18:38In the 1820s, the Japanese artist Katsushika Hokusai
0:18:38 > 0:18:45produced a famous series of prints known as the 36 views of which site?
0:18:50 > 0:18:55Hokusai is one of my all-time favourite artists.
0:18:55 > 0:18:58He was a member of the Ukiyo-e, the School of the Floating World,
0:18:58 > 0:19:02which attempted to catch impressions of the world around him and his most
0:19:02 > 0:19:05famous series was the 36 views of Mount Fuji.
0:19:05 > 0:19:09I love it when you guys do the background as well.
0:19:09 > 0:19:13Mount Fuji is right. Grace, the popular historical novel
0:19:13 > 0:19:17by Captain Marryat, set during the English Civil War,
0:19:17 > 0:19:22about a group of royalist children forced to go into hiding,
0:19:22 > 0:19:25is called The Children Of The... what?
0:19:29 > 0:19:32I think it's Children Of The New Forest.
0:19:32 > 0:19:35Absolutely right. Well done.
0:19:35 > 0:19:38Well done, Grace. New Forest is correct.
0:19:38 > 0:19:41Barry, your question.
0:19:41 > 0:19:46What was the name of the American poet born in 1894 who was known
0:19:46 > 0:19:48for experimental typography,
0:19:48 > 0:19:54especially the ubiquitous use of lower case letters?
0:19:58 > 0:20:02Well, Ezra Pound is much later than that.
0:20:02 > 0:20:05And Emily Dickinson is earlier, although she only had three poems
0:20:05 > 0:20:07ever published in her lifetime.
0:20:07 > 0:20:10But the poet renowned for his typography and I wish
0:20:10 > 0:20:12I could say this in lower case...
0:20:12 > 0:20:13is EE Cummings.
0:20:13 > 0:20:16EE Cummings is right. Anyone know any EE Cummings?
0:20:16 > 0:20:19Not the poems. I mean, you see his name.
0:20:19 > 0:20:21His name was never written like that.
0:20:21 > 0:20:23It's all lower case letters without full stops.
0:20:23 > 0:20:28What was the Woody Allen film where EE Cummings was quoted?
0:20:28 > 0:20:30The Sleeper.
0:20:30 > 0:20:33Hannah And Her Sisters.
0:20:33 > 0:20:38No-one, not even the rain, has such small hands.
0:20:38 > 0:20:40- That's very baffling.- It is baffling.
0:20:40 > 0:20:44Beautiful things can be baffling.
0:20:44 > 0:20:47Well, Grace, no easy way to say it.
0:20:47 > 0:20:51If you get this one wrong, you won't be in the final and I think Wilson
0:20:51 > 0:20:53would like you to be in the final.
0:20:53 > 0:20:55I'll try.
0:20:55 > 0:20:57Otherwise he's going to be slightly lonely. So here we go.
0:20:57 > 0:21:04In the detective stories by Dorothy L Sayers, what is the name of Lord Peter Wimsey's manservant?
0:21:16 > 0:21:18I don't think it's Hudson.
0:21:20 > 0:21:24Burrell or Bunter.
0:21:24 > 0:21:27I'll go for Burrell.
0:21:27 > 0:21:29Your answer is Burrell.
0:21:29 > 0:21:31Yes.
0:21:31 > 0:21:33But it's Bunter.
0:21:33 > 0:21:36- Oh.- Sorry.
0:21:36 > 0:21:38He passed us all by. Bunter the butler.
0:21:38 > 0:21:40Well, Grace, bad luck.
0:21:40 > 0:21:42And well done, Barry.
0:21:42 > 0:21:46Grace, unfortunately, you've been undone by our Egghead
0:21:46 > 0:21:52and you won't be able to join your team in the final round. Barry, you will be there. Please, both of you,
0:21:52 > 0:21:54come back and rejoin your teammates.
0:21:54 > 0:21:55This is what we've been playing towards.
