Episode 2

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0:00:03 > 0:00:08These 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.

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

0:00:24 > 0:00:28Welcome to Eggheads, the show where a team of five quiz challengers

0:00:28 > 0:00:32pit their wits against possibly the greatest quiz team in Britain.

0:00:32 > 0:00:36You might recognise them as they've won some of the country's toughest quiz shows.

0:00:36 > 0:00:38They are, of course, the Eggheads.

0:00:38 > 0:00:41And taking on the awesome might of our quiz goliaths today are

0:00:41 > 0:00:42Cobbled Together.

0:00:42 > 0:00:45The team have been literally cobbled together by

0:00:45 > 0:00:49team captain Jane from the pick of her quiziest friends and colleagues.

0:00:49 > 0:00:52- Let's meet them.- Hello. I'm Jane.

0:00:52 > 0:00:54I'm 61 years old and I'm a London cabbie.

0:00:54 > 0:00:59Hello. I'm Rob. I'm 62 years old and I'm a retired London cab driver.

0:00:59 > 0:01:03Hello. I'm David. I'm 48 and I'm a telecom's project manager.

0:01:03 > 0:01:07Hello. I'm David. I'm 52-years-old and I'm a commercial manager.

0:01:07 > 0:01:12Hello. I'm Nick. I'm 57-years-old and I'm an ombudsman from Essex.

0:01:12 > 0:01:14Welcome to you, Cobbled Together.

0:01:14 > 0:01:17- And Jane, you've done the cobbling. - Yes. I have.

0:01:17 > 0:01:25I wanted to be on the show for quite a while and I'm a cab driver with Rob and the two Davids. We quiz together

0:01:25 > 0:01:30- sometimes, and Nick's a friend of Rob's, so we've sort of cobbled ourselves together for this.- I see.

0:01:30 > 0:01:34It wasn't people who were in the back of your cab and you turned round and said, fancy a go?

0:01:34 > 0:01:38No. I think we're all keen quizzers in different directions.

0:01:38 > 0:01:41One thing's for sure, I'm sure it's going to be a good old quiz.

0:01:41 > 0:01:45And every day there's £1,000 worth of cash up for grabs for our challengers.

0:01:45 > 0:01:48However, if they fail to defeat the Eggheads, the prize money rolls over to the next show.

0:01:48 > 0:01:53So Cobbled Together, the Eggheads have won the last 35 games

0:01:53 > 0:01:57which means £36,000 says you can't beat the Eggheads.

0:01:57 > 0:02:01And our first head-to-head battle will be on the subject of film and television.

0:02:01 > 0:02:02So Cobbled Together,

0:02:02 > 0:02:05it's your choice who wants to play and who would you like to take on?

0:02:05 > 0:02:08OK. I think we've decided then on...

0:02:08 > 0:02:10- Me?- Nick...going on, Film & Television.

0:02:10 > 0:02:13Who do we fancy playing on this one?

0:02:13 > 0:02:17- Maybe Chris.- Yeah. OK.- Yeah. OK.

0:02:17 > 0:02:18OK. Like to challenge Chris.

0:02:18 > 0:02:20OK. Chris...

0:02:20 > 0:02:24international Mastermind against Nick. Film & Television.

0:02:24 > 0:02:27So could I ask you both to take your positions in the question room

0:02:27 > 0:02:30just to make sure you can't confer with your teammates.

0:02:30 > 0:02:34So, Nick, do you have a particular passion for film or television, or both?

0:02:34 > 0:02:39Both, really. I've enjoyed watching television for many years.

0:02:39 > 0:02:43And I've been going to the cinema with my children and my family

0:02:43 > 0:02:46for as long as I can remember, so, yeah, both really.

0:02:46 > 0:02:48OK. Well, we'll put that to the test right now.

0:02:48 > 0:02:52- Nick, would you like to go first or second?- I'd like to go first, please.

0:02:54 > 0:03:00Good luck. Here you are. Who played the King of Siam in the 1956 film musical, The King And I?

0:03:05 > 0:03:08I actually remember the film version of this.

0:03:08 > 0:03:11Yul Brynner because he was bald

0:03:11 > 0:03:14and I thought it was very strange to have someone who was bald.

0:03:14 > 0:03:18Now I recognise that I've joined those ranks.

0:03:18 > 0:03:23- So Yul Brynner.- I don't think you're in Yul Brynner's league yet, Nick.

0:03:23 > 0:03:26Yul Brynner is correct. Yes. Well, done. The King And I.

0:03:26 > 0:03:29OK. Chris.

0:03:29 > 0:03:32In which Sam Mendes film does Kevin Spacey have a vision of

0:03:32 > 0:03:36Mena Suvari lying on his ceiling, covered in rose petals?

