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Difference between revisions of "Letters and Numbers"

From Countdown
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[[Image:Lily Serna.jpg|right|thumb| The maths guru, Lily Serna]]
 
[[Image:Lily Serna.jpg|right|thumb| The maths guru, Lily Serna]]
 
[[Image:David Astle.jpg|right|thumb| The word expert, David Astle]]
 
[[Image:David Astle.jpg|right|thumb| The word expert, David Astle]]
'''Letters and Numbers''' is an Australian version of Countdown.  It began on 2 August 2010 on SBS One, and is the third English-language version of the show so far. It was adapted from [[Des chiffres et des lettres]] in the same way that [[Countdown]] was in 1982. The host is [[Richard Morecroft]].
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'''Letters and Numbers''' is an Australian version of Countdown.  It originally ran from 2 August 2010 to 27 June 2012 on SBS One, having been repeated in its entirety since, and is the third English-language version of the show so far. It was adapted from [[Des chiffres et des lettres]] in the same way that [[Countdown]] was in 1982. The host is [[Richard Morecroft]].
  
 
==Format==
 
==Format==
  
The show follows almost the same layout as the English version. Shows have five [[letters game]]s, three [[numbers game]]s and a [[conundrum]], with two advertising breaks during which Word Mixes (eight-letter anagrams similar to [[Teatime Teaser]]s) are displayed for viewers.
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The show followed a layout inspired the British version. Shows had five [[letters game]]s, three [[numbers