0:21:55 > 0:21:59Time for our final round which, as always, is general knowledge.
0:21:59 > 0:22:02I'm afraid those of you who lost your head to heads won't be
0:22:02 > 0:22:07allowed to take part in this round, so that's Grace, Richard, Fiona and Alan, from Insight Radio.
0:22:07 > 0:22:09Please leave the studio.
0:22:10 > 0:22:12Wilson, you are playing to win Insight Radio £1,000.
0:22:12 > 0:22:19CJ, Daphne, Chris, Barry and Judith, you are playing for something which money can't buy -
0:22:19 > 0:22:22the Eggheads' reputation. It needed rebuilding in the last match.
0:22:22 > 0:22:26They were down to one and they lost,
0:22:26 > 0:22:31so this is all about them trying to feel good about themselves.
0:22:31 > 0:22:35As usual, I'll ask each team three questions in turn.
0:22:35 > 0:22:37This time, the questions are all general knowledge.
0:22:37 > 0:22:41You can confer...with yourself.
0:22:41 > 0:22:44Insight Radio, the question is is your one brain
0:22:44 > 0:22:49better than the Eggheads' five? Do you want to go first or second?
0:22:49 > 0:22:51Jeremy, I'll go second.
0:22:54 > 0:22:56Your question, Eggheads. In the UK, for what does the letter D stand
0:22:56 > 0:23:02in the name of the veterinary charity, the PDSA?
0:23:07 > 0:23:13Dispensary. It's the People's Dispensary for Sick Animals.
0:23:13 > 0:23:15I just assumed it stood for dog.
0:23:17 > 0:23:20- Oh.- Dispensary's correct.
0:23:22 > 0:23:27Back to you, Wilson. In the UK property market, fashionable, urban
0:23:27 > 0:23:33apartments that are marketed as New York style, are usually called what?
0:23:38 > 0:23:43Well, I've just seen a wonderful film which was set in a garret
0:23:43 > 0:23:48and I can't imagine anybody marketing a house as a garret.
0:23:48 > 0:23:50Attics, I don't think many people
0:23:50 > 0:23:52have attics and basically, that's what they're called.
0:23:52 > 0:23:56So I'm going to go for B, lofts.
0:23:56 > 0:23:57And you're totally right. Well done. Lofts is right.
0:24:00 > 0:24:05Eggheads, in German, the letter V is normally pronounced like
0:24:05 > 0:24:07which letter in English?
0:24:12 > 0:24:14That would be F.
0:24:14 > 0:24:18- F for... Freddy.- F...
0:24:18 > 0:24:21for Freddy is right.
0:24:21 > 0:24:24Wilson, back to you.
0:24:24 > 0:24:30In ancient architecture, what name was given to a temple dedicated to all the Gods?
0:24:35 > 0:24:40Well, I think pyramid, I associate that specifically with Ancient Egypt.
0:24:40 > 0:24:46And Parthenon is really the Greek word for beautiful.
0:24:46 > 0:24:52So I think the temple of all the Gods in Greek would be the Pantheon.
0:24:52 > 0:24:54Pantheon, it is, Wilson. Yes.
0:24:54 > 0:24:56Two points each.
0:24:56 > 0:25:00Eggheads, Pygmalion, by George Bernard Shaw, was first staged
0:25:00 > 0:25:04in 1913, not in London, but in which city?
0:25:09 > 0:25:11Chichester is a city.
0:25:14 > 0:25:16- I can't imagine it would be Cairo. - There might have been a reason.
0:25:16 > 0:25:20For an out of town triumph, we'll bring it into the West End.
0:25:20 > 0:25:23The only thing I ever know that was first staged in Cairo
0:25:23 > 0:25:25was Aida.
0:25:25 > 0:25:28Why Vienna?
0:25:28 > 0:25:33What date? And why Vienna?
0:25:33 > 0:25:36It's not English-speaking.