0:03:41 > 0:03:43Well, it wouldn't be Road To Perdition

0:03:43 > 0:03:47because that's a '30s depression gangster thing.

0:03:47 > 0:03:50It's not Revolutionary Road because

0:03:50 > 0:03:53that's a sort of urban terrorist, urban paranoia type of film.

0:03:53 > 0:03:57So, logically, it should be American Beauty.

0:03:57 > 0:04:01- American Beauty. Is it, Eggheads? - Yes.- Yes. It is. The midlife crisis.

0:04:01 > 0:04:06American Beauty is correct. OK. Nick, second question.

0:04:06 > 0:04:14Marcus Bentley has been the voice and narrator of which series since it began broadcasting in 2000?

0:04:18 > 0:04:21I don't think it's Strictly Come Dancing.

0:04:21 > 0:04:24And I'm sure it's not Who Do You Think You Are?

0:04:24 > 0:04:28The name rings a bell because he has a very distinctive voice

0:04:28 > 0:04:31- and I think the answer is Big Brother.- Big Brother.

0:04:31 > 0:04:35A distinctive Geordie accent... is owned by Marcus Bentley.

0:04:35 > 0:04:37Yes. It's the right answer. Well done.

0:04:37 > 0:04:42OK, then. Chris, who co-starred with Jack Nicholson

0:04:42 > 0:04:44in the 2008 film, The Bucket List?

0:04:50 > 0:04:53- Good question.- Glad you like it.

0:04:53 > 0:04:56Ah, The Bucket List. The list in a bucket.

0:04:56 > 0:05:01- Just on a gut feeling, I'll say Mike Myers.- It's Morgan Freeman.

0:05:01 > 0:05:05- Is it?- Yeah. Morgan Freeman in The Bucket List, with Jack Nicholson.

0:05:05 > 0:05:09So here you go then, Nick. Knocking a big Egghead out here

0:05:09 > 0:05:10if you get this right.

0:05:10 > 0:05:13Which interviewer and broadcaster

0:05:13 > 0:05:17did Kenneth Williams once refer to as a north country nit?

0:05:20 > 0:05:22Doesn't sound like Alan Whicker.

0:05:22 > 0:05:28I think several people fell out with Russell Harty.

0:05:29 > 0:05:33No. I'm going to stick with Russell Harty.

0:05:33 > 0:05:36OK. Russell Harty... a north country nit.

0:05:36 > 0:05:39No. It's Michael Parkinson.

0:05:39 > 0:05:42Fell out with Parky, or maybe he was just teasing him.

0:05:42 > 0:05:47Chance for Chris to level it up and take us into sudden death.

0:05:47 > 0:05:50Chris, who received the first ever academy fellowship from BAFTA

0:05:50 > 0:05:53when the honour was bestowed in 1971?

0:05:57 > 0:06:00Well, I don't think it will be Charlie Chaplin, who did most

0:06:00 > 0:06:01of his work in America,

0:06:01 > 0:06:05although he did fall out big time with the McCarthyite regime.

0:06:08 > 0:06:11I don't think they'd have given a fellowship to Alec Guinness

0:06:11 > 0:06:15who was an actor rather than a producer.

0:06:15 > 0:06:18I think Hitchcock was dead by then, so yeah, I'll go back

0:06:18 > 0:06:20on what I've just said and say Alec Guinness.

0:06:20 > 0:06:24It is Alfred Hitchcock, Chris, which you had worked out but

0:06:24 > 0:06:27then talked yourself out of. But great luck for you, Nick.

0:06:27 > 0:06:29Means you don't need another question.

0:06:29 > 0:06:31You're through to the final round, playing for £36,000.

0:06:31 > 0:06:34Would you come back and join your teams, both of you.

0:06:35 > 0:06:38Well, Jane, don't know where you cobbled him from.

0:06:38 > 0:06:40Nick played very well there. Knocked Chris out.

0:06:40 > 0:06:43Means you're one ahead in the head to heads. We've only played one.

0:06:43 > 0:06:49And we move on to our second round today and this one is Science.

0:06:49 > 0:06:51Who'd like to play this? Can't be Nick.

0:06:51 > 0:06:52Sure you're good at that, as well...

0:06:52 > 0:06:56but you're ineligible until the final round. Who wants to play?

0:06:56 > 0:06:57- Who do you think?- Shall I go?

0:06:57 > 0:07:00- I think Rob should do this. - I think so. Yeah, yeah.

0:07:00 > 0:07:02Can't be Chris, remember. He's out.

0:07:02 > 0:07:05- I think Pat. - Pat. Pat.- Pat.- Yeah.

0:07:05 > 0:07:09- Pat, now why have you chosen Pat? - He's an unknown quantity.

0:07:09 > 0:07:14Unknown quantity. You'll soon find out what a good quizzer he is but you know that already, don't you,

0:07:14 > 0:07:17because he wouldn't be on that team if he weren't.

