Episode 95

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0:00:04 > 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.

0:00:16 > 0:00:19The question is - can they be beaten?

0:00:23 > 0:00:27Welcome to Eggheads where a team of five quiz challengers attempt

0:00:27 > 0:00:30to beat possibly the greatest quiz team in Britain.

0:00:30 > 0:00:36They have won some of the country's toughest quiz shows. They are the Eggheads.

0:00:36 > 0:00:40And taking on the awesome might of our quiz Goliaths today

0:00:40 > 0:00:43are Relatively Friendly from Leicester.

0:00:43 > 0:00:45This team is a real family affair

0:00:45 > 0:00:48which features mum, dad, son and aunt.

0:00:48 > 0:00:53That just leaves family friend Ann to complete the quintet. Let's meet them.

0:00:53 > 0:00:56Hi, I'm John, I'm 59 and I'm an engineer.

0:00:56 > 0:01:00Hi, I'm Carol, I'm 58 and I'm a retired administrator.

0:01:00 > 0:01:03Hello, I'm James, I'm 34. I'm an operations director.

0:01:03 > 0:01:07Hi, I'm Chris, I'm 63 and I'm a retired PA.

0:01:07 > 0:01:13Hi, I'm Ann, I'm 72 and I'm a retired lecturer in Business Studies.

0:01:13 > 0:01:19- John, team, welcome.- Thank you. - Good to see you. The family plus Ann, basically?- Correct.

0:01:19 > 0:01:21And how did you meet your wife?

0:01:21 > 0:01:23I met Carol at a bowling alley.

0:01:24 > 0:01:30I'd gone with a friend and she was being pestered by some Italians.

0:01:30 > 0:01:38And she looked at me appealingly and I got rid of the Italians and we've been together ever since.

0:01:38 > 0:01:43- That's how many years? - 40 years we've been married, so probably 44 years.

0:01:43 > 0:01:48Excellent. This will be a notable moment in the story of your relationship

0:01:48 > 0:01:51if you can do over the Eggheads here.

0:01:51 > 0:01:54Good luck. Hope you have a great game.

0:01:54 > 0:01:58£1,000 of cash up for grabs for our challengers every day.

0:01:58 > 0:02:02If they fail to defeat the Eggheads, the prize money rolls over.

0:02:02 > 0:02:06Relatively Friendly, the Eggheads have won the last three games,

0:02:06 > 0:02:10which means £4,000 says you can't beat them today.

0:02:10 > 0:02:14The first head-to-head battle is on the subject of Film & TV.

0:02:14 > 0:02:17Which one of you would like this?

0:02:17 > 0:02:20- That'll be me, I think. - I think it's you.- Chris.

0:02:20 > 0:02:25- Chris, OK.- Who do you want to take on?- Barry, I think.- Very decisive.

0:02:25 > 0:02:29Chris, from Relatively Friendly against Barry from the Eggheads.

0:02:29 > 0:02:33To ensure no conferring, take your positions in the question room.

0:02:33 > 0:02:39- So, Chris, just to make sure I understand the relationships, you're John's sister?- That's right.

0:02:39 > 0:02:42And you've just celebrated your ruby wedding?

0:02:42 > 0:02:46We have, yes. We went on a Mediterranean cruise for that.

0:02:46 > 0:02:49- How long have you been married, Barry?- 35 this year.

0:02:49 > 0:02:52Is that paper or tin or what for 35?

0:02:52 > 0:02:57- Coral.- Coral.- I think a visit to the Great Barrier Reef in Australia is called for.

0:02:57 > 0:03:01- Yeah, exactly, or the bookmakers maybe.- I'd not thought of that one.

0:03:01 > 0:03:05I'll ask each of you three questions in turn. They're on Film & TV.

0:03:05 > 0:03:12- Whoever answers the most questions correctly wins. Would you like the first or second set?- First, please.