0:25:36 > 0:25:38No. It wasn't written...
0:25:38 > 0:25:42Yes. It wouldn't be Cairo. I reckon
0:25:42 > 0:25:44he tried it out in the provinces which would be Chichester...
0:25:44 > 0:25:49- which is a city.- A double bluff.
0:25:49 > 0:25:52And it was Chichester, wouldn't you
0:25:52 > 0:25:55put two other Colchester, or Caernarvon or something.
0:25:55 > 0:25:59- That could be the double bluff. - The double bluff. Yeah.
0:25:59 > 0:26:04Well, as you can tell, we're completely flummoxed.
0:26:04 > 0:26:09But we think the logical answer must be Chichester.
0:26:09 > 0:26:13- So that's what we'll go for.- OK.
0:26:13 > 0:26:17If you're right, then you take the lead.
0:26:17 > 0:26:19You're wrong, Eggheads.
0:26:19 > 0:26:22You are wrong. All five of you.
0:26:22 > 0:26:24Chichester. No.
0:26:24 > 0:26:27- Vienna.- You wouldn't have even got it right if you'd had two choices.
0:26:27 > 0:26:28Vienna, so what a turn of events.
0:26:28 > 0:26:32You all coasted through to the final,
0:26:32 > 0:26:36not losing a single life.
0:26:36 > 0:26:39And here's Wilson now with the chance to take the money
0:26:39 > 0:26:41if you get this answer right.
0:26:41 > 0:26:46In printing, what name is given to a short line of text at the end of a
0:26:46 > 0:26:51paragraph that appears awkwardly at the top of the next page?
0:26:56 > 0:27:01Well, I don't pretend to know the technicalities of printing.
0:27:01 > 0:27:04I enjoy reading books but I have to say that maybe all
0:27:04 > 0:27:08the books I've read have been properly typographically set.
0:27:10 > 0:27:13This is very difficult. It actually could be any of these.
0:27:13 > 0:27:15Spinster...
0:27:15 > 0:27:17on its own.
0:27:17 > 0:27:20Maiden...possibly.
0:27:20 > 0:27:22Not yet on its own.
0:27:22 > 0:27:29Well, they're all female and they all suggest something on its own.
0:27:29 > 0:27:32I'm going to guess widow.
0:27:34 > 0:27:35Now, you say you don't know about printing.
0:27:35 > 0:27:39Some will know the answer from this because they use a computer.
0:27:39 > 0:27:41They go in and they format some word processing
0:27:41 > 0:27:45document and they're asked about the last line of a paragraph and
0:27:45 > 0:27:50they're asked to check the box next to which is the word "widow".
0:27:50 > 0:27:53Widow is absolutely right. Congratulations, challengers.
0:27:53 > 0:27:55You've won.
0:28:00 > 0:28:02Well, well, well.
0:28:02 > 0:28:07Only the fourth time in Eggheads' history that a single player has defeated the lot of them.
0:28:07 > 0:28:11Only the fourth time that you've lost two in a row, because this the
0:28:11 > 0:28:17whole point of this was they were going to get their spirit back together after the crushing defeat.
0:28:19 > 0:28:21- What's gone wrong? Well done, Wilson. Brilliant play.- Thank you.
0:28:21 > 0:28:26Great attempt by the team behind to disguise the plan as well...
0:28:26 > 0:28:29and make us think you weren't going to win. Congratulations.
0:28:29 > 0:28:31You're officially cleverer than the Eggheads.
0:28:31 > 0:28:33You proved they can be beaten.
0:28:33 > 0:28:36Join us next time. See what they're up to next time.
0:28:36 > 0:28:40See if a new team of challengers can make it three in a row.
0:28:40 > 0:28:43They'll need counselling if that happens.
0:28:43 > 0:28:45Until then, goodbye.
0:28:50 > 0:28:54Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd
0:28:54 > 0:28:56E-mail subtitling@bbc.co.uk