0:07:17 > 0:07:20OK. Let's have Rob and Pat into the question room, please.

0:07:20 > 0:07:25- OK, then. Rob, do you want to go first or second? - I'd like to go first, please.

0:07:27 > 0:07:29Good luck, Rob. Here you are. First question.

0:07:29 > 0:07:35Valentina Tereshkova became the first woman in space in 1963

0:07:35 > 0:07:37when she was launched in which spacecraft?

0:07:42 > 0:07:44The name doesn't sound American.

0:07:44 > 0:07:48So, one would look towards the Russian space programmes.

0:07:48 > 0:07:52So I would say Vostok six.

0:07:52 > 0:07:54Once you're going Russian, you can't choose the other two.

0:07:54 > 0:07:58And it's the right answer. Well, done. Vostok Six. OK.

0:07:58 > 0:08:00Right. First question for you, Pat.

0:08:00 > 0:08:05A barium meal is given to patients before being x-rayed in a procedure

0:08:05 > 0:08:11commonly used to determine the existence or extent of problems with which bodily system?

0:08:13 > 0:08:18Well, it's a milky, I think milky fluid and it's swallowed.

0:08:18 > 0:08:21And it makes its way through the digestive system.

0:08:21 > 0:08:23And is tracked with scanners.

0:08:23 > 0:08:25So it's the digestive system.

0:08:25 > 0:08:28Digestive is correct, Pat. Yes. A solid start from you both.

0:08:28 > 0:08:30Back to you, Rob. Second question.

0:08:30 > 0:08:35The numbers 496 and 8,128

0:08:35 > 0:08:39are the third and fourth numbers in which sequence?

0:08:44 > 0:08:46I don't think it's a prime number sequence.

0:08:46 > 0:08:49So I'm left with the choice of perfect or pyramid

0:08:49 > 0:08:52and I will try for pyramid.

0:08:52 > 0:08:58Pyramid numbers. 496, 8,128... are perfect numbers.

0:08:58 > 0:09:01Not a perfect answer. It stays all square after that

0:09:01 > 0:09:04and a chance for the lead then, Pat.

0:09:04 > 0:09:09In mobile phone technology, for what does the letter G stand in 3G?

0:09:12 > 0:09:17I think it must be generation. I've never given it very much thought.

0:09:17 > 0:09:21But 3G in the world of technology

0:09:21 > 0:09:25frequently refers to third generation of various technologies.

0:09:26 > 0:09:30It could conceivably be global or grade, but I'll go for generation.

0:09:30 > 0:09:323G is, yeah, third generation.

0:09:32 > 0:09:33It's the right answer.

0:09:33 > 0:09:35So you have the lead, Pat.

0:09:35 > 0:09:37That means you've got to get this then, Rob.

0:09:37 > 0:09:43Ichthyosis is a family of disorders that affects which part of the body?

0:09:45 > 0:09:50Ichthyosis. I-C-H-T-H-Y-O-S-I-S.

0:09:50 > 0:09:54I have a feeling I've heard of it and I think it's related to the eyes.

0:09:54 > 0:09:58- So that'll be my answer.- Ichthyosis.

0:09:58 > 0:09:59Do the eyes have it?

0:09:59 > 0:10:02No, they don't. It's skin.

0:10:02 > 0:10:07Ichthyosis relates to a disorder of the skin. Any more specifics on it?

0:10:07 > 0:10:11- Scaling, like a fish.- Yes. I thought ichs had to do with fish.

0:10:11 > 0:10:14So not eyes, it's skin. Which means I'm sorry to say, Rob,

0:10:14 > 0:10:18you're not playing in the final round. You won through, Pat.

0:10:18 > 0:10:20Would you both please come back and join your teams.

0:10:21 > 0:10:23The Eggheads have levelled it up.

0:10:23 > 0:10:27It's now all square. Both teams have lost one brain from the final round.

0:10:27 > 0:10:31Our third category today, I can announce, is arts and books.

0:10:31 > 0:10:34Who'd like to play, Jane, Dave or David?

0:10:34 > 0:10:35I think David's the one for that.

0:10:35 > 0:10:39- It's my category, isn't it? - I think it is.- I'm on my way.- OK.

0:10:39 > 0:10:42Well, you've got to take an Egghead with you, David.

0:10:42 > 0:10:44Who would you like? It can't be Chris or Pat.

0:10:44 > 0:10:47Not Judith. I think she's too good at that. So Barry, maybe?

0:10:47 > 0:10:49Let's have a crack at Barry.

0:10:49 > 0:10:51- Yeah. - Have a crack at Barry. Why not?

0:10:51 > 0:10:55OK. Let's have David and Barry into the question room, please.

0:10:56 > 0:10:58Do you want to go first or second?