0:03:15 > 0:03:20Here we go. Good luck. Which anniversary did Coronation Street celebrate in 2010?

0:03:25 > 0:03:31Well, I'm a very big Coro fan and I think it was the 50th.

0:03:31 > 0:03:34Spot-on, Chris. Well done. The 50th is right.

0:03:35 > 0:03:41Barry, in 2007, the entrepreneur James Caan joined the panel of which TV show?

0:03:44 > 0:03:48I've watched all the shows. I'm a big fan of all of them.

0:03:48 > 0:03:51But James Caan was definitely in Dragons' Den.

0:03:51 > 0:03:53Dragons' Den is correct.

0:03:55 > 0:04:00Chris, who played the leading role of a worker involved in manufacturing underwear

0:04:00 > 0:04:04in the 1941 film comedy, Turned Out Nice Again?

0:04:08 > 0:04:11Right, um...

0:04:11 > 0:04:14I think I do know who it is

0:04:14 > 0:04:19because I think that was his catchphrase - George Formby.

0:04:19 > 0:04:23It is indeed George Formby. Very good.

0:04:24 > 0:04:30Barry, in the 1986 Brat Pack film Pretty In Pink, who played the role of Andie Walsh?

0:04:35 > 0:04:37It wouldn't have been Demi Moore.

0:04:37 > 0:04:41Pretty In Pink... I think it was Molly Ringwald.

0:04:41 > 0:04:44You're right. It was Molly Ringwald.

0:04:44 > 0:04:46So, level-pegging.

0:04:46 > 0:04:51Who played the explorer Ernest Shackleton in the 2002 TV drama Shackleton?

0:04:56 > 0:04:59Right, I can't remember seeing this one at all.

0:05:00 > 0:05:04I'm not 100% sure, but I'll try Kenneth Branagh.

0:05:04 > 0:05:06Nice one. You've got it right.

0:05:06 > 0:05:09A difficult one as well.

0:05:09 > 0:05:12Barry, your question to stay in it.

0:05:12 > 0:05:18The Golden Leopard has been awarded at which international film festival since 1968?

0:05:22 > 0:05:24Oh, that's a tough one.

0:05:25 > 0:05:27I don't think it's Moscow.

0:05:27 > 0:05:30I can't think of a connection

0:05:30 > 0:05:34between a leopard and any of these three places.

0:05:35 > 0:05:37I think I'm going to go for Locarno.

0:05:37 > 0:05:40Locarno is right again.

0:05:40 > 0:05:45You couldn't shake him off, Chris, I'm afraid. We go to Sudden Death.

0:05:45 > 0:05:49I don't give you alternative answers now. You have to give me one.

0:05:49 > 0:05:55In March 1969, Mickey Deans became the fifth and final husband of which Hollywood film star?

0:05:57 > 0:05:59It's a guess,

0:05:59 > 0:06:02but Elizabeth Taylor?

0:06:02 > 0:06:08No, it was Judy Garland who died in June 1969, so he didn't have very long with her.

0:06:10 > 0:06:15Barry, who played the role of the chauffeur Jim London in the 1980s sitcom Home James?

0:06:15 > 0:06:18I've never seen this,

0:06:18 > 0:06:21but Paul Nicholas is coming to mind, so I shall try him.

0:06:21 > 0:06:24- No, Jim Davidson.- Oh!

0:06:25 > 0:06:27Chris, back to you.

0:06:27 > 0:06:31In a comedy drama written by Caroline Aherne and Jeff Pope

0:06:31 > 0:06:34and first broadcast in December 2009,

0:06:34 > 0:06:38who played The Fattest Man In Britain?

0:06:40 > 0:06:44I don't think I'm going to think of his name.

0:06:44 > 0:06:45Um...

0:06:46 > 0:06:50I think he was in Auf Wiedersehen, Pet as well.

0:06:53 > 0:06:56No, I can't think of his name.