0:10:58 > 0:11:01I'll keep with the tradition we've set. First, please.

0:11:03 > 0:11:06Right. Best of luck. First question on arts and books.

0:11:06 > 0:11:10In publishing, what term is used to describe fiction written for

0:11:10 > 0:11:15and marketed towards younger women, usually in their 20s?

0:11:20 > 0:11:23There's a bit of innuendo going on here.

0:11:23 > 0:11:27I've heard of men's mags but never girlie rags.

0:11:27 > 0:11:30I've never heard of a femme book, either.

0:11:30 > 0:11:34But chick lit kind of fits the zeitgeist, doesn't it?

0:11:34 > 0:11:36So I think it's chick lit.

0:11:36 > 0:11:41Most certainly is. Good start. Correct. Chick lit. OK, Barry.

0:11:41 > 0:11:43Which fictional detective died

0:11:43 > 0:11:46in the story entitled The Adventure Of The Final Problem,

0:11:46 > 0:11:49but was later resurrected through popular demand?

0:11:52 > 0:11:54It was Sherlock Holmes,

0:11:54 > 0:11:57who was supposed to have died at the Reichenbach Falls.

0:11:57 > 0:12:00But there was such an outcry over his supposed death

0:12:00 > 0:12:03that Conan Doyle had to reinvent him again.

0:12:03 > 0:12:07Yeah. Sherlock Holmes is correct. Well done, Barry.

0:12:07 > 0:12:09All square. David,

0:12:09 > 0:12:14who was the sponsor of the Turner Prize between 1991 and 2003?

0:12:17 > 0:12:20I had a number of other possible answers in my head

0:12:20 > 0:12:24and frankly, it was none of those.

0:12:24 > 0:12:28I can't imagine Ronald McDonald being associated with the Turner.

0:12:28 > 0:12:32And it's a very British institution, isn't it,

0:12:32 > 0:12:35which takes us back to Channel 4 and British Airways.

0:12:37 > 0:12:40British Airways was stretched enough in its sponsorship in those days.

0:12:40 > 0:12:45- So I'll go for Channel 4, if that's all right.- OK.

0:12:45 > 0:12:48Working the logic like an Egghead to get the correct answer.

0:12:48 > 0:12:50Yes. Well done, David. Two to you.

0:12:50 > 0:12:54Sponsor of the Turner prize between '91 and 2003.

0:12:54 > 0:12:56Second question, Barry.

0:12:56 > 0:12:58In Alexander McCall Smith's novels,

0:12:58 > 0:13:00The Number One Ladies Detective Agency,

0:13:00 > 0:13:03what's the name of Botswana's first female detective

0:13:03 > 0:13:04who founded the agency?

0:13:10 > 0:13:15Grace Makutsi played her secretary who got 97% in her typing exam.

0:13:15 > 0:13:18But Botswana's detective was Precious Ramotswe.

0:13:18 > 0:13:22And you know that Grace got 97% in her typing?

0:13:22 > 0:13:24She was very proud. It's in all the books.

0:13:24 > 0:13:26Yeah. OK. It is the right answer.

0:13:26 > 0:13:28Well done, Barry.

0:13:28 > 0:13:31No disputing that. OK. It's 2-2.

0:13:31 > 0:13:34Both doing really well. Get your third question right, David,

0:13:34 > 0:13:36and you might be playing for the money.

0:13:36 > 0:13:40In Elizabethan times, a white flag raised

0:13:40 > 0:13:43outside Shakespeare's Globe Theatre

0:13:43 > 0:13:46indicated that audiences could expect to see which type of play?

0:13:49 > 0:13:53This is lucky dip for me, I'm afraid. Um...

0:13:55 > 0:14:00There's nothing I can latch on to that gives it any logic at all.

0:14:00 > 0:14:03So I'm going to plumb for comedy.

0:14:03 > 0:14:08Comedy. So your first proper guess... ie, you didn't have a clue.

0:14:08 > 0:14:10It's the right answer. Yes. Well done.

0:14:12 > 0:14:15So, it means that you might be about to lose, Barry,

0:14:15 > 0:14:18if you don't get this. During World War II,

0:14:18 > 0:14:20paintings in the National Gallery

0:14:20 > 0:14:23were evacuated to which part of the United Kingdom?

0:14:27 > 0:14:31I seem to recall they were evacuated to somewhere that had deep caves.

0:14:31 > 0:14:34The one that has the deepest caves would be Snowdonia.

0:14:34 > 0:14:36So I will go for Snowdonia.

0:14:36 > 0:14:39Yeah. Well, or remote.

0:14:39 > 0:14:42But that answer, not remote, it's correct.

0:14:42 > 0:14:44It's 3-3. We go to sudden death.

0:14:44 > 0:14:46And David,

0:14:46 > 0:14:49just to double-check, you won't see any more choices.

0:14:49 > 0:14:53Just got to hear the answer from you until the completion of this round.

0:14:53 > 0:14:59Which Dutch painter moved to London in 1873 to live in Brixton?

0:14:59 > 0:15:02You've thrown me a curve ball there, um...

0:15:02 > 0:15:07because I'm aware of a Dutch painter who lived in Isleworth.

0:15:07 > 0:15:10- Who was that then, David? - That was Van Gogh.

0:15:10 > 0:15:14So he may have been in both, so I'm going to go with Vincent Van Gogh.

0:15:14 > 0:15:17OK. Van Gogh. Isleworth.

0:15:17 > 0:15:20And I'm sure Jane and Rob can find us

0:15:20 > 0:15:24the quickest route from Isleworth to Brixton...

0:15:24 > 0:15:28although I wonder if Van Gogh took cabs between the places.

0:15:28 > 0:15:30It is the right answer.

0:15:30 > 0:15:32Yes. Vincent Van Gogh. Well done.

0:15:32 > 0:15:35Very good, that. I mean, Isleworth, Brixton,

0:15:35 > 0:15:37do we know any more about his time in London?

0:15:37 > 0:15:40- Not really. No.- Oh. OK. Thank you, Eggheads.

0:15:40 > 0:15:42Kevin probably would if he was here.

0:15:42 > 0:15:46If you don't know this, Barry, you won't be playing in the final round.

0:15:46 > 0:15:52Which 20th century novel is set in the year 632 AF?

0:15:52 > 0:15:55Well, the AF part of the number means after Ford.

0:15:55 > 0:15:59And it was a novel after the supposed Industrial Revolution caused by Ford

0:15:59 > 0:16:01and it was Brave New World.

0:16:01 > 0:16:03- Correct. By?- Aldous Huxley.

0:16:03 > 0:16:07Brave New World is correct. Well done, Barry. It's all square.

0:16:07 > 0:16:08Two great quizzers here.

0:16:08 > 0:16:13David, The Idiot, The Gambler, and The Brothers Karamazov

0:16:13 > 0:16:15are novels by which Russian author?

0:16:15 > 0:16:17I said before I came on here

0:16:17 > 0:16:20that as long as it wasn't Russian literature I'd be all right.

0:16:20 > 0:16:24One of the few things I know is Fyodor Dostoyevsky wrote those.

0:16:24 > 0:16:25That's your answer?

0:16:25 > 0:16:28- Fyodor Dostoyevsky. - It is absolutely correct.

0:16:28 > 0:16:33Fyodor Dostoyevsky, author of The Idiot, The Gambler, amongst others.

0:16:33 > 0:16:36So, got to get this again, Barry.

0:16:36 > 0:16:41Guy Debord was a leading light in which revolutionary art movement

0:16:41 > 0:16:45who thought that art should be made out of life?

0:16:45 > 0:16:47Now, I'm struggling on this one.

0:16:47 > 0:16:51He obviously sounds French so we have to take a French movement.

0:16:51 > 0:16:55I really don't know this, so I'll have a shot in the dark with the Barbizon school.

0:16:55 > 0:16:59The Barbizon school. Guy Debord.

0:16:59 > 0:17:01It's incorrect, Barry. It is...

0:17:01 > 0:17:02- Anyone know?- Is it Dada?- No.

0:17:02 > 0:17:06Guy Debord, leading light in the Situationists.

0:17:06 > 0:17:11Situationist International. Well, the situation is

0:17:11 > 0:17:14Barry will not have a chair for that final round.

0:17:14 > 0:17:18You'll be playing for £36,000 today, David, in that final round.

0:17:18 > 0:17:21Would you both please come back and join your teams.

0:17:21 > 0:17:26As it stands, the Eggheads have lost two brains from the final round, Barry and Chris.

0:17:26 > 0:17:30And only one brain gone from Cobbled Together. That's Rob.

0:17:30 > 0:17:33So let's play the last subject now. This one is politics.

0:17:33 > 0:17:35And it's Dave or Jane to play.

0:17:35 > 0:17:38- Politics. - How do you feel on this, Jane?

0:17:38 > 0:17:41- Not too good.- Oh!

0:17:41 > 0:17:44How are you on it? Are you happy to go ahead?

0:17:44 > 0:17:49- No, but it's better if you're in the general knowledge so I'll take this. - OK. Nice of you.

0:17:49 > 0:17:51- Going to be you then, Dave.- Yes.

0:17:51 > 0:17:53One of our female Eggheads then.

0:17:53 > 0:17:55Daphne or Judith remain.

0:17:56 > 0:18:00- Who do you reckon? - Don't know. Your choice, really.

0:18:00 > 0:18:02- Let's go with Judith.- Judith.