0:06:56 > 0:07:00- The answer is... Any Eggheads know? - Timothy Spall.

0:07:00 > 0:07:03- Was he in Auf Wiedersehen, Pet? - Yeah.

0:07:05 > 0:07:12Barry, who played the criminal kingpin Mr Bridger in the 1969 film, The Italian Job?

0:07:12 > 0:07:18This was a performance full of style and panache and it could only have been by Noel Coward.

0:07:18 > 0:07:21Noel Coward is right, Barry. You have taken that round.

0:07:21 > 0:07:25Sorry, Chris, you won't be in the final. Barry will.

0:07:25 > 0:07:28Please come back and rejoin your team-mates.

0:07:29 > 0:07:35The challengers have lost one brain from the final round whilst the Eggheads have lost no brains.

0:07:35 > 0:07:37The next subject is Geography.

0:07:37 > 0:07:40Who's been the best travelled?

0:07:40 > 0:07:45- Who's going to do Geography? - Shall we keep James for Sport?- Yes. - Who's Geography then?

0:07:45 > 0:07:50- You or me, really?- Yeah.- Or Ann? - That was you, wasn't it?- Was it me?

0:07:50 > 0:07:54- I think I'll go.- You can do it. You've travelled all over the world.

0:07:54 > 0:07:59- Carol?- All those cruises! - Which Egghead?- I don't know.

0:07:59 > 0:08:01I'd tend to go for Chris.

0:08:01 > 0:08:07- Chris, please. - OK, Carol from Relatively Friendly against Chris from the Eggheads.

0:08:07 > 0:08:11He's been everywhere on a train. A train line has to lead to it.

0:08:11 > 0:08:17- I think they're all good on Geography.- They are. Carol and Chris, take your positions now.

0:08:18 > 0:08:20Carol, you love to travel.

0:08:20 > 0:08:24- Yes, that's right. - You go around by caravan mainly?

0:08:24 > 0:08:27Caravan for 80% of the time,

0:08:27 > 0:08:32- then we usually manage to get a long-haul break somewhere different in the world.- Tremendous.

0:08:32 > 0:08:38- Chris, where do you go when you go abroad?- I've not been out of the UK since '98 and that was only Dublin.

0:08:38 > 0:08:42When I was making my joke about the train lines, I was actually right?

0:08:42 > 0:08:45- Yeah.- Let's see how you do in Geography.

0:08:45 > 0:08:50Three questions and you can choose, Carol, the first or second set.

0:08:50 > 0:08:52I'll go first, please.

0:08:55 > 0:09:00Good luck. What term is often used in the United States for a ring road?

0:09:06 > 0:09:10I've been to America a few times, but I've never come across this at all.

0:09:11 > 0:09:14Logic is steering me to "belt"

0:09:14 > 0:09:18because it goes round your waist in a circle,

0:09:18 > 0:09:20so I think I'll go with "beltway".

0:09:20 > 0:09:25I'm glad you did. "Beltway" is the answer. Well done.

0:09:26 > 0:09:31Which airport is located closest to the 2012 London Olympic Stadium?

0:09:33 > 0:09:37It's in the old London Docks about three miles from Stratford

0:09:37 > 0:09:39and it's London City.

0:09:39 > 0:09:42Well done. London City it is.

0:09:43 > 0:09:49Carol, the highest mountain in England, Scafell Pike, measures how many metres in height?

0:09:57 > 0:09:59Right, I have actually climbed this.

0:09:59 > 0:10:03John and I did the Three Peaks Challenge, but did it in three years,

0:10:03 > 0:10:09so we did Ben Nevis one year, then Scafell Pike and then Snowdon.

0:10:09 > 0:10:13And I think it's 3,000-something feet,

0:10:13 > 0:10:16so it's got to be 978 metres, I think.

0:10:16 > 0:10:19Very good. 978 it is.

0:10:19 > 0:10:23Excellent. Chris, your question.

0:10:23 > 0:10:27The River Loire flows through France into which body of water?

0:10:31 > 0:10:34- Did you say the Loire? - The River Loire.

0:10:34 > 0:10:39- It flows into the Bay of Biscay at St Nazaire.- Correct, Bay of Biscay.

0:10:39 > 0:10:44Two each. If you get this one right, Carol, put some pressure on Chris,

0:10:44 > 0:10:46see if he falls into the sea.

0:10:46 > 0:10:50Bujumbura is the capital of which African country?

0:10:55 > 0:11:00Hmm... This is one of my weaknesses, African capitals.

0:11:00 > 0:11:05I'm drawn towards Burundi, but I don't know why.

0:11:06 > 0:11:08Hmm.

0:11:08 > 0:11:10No, I'm going to say Togo.

0:11:10 > 0:11:15- Eggheads?- Burundi.- It is Burundi. I'm afraid you got that wrong.

0:11:15 > 0:11:18Chris, your question to take the round.

0:11:18 > 0:11:25The Scottish island of Iona lies approximately one mile from the western tip of which larger island?

0:11:29 > 0:11:30Hmm...

0:11:30 > 0:11:32Iona, that's...

0:11:33 > 0:11:37It's not Lewis because that's the Outer Hebrides.

0:11:37 > 0:11:41The Isle of Arran is in the Firth of Clyde, so it's not that either.

0:11:41 > 0:11:46- It must be Mull.- If you have got this right, you are in the final round.

0:11:46 > 0:11:50Mull is the answer. Chris, well done. Sorry, Carol.

0:11:50 > 0:11:54Got beaten there. Both of you come back and rejoin your teams.

0:11:54 > 0:12:00The challengers have lost two brains from the final round whilst the Eggheads have lost no brains.

0:12:00 > 0:12:04The next subject for you is Politics.

0:12:04 > 0:12:06Who wants this?

0:12:06 > 0:12:11- We know who that is.- Ann's going to do that.- OK.- Aren't I the lucky one?

0:12:11 > 0:12:15- Yes, that's fine.- Who would you like to play?- Not Chris, not Barry.

0:12:15 > 0:12:20- Do you want to go for Pat? - How do you feel about Pat?- Yes.

0:12:20 > 0:12:27- Yeah?- Yeah. Pat then. - OK, Ann from Relatively Friendly against Pat from the Eggheads.

0:12:27 > 0:12:30Please take your positions in the question room.

0:12:30 > 0:12:33So, Pat, you've had a good couple of years.

0:12:33 > 0:12:38- You won the Mastermind...? - Mastermind Champion of Champions.

0:12:38 > 0:12:42- So the champion of the whole lot? - Yes, that's me.

0:12:42 > 0:12:48- Ann, you've picked the very best here.- Yes, perhaps so, but there may be a question that causes a problem.

0:12:48 > 0:12:52He's slipped up before. All the best in this round.

0:12:52 > 0:12:55- The first or second set of questions?- I'd like to go first.

0:12:58 > 0:13:00Here is your first question, Ann.

0:13:00 > 0:13:06In the initials CPS for the government department responsible for prosecuting cases,

0:13:06 > 0:13:10investigated by the police in England and Wales, what does C stand for?

0:13:14 > 0:13:19I'm afraid it's going to be a guess and I will go for Crown.

0:13:19 > 0:13:23Crown is the right answer. Crown Prosecution Service, yes.

0:13:23 > 0:13:27Pat, what name has been given to the grassroots conservative movement

0:13:27 > 0:13:30that emerged in the United States in 2009?

0:13:34 > 0:13:37I think their origins are in the Chicago area

0:13:37 > 0:13:42and their name reflects the famous Boston Tea Party,

0:13:42 > 0:13:44so I think it's the Tea Party.

0:13:44 > 0:13:47Tea Party is correct.