0:18:02 > 0:18:05OK. Let's have Dave and Judith into the question room then.

0:18:07 > 0:18:09Dave, let's see if you can build on

0:18:09 > 0:18:11that great performance so far by the team.

0:18:11 > 0:18:13Would you like to go first or second?

0:18:13 > 0:18:16I'd like to go first please, Dermot.

0:18:18 > 0:18:20Good luck, Dave. First question.

0:18:20 > 0:18:23What name was applied to the confrontational

0:18:23 > 0:18:28and often unstable relationship between the United States and the Soviet Union

0:18:28 > 0:18:30that lasted for much of the 20th century?

0:18:33 > 0:18:37That was characterised as the frosty relationship

0:18:37 > 0:18:40between the two leading candidates, so that'll be the Cold War.

0:18:40 > 0:18:44Cold War, it is. Good start. One to you. Judith,

0:18:44 > 0:18:47who became the leader of the Socialist Labour Party

0:18:47 > 0:18:50when it was re-established in Britain in 1996?

0:18:56 > 0:19:00Well, David Owen was a Lib Dem, wasn't he?

0:19:00 > 0:19:03Or whatever they were. SDP or whatever they're called.

0:19:03 > 0:19:07Dennis Skinner is very red but I think he was

0:19:07 > 0:19:11just an ordinary MP in the Commons. I think it's Arthur Scargill.

0:19:12 > 0:19:16The Socialist Labour Party re-founded by Arthur Scargill

0:19:16 > 0:19:19is the right answer. Well done, Judith.

0:19:19 > 0:19:21OK. 1-1. Dave.

0:19:21 > 0:19:25Gaston Eyskens served as prime minister of which country

0:19:25 > 0:19:28three times in the 20th century?

0:19:30 > 0:19:32And I'll spell the surname

0:19:32 > 0:19:36in case my pronunciation isn't as spot on as it should be.

0:19:36 > 0:19:38E-Y-S-K-E-N-S.

0:19:38 > 0:19:41It sounds like it's a French base

0:19:41 > 0:19:43so I would say either France or Belgium.

0:19:43 > 0:19:46I'm not sure I've actually heard of him.

0:19:46 > 0:19:49I think it's Belgium actually. I'll go with Belgium.

0:19:49 > 0:19:50It is the right answer.

0:19:50 > 0:19:53Well done. Gaston Eyskens.

0:19:53 > 0:19:56And second question to you, Judith.

0:19:56 > 0:20:01Who was appointed leader of the House of Commons in June 2007?

0:20:04 > 0:20:09I think that was Harriet Harman.

0:20:09 > 0:20:12- I think it was. - Going for that. Harriet Harman.

0:20:12 > 0:20:14Yes. Leader of the House.

0:20:14 > 0:20:15Appointed in 2007. Well done.

0:20:15 > 0:20:182-2. Dave...

0:20:18 > 0:20:21Richard J Daley and his son Richard M Daley

0:20:21 > 0:20:23have both been mayors of which American city?

0:20:27 > 0:20:28Oh, dear.

0:20:28 > 0:20:31Can I change the question, Dermot?

0:20:31 > 0:20:33Too late now.

0:20:33 > 0:20:36I was hoping this one wouldn't come up.

0:20:36 > 0:20:38Have I heard of New York? No.

0:20:38 > 0:20:40I'm thinking Chicago for some reason,

0:20:40 > 0:20:43but other than that, it's a complete guess.

0:20:43 > 0:20:45Chicago, it is.

0:20:45 > 0:20:47You can breathe again, Dave.

0:20:47 > 0:20:49- It was a good guess. - Going out on a limb.

0:20:49 > 0:20:51There must have been something there.

0:20:51 > 0:20:53You seemed fairly assured in the end.

0:20:53 > 0:20:55So it's three to you.

0:20:55 > 0:20:59And if it stays that way after I hear the answer to this question, you're through.

0:20:59 > 0:21:01Judith, what was the first name

0:21:01 > 0:21:05of the Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu's wife,

0:21:05 > 0:21:09who also served as a first deputy prime minister of the country?

0:21:11 > 0:21:14Elena Ceausescu. Natalia. Galina.

0:21:14 > 0:21:17Elena, I think, but it's a bit of a guess.

0:21:17 > 0:21:19I mean, just sounds right.

0:21:19 > 0:21:23OK. Sounds right. Elena Ceausescu, also first deputy prime minister.

0:21:23 > 0:21:27It's correct. Yeah. 3-3. We go to sudden death again.

0:21:27 > 0:21:29Well, great round last time.

0:21:29 > 0:21:31David managed to come out on top.

0:21:31 > 0:21:34Will Dave match that? OK. Your question, Dave.