0:13:48 > 0:13:55Ann, the Pulitzer Prize-winning book entitled A Thousand Days by Arthur M Schlesinger Junior

0:13:55 > 0:13:58concerns the time in office of which US President?

0:14:04 > 0:14:07I seem to be making guesses in each round,

0:14:07 > 0:14:09but I'd go for John F Kennedy.

0:14:09 > 0:14:13Very good again. John F Kennedy it was. Nicely done.

0:14:13 > 0:14:15Pat,

0:14:15 > 0:14:19in 1983 Simon Hughes was elected the MP of a constituency in which city?

0:14:22 > 0:14:27Simon Hughes. I think he's a leading LibDem.

0:14:27 > 0:14:33Em...I don't think he's Liverpool or Leeds. I think he's from a constituency within London.

0:14:33 > 0:14:36London is the right answer.

0:14:36 > 0:14:39Ann, back to you.

0:14:39 > 0:14:42Third question. Prior to Mervyn King in 2010,

0:14:42 > 0:14:48how many Governors of the Bank of England had addressed the TUC's annual congress?

0:14:51 > 0:14:54Well, I have no idea.

0:14:56 > 0:14:59I would go for one.

0:14:59 > 0:15:02Very good. One is right again!

0:15:05 > 0:15:08Pat, get this wrong and you're out.

0:15:08 > 0:15:14Goodluck Jonathan was sworn in as the new President of which country in May, 2010?

0:15:17 > 0:15:22I think he got the call when the previous, the incumbent

0:15:22 > 0:15:26experienced extreme ill health and, I think, died.

0:15:26 > 0:15:29He's from southern Nigeria. So it's Nigeria.

0:15:29 > 0:15:34Nigeria is the right answer. Three questions, all of them right.

0:15:34 > 0:15:37So we go to sudden death. Here we go.

0:15:37 > 0:15:44In an infamous 1995 interview, Jeremy Paxman repeatedly asked the Home Secretary Michael Howard

0:15:44 > 0:15:49if he'd threatened to overrule which Director of the Prison Service?

0:15:51 > 0:15:56- No, I don't know. - Derek Lewis is the answer.

0:15:56 > 0:15:57Over to you, Pat.

0:15:57 > 0:16:03Mik was the Westminster nickname of which left-wing Labour MP who served on and off

0:16:03 > 0:16:06from 1945 to 1987?

0:16:06 > 0:16:09Mik spelt M-I-K.

0:16:09 > 0:16:11That's a long period of service.

0:16:12 > 0:16:1542 years, with some gaps.

0:16:15 > 0:16:22It's such a strange spelling. It's tempting to think it's something to do with his initials.

0:16:22 > 0:16:26Michael Foot? Michael Foot, I suppose... Maybe Michael Foot.

0:16:26 > 0:16:31Is he old enough to have been in Parliament just after WWII?

0:16:31 > 0:16:33Any other Michaels?

0:16:33 > 0:16:36I'm making heavy weather of this.

0:16:36 > 0:16:40I think I'll have to go with Michael Foot.

0:16:40 > 0:16:45It's not Michael Foot. It's Ian Mikardo, which is M-I-K-A-R-D-O.

0:16:45 > 0:16:47Ann, back to you.

0:16:47 > 0:16:52The Sejm is the lower house of which country's parliament, Ann?

0:16:52 > 0:16:56The Sejm. S-EJ-M.

0:16:56 > 0:17:01It doesn't seem like a language that I would know.

0:17:01 > 0:17:04I'll go for...

0:17:04 > 0:17:06Romania.

0:17:06 > 0:17:09Roughly the right area, but it's Poland.

0:17:12 > 0:17:13OK, Pat, get this right

0:17:13 > 0:17:18and you're in the final. In 2010, which columnist for The Spectator

0:17:18 > 0:17:23became the first blogger censured by the Press Complaints Commission?

0:17:26 > 0:17:28I'm stumped.

0:17:28 > 0:17:31Em...I really don't know.

0:17:31 > 0:17:34I'll just have to have a guess.

0:17:34 > 0:17:39What could he have got himself into trouble for?

0:17:39 > 0:17:45World's his oyster, really. Maybe he was indiscreet or breached Official Secrets...

0:17:45 > 0:17:48I don't know. Paul Foot.

0:17:48 > 0:17:52Not Paul Foot. Rod Liddle it is,

0:17:52 > 0:17:58who wrote that the overwhelming majority of London's violent crime is by young Afro-Caribbean men.

0:17:58 > 0:18:03That was why he got censured. OK, you're still equal.

0:18:03 > 0:18:09Ann, Nancy Pelosi, who became the House of Representatives Speaker in 2007,

0:18:09 > 0:18:13started her congressional career when she took office in 1987

0:18:13 > 0:18:19as the representative of a constituency in which US state?

0:18:20 > 0:18:25- I will go for California. - California is correct.

0:18:28 > 0:18:31Pat, to stay in it.

0:18:31 > 0:18:38Despite its name, the Conservative Parliamentary Committee known as the 1922 Committee

0:18:38 > 0:18:40was, in fact, set up in which year?

0:18:40 > 0:18:46I think it's got something to do with Harold Macmillan and his Wind of Change speech in Cape Town.

0:18:46 > 0:18:54So somewhere in the early '60s. He was certainly in power when Kennedy was in power, '62, '63.

0:18:54 > 0:18:58I think he outstayed Kennedy after the assassination, so '64.

0:18:58 > 0:19:03Could it have been all the way up to '66? I really don't know.

0:19:03 > 0:19:08On the basis that it was inspired by Macmillan's rallying call,

0:19:08 > 0:19:10I'll have to go for 1964.

0:19:10 > 0:19:15You're quite a long way off. It's 1923 - only a year out.

0:19:15 > 0:19:19It refers to the year they were all elected. That's why it's 1922.

0:19:19 > 0:19:21So, Ann, well done!

0:19:21 > 0:19:23You have taken the round!

0:19:23 > 0:19:28So definitely at least two Relatively Friendlies in the final.

0:19:28 > 0:19:32Pat, you've been knocked out. Please both of you come back here.

0:19:32 > 0:19:38The challengers have lost two brains from the final round, the Eggheads have lost one brain.

0:19:38 > 0:19:41The last subject is Music.

0:19:41 > 0:19:43Which of you would like Music?

0:19:43 > 0:19:46- You're going to do this? - I'll have a go.

0:19:46 > 0:19:50- James?- I'll go for it. - Against which Egghead?

0:19:50 > 0:19:54- Judith, without a doubt. - Judith, please.

0:19:54 > 0:19:59James against Judith on Music. Please go to the question rooms now.

0:19:59 > 0:20:03So Judith and James, here we go. We're doing Music.

0:20:03 > 0:20:06Three questions. James, you can choose the first or second set.

0:20:06 > 0:20:09I'd like to go second, please.

0:20:12 > 0:20:15OK. First question to Judith.

0:20:15 > 0:20:22Which song, often associated with Andy Williams, ends with, "to reach the unreachable star"?

0:20:28 > 0:20:33I think this is one I do know! I think it's The Impossible Dream.

0:20:33 > 0:20:37It is The Impossible Dream. Well done. James, your question.

0:20:37 > 0:20:41In which decade did Frank Sinatra die?

0:20:43 > 0:20:46Right, OK. Em...

0:20:46 > 0:20:49I was born in 1976.

0:20:49 > 0:20:54So I'm thinking... This will be a guess.

0:20:56 > 0:21:00He wasn't around in the 1980s. I think it was the 1970s.

0:21:00 > 0:21:07- No, quite a way out. The 1990s was the answer. Any year?- '98.- '98.

0:21:07 > 0:21:11It was the end of that decade. Relatively recently.