0:21:34 > 0:21:37Who was the leader of the Liberal Party

0:21:37 > 0:21:42from 1956 to 1967 and again, briefly, in 1976?

0:21:46 > 0:21:47Briefly after '76.

0:21:47 > 0:21:51That would have been after Jeremy Thorpe, wouldn't it?

0:21:52 > 0:21:54- Was it Jo Grimond? - Is that your answer?

0:21:54 > 0:21:56That's my answer.

0:21:56 > 0:21:58Jo Grimond.

0:21:58 > 0:22:03And '76, Jeremy Thorpe and all the scandal surrounding him.

0:22:03 > 0:22:05It's the right answer. Yes. Jo Grimond.

0:22:05 > 0:22:09And well pulled out there. And of course, the reason in 1976,

0:22:09 > 0:22:12as you said, was after the resignation of Jeremy Thorpe.

0:22:12 > 0:22:14He stood in as caretaker. Leader, very briefly.

0:22:14 > 0:22:16So, you're in the lead.

0:22:16 > 0:22:18And Judith needs to get this.

0:22:18 > 0:22:20The French Senate or Upper House of Parliament,

0:22:20 > 0:22:22sits in which building in Paris?

0:22:22 > 0:22:26I really should know this, shouldn't I, since I lived there.

0:22:27 > 0:22:30The Elysee Palace is the President.

0:22:34 > 0:22:39The Quai d'Orsay, that's the Foreign Office, isn't it...

0:22:39 > 0:22:41in Paris.

0:22:44 > 0:22:47I have absolutely no idea. I don't know.

0:22:47 > 0:22:50I'm going to say Quai d'Orsay, just in case they sit there, as well.

0:22:50 > 0:22:52- OK. Quai d'Orsay.- Yeah.

0:22:52 > 0:22:56- Eggheads?- Luxembourg. - Luxembourg.- Right.

0:22:56 > 0:22:58- I never would have got that.- No. OK.

0:22:58 > 0:23:01It's not the Quai d'Orsay.

0:23:01 > 0:23:03I've had a correct answer in Jo Grimond from Dave.

0:23:03 > 0:23:06Which means you're through to the final round.

0:23:06 > 0:23:09Would you both please come back and join your teams.

0:23:09 > 0:23:11This is what we've been playing towards.

0:23:11 > 0:23:16It's time for the final round and what an exciting final round it promises to be.

0:23:16 > 0:23:17It is general knowledge,

0:23:17 > 0:23:20but I'm afraid those of you who lost your head to heads

0:23:20 > 0:23:22won't be allowed to take part in this round.

0:23:22 > 0:23:26So Rob from Cobbled Together, and Chris, Barry and Judith,

0:23:26 > 0:23:30three Eggheads, would you leave the studio, please.

0:23:30 > 0:23:32So, Jane, Dave, David and Nick,

0:23:32 > 0:23:35you're playing to win Cobbled Together £36,000.

0:23:35 > 0:23:40Daphne and Pat, you're playing for something which money can't buy,

0:23:40 > 0:23:42the Eggheads' reputation.

0:23:42 > 0:23:45As usual, I'll ask each team three questions.

0:23:45 > 0:23:48The questions are general knowledge and you are allowed to confer.

0:23:48 > 0:23:52So, Cobbled Together, are your four brains better than the Eggheads' two?

0:23:52 > 0:23:54And Jane, Dave, David and Nick,

0:23:54 > 0:23:56would you like to go first or second?

0:23:56 > 0:24:00- We'll stick with first, I think. - Stick with first.- Stick with first.

0:24:02 > 0:24:05Here you go. Best of luck. They're general knowledge.

0:24:05 > 0:24:08In computer security, what term is commonly used for

0:24:08 > 0:24:12the fraudulent process of trying to attain sensitive information

0:24:12 > 0:24:15by masquerading as a trusted source?

0:24:19 > 0:24:21In computer security, what term is commonly used

0:24:21 > 0:24:25for the fraudulent process of trying to attain sensitive information

0:24:25 > 0:24:28by masquerading as a trusted source?

0:24:28 > 0:24:32I'm not very au fait with computers at all but I'm told it's phishing.

0:24:32 > 0:24:34Phishing with a Ph. It is. It's right.

0:24:34 > 0:24:36Good start. Phishing.

0:24:36 > 0:24:38OK, Eggheads.

0:24:38 > 0:24:39Which part of the body

0:24:39 > 0:24:43is sometimes informally referred to as the phizog?

0:24:45 > 0:24:47Which part of the body

0:24:47 > 0:24:49is sometimes informally referred to as the phizog?

0:24:51 > 0:24:53It's the face.

0:24:53 > 0:24:55- The old phizog.- Yeah.

0:24:55 > 0:24:58Face. It's the right answer. OK.

0:24:58 > 0:25:01Well, back to you, Cobbled Together.