0:21:11 > 0:21:17Judith, your question. The opera Simon Boccanegra, set in 14th-century Genoa,

0:21:17 > 0:21:20is the work of which composer?

0:21:23 > 0:21:26It's Verdi.

0:21:26 > 0:21:31- No hesitation whatsoever.- Beethoven only wrote one opera, Fidelio.

0:21:31 > 0:21:37And Britten is a 20th century person, so Verdi.

0:21:37 > 0:21:42Brilliant. You're right. So the situation is, James,

0:21:42 > 0:21:47- you need this question or there is no way back.- Indeed.

0:21:47 > 0:21:53McFly's first single, Five Colours In Her Hair, reached number one in the UK in which year?

0:21:59 > 0:22:00Right...

0:22:00 > 0:22:05I normally associate music with what I was doing at the time.

0:22:05 > 0:22:07And I think that was around

0:22:08 > 0:22:12in...2001.

0:22:12 > 0:22:162001 is your answer. It's actually 2004.

0:22:16 > 0:22:21- So more recent than that.- Yeah. - Sorry, James.

0:22:21 > 0:22:24Judith will be in the final.

0:22:24 > 0:22:29Please come back, both of you, and rejoin your teammates.

0:22:29 > 0:22:34This is what we've been playing towards. It is the final round, General Knowledge.

0:22:34 > 0:22:36But those of you who lost

0:22:36 > 0:22:42won't be allowed to take part, so Carol, James and Chris from Relatively Friendly

0:22:42 > 0:22:46and Pat from the Eggheads, please now leave the studio.

0:22:48 > 0:22:54So here we are, John and Ann, playing to win Relatively Friendly £4,000.

0:22:54 > 0:23:01Chris, Barry, Judith and Kevin, you're playing for the Eggheads' very precious reputation.

0:23:01 > 0:23:08As usual, I will ask each team three questions. They're all General Knowledge and you can confer.

0:23:08 > 0:23:12So are your two brains better than the Eggheads' four?

0:23:12 > 0:23:18- Would you like to go first or second?- First?- I think first. - Yeah, we'll go first.

0:23:21 > 0:23:28Very good luck to you. Which Premiership football club is associated with a song that begins,

0:23:28 > 0:23:34"Blue is the colour, football is the game, we're all together and winning is our aim"?

0:23:37 > 0:23:39It's the wrong colour for West Ham.

0:23:39 > 0:23:45- So it could be Chelsea. - I actually don't think Everton...

0:23:45 > 0:23:49- James will kill me, as an Everton fan, if we're wrong.- We need him.

0:23:50 > 0:23:54- But I think it's Chelsea. - I'm quite happy, cos I don't know.

0:23:54 > 0:23:56We'll go with Chelsea.

0:23:56 > 0:23:59James is relieved. Chelsea's right.

0:23:59 > 0:24:00Eggheads,

0:24:00 > 0:24:05what's the technique in which photos taken at regular intervals

0:24:05 > 0:24:11are played back in rapid succession, making time appear much faster?

0:24:14 > 0:24:16OK, time lapse?

0:24:16 > 0:24:19- It's time lapse, Jeremy.- Right answer.

0:24:21 > 0:24:29Pelmanism, a system that was popular in the early 20th century, was developed in order to train what?

0:24:32 > 0:24:35Pelmanism. Is it impel?

0:24:35 > 0:24:39- I don't know. It's memory, I think. - You think it's memory?

0:24:39 > 0:24:43Yes, looking at the three choices, I'd guess at memory.

0:24:43 > 0:24:46I think we'll go memory.

0:24:46 > 0:24:51- Is it something to do with that game Pairs, Eggheads?- Yes.

0:24:51 > 0:24:54Pelmanism is a game.

0:24:54 > 0:24:56Pelmanism is memory. You're right.

0:24:56 > 0:25:01- Well done.- We had Pairs at our house, the cards you turn over.

0:25:01 > 0:25:04Someone said, "Ah, Pelmanism!"

0:25:04 > 0:25:09Yes, it is that. It's a game called Pelmanism.

0:25:09 > 0:25:11Here's your question.

0:25:11 > 0:25:13Marc Bohan -

0:25:13 > 0:25:16M-A-R-C B-O-H-A-N -

0:25:16 > 0:25:24head fashion designer at Christian Dior between 1960 and 1989, was born in which country?

0:25:27 > 0:25:30Unless it's a trick, it's France.

0:25:30 > 0:25:33I really don't know.

0:25:33 > 0:25:38- Italian would be Marco. - B-O-H-A-N, was it?

0:25:38 > 0:25:41I've heard the name.

0:25:41 > 0:25:46There are examples of ones whose names appear to be one thing...

0:25:46 > 0:25:50- Well, exactly. - So B-O-H-A-N?

0:25:50 > 0:25:54- And M-A-R-C, Marc. - Yeah, yeah.

0:25:54 > 0:25:56So, yeah, I think we have to.

0:25:56 > 0:26:01We're not sure, but we have to go for France on the basis of the name.

0:26:01 > 0:26:05France is the right answer.

0:26:05 > 0:26:09OK, your third question. Sometimes they just fall over.

0:26:09 > 0:26:17What type of African animals belong to the genus Loxodonta?

0:26:21 > 0:26:24- No idea. - I think it could be giraffe.

0:26:24 > 0:26:28For some reason. I don't know why. It might be LO for long neck!

0:26:28 > 0:26:33I've got no reason for the others, so I'm happy with that.

0:26:33 > 0:26:35It's a bit of a guess.

0:26:35 > 0:26:40I don't know if I saw it on a sign at a zoo, but we'll go with giraffe.

0:26:40 > 0:26:43Giraffes is your answer. Eggheads?

0:26:43 > 0:26:47- Elephants.- How can we deduce that from the name?

0:26:47 > 0:26:52- Loxo.- Loxodonta. Donta, teeth. Tusks.

0:26:52 > 0:26:55So they have a chance now. Eggheads,

0:26:55 > 0:27:01what was the original name of the American-born loyalist, inventor and physicist

0:27:01 > 0:27:08who co-founded the Royal Institution and was made Count Rumford by the Elector of Bavaria?

0:27:11 > 0:27:15- Benjamin Thompson. - It's Benjamin Thompson.

0:27:15 > 0:27:21It's always worrying when you say the name before the options come up.

0:27:21 > 0:27:23Benjamin Thompson is correct.

0:27:23 > 0:27:27Congratulations, Eggheads. You've won.

0:27:32 > 0:27:36How did you know that so swiftly, all of you?

0:27:36 > 0:27:41He was just...because of his involvement in both politics,

0:27:41 > 0:27:45having to flee the States because he was a loyalist,

0:27:45 > 0:27:48and then he became famous all over Europe.

0:27:48 > 0:27:53- This does happen quite a lot. - Yes, we know.

0:27:53 > 0:27:56They sit there looking half asleep, then bang!

0:27:56 > 0:28:01- Thank you so much for playing. - No, it's been super.

0:28:01 > 0:28:07- And you're an honorary member of the family, Ann.- Yes, they'll allow me to come and visit occasionally.

0:28:07 > 0:28:12Commiserations to you. The Eggheads have done what comes naturally.

0:28:12 > 0:28:16They still reign supreme. You're not going home with the £4,000.

0:28:16 > 0:28:23The money rolls over to our next show. Eggheads, congratulations. Who will beat you?

0:28:23 > 0:28:29Join us next time to see if a new team have the brains to defeat them. £5,000 says they don't.

0:28:29 > 0:28:31Until then, goodbye.

0:28:46 > 0:28:50Subtitles by Subtext for Red Bee Media Ltd - 2012

0:28:51 > 0:28:53Email subtitling@bbc.co.uk