0:25:01 > 0:25:04In which country did Elvis Presley

0:25:04 > 0:25:08spend his military service from October 1958 to March 1960?

0:25:11 > 0:25:13In which country did Elvis Presley

0:25:13 > 0:25:17spend his military service from October 1958 to March 1960?

0:25:17 > 0:25:22There's not much American military service in Poland or Mexico.

0:25:22 > 0:25:26- It's got to be West Germany.- Yeah. - It's West Germany.- Of course it is.

0:25:26 > 0:25:30Well done. And of course, as a result of that military service,

0:25:30 > 0:25:33it led to his only appearance in the United Kingdom.

0:25:33 > 0:25:35- Yes. In Preswick, I think. - Preswick Airport.

0:25:35 > 0:25:39A stopover I think, on the way to or from West Germany. So there you are.

0:25:39 > 0:25:41You've got two. And Eggheads.

0:25:41 > 0:25:46Which popular website was co-founded by Mark Zuckerberg

0:25:46 > 0:25:50when he was a student at Harvard University?

0:25:55 > 0:25:57- MySpace, I think, is somebody else. - Yeah.

0:25:57 > 0:26:02- Facebook.- Facebook? - Yep.- You on it, Daphne?

0:26:02 > 0:26:06No, but apparently somebody pretending to be me is.

0:26:06 > 0:26:07But she ain't.

0:26:07 > 0:26:12Who could pretend to be you, Daphne? The inimitable Daphne Fowler.

0:26:12 > 0:26:15Right. Well, Facebook is the right answer anyway. So there you are.

0:26:15 > 0:26:19It's 2-2. It's the third question for each team.

0:26:19 > 0:26:21Your question is this, Cobbled Together.

0:26:21 > 0:26:27After departing Southampton on her maiden voyage, on 10th April 1912,

0:26:27 > 0:26:30what was the first port at which the Titanic stopped

0:26:30 > 0:26:31to pick up more passengers?

0:26:37 > 0:26:39I thought it sailed from Liverpool, didn't it?

0:26:39 > 0:26:42Cobh would be the right direction to go in.

0:26:42 > 0:26:44It's on the south west of Ireland.

0:26:44 > 0:26:48I've a feeling there were lots of Liverpudlian accents.

0:26:48 > 0:26:51It sailed to Liverpool first and then set off.

0:26:51 > 0:26:53- I'm good with that.- OK.

0:26:53 > 0:26:55Right. We think it's Liverpool.

0:26:55 > 0:26:59Liverpool. So your routing is going Southampton, Liverpool.

0:26:59 > 0:27:03And you were thinking of Cobh there, That's Southern Ireland, of course.

0:27:03 > 0:27:05No. It's not that. It's Cherbourg.

0:27:05 > 0:27:09Cherbourg, which I guess would have been the last on your list.

0:27:09 > 0:27:14It means the Eggheads have a chance to win the game if they get this.

0:27:14 > 0:27:20Who had a top five hit in 2003 with the single Hey Ya?

0:27:24 > 0:27:28Who had a top five hit in 2003 with the single Hey Ya?

0:27:28 > 0:27:34- DAPHNE WHISPERS I think it's OutKast.- Yes. Yep.

0:27:34 > 0:27:38- We both agree it's OutKast.- Hey Ya.

0:27:38 > 0:27:432003 top five hit is by...OutKast.

0:27:43 > 0:27:45Eggheads, you've won.

0:27:50 > 0:27:53All that hard work, gone on one question.

0:27:53 > 0:27:56It's the way Eggheads goes. It swung on the one question.

0:27:56 > 0:28:01All that great work by Dave and David there and Nick in those head to heads.

0:28:01 > 0:28:04I think that's a moral victory. Unfortunately,

0:28:04 > 0:28:08we can't give you the money unless they have a whip round which I suspect they won't!

0:28:08 > 0:28:09Great performance.

0:28:09 > 0:28:13You'd done everything you could to win and got caught out on that Titanic question.

0:28:13 > 0:28:17Thank you very much for being such a fantastic quizzing team today.

0:28:17 > 0:28:20- It's been a real pleasure. - We've had a lovely time.

0:28:20 > 0:28:24The Eggheads have done what comes naturally. That winning streak continues.

0:28:24 > 0:28:29You won't be going home with the £36,000 which means the money rolls over to the next show.

0:28:29 > 0:28:32Eggheads, congratulations. Who will beat you?

0:28:32 > 0:28:33Quite a streak at the moment.

0:28:33 > 0:28:38Join us next time to see if a new team have the brains to defeat the Eggheads.

0:28:38 > 0:28:42It's £37,000 that now says they don't. Until then, goodbye.

0:28:53 > 0:28:55Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd

0:28:55 > 0:28:57E-mail subtitling@bbc.co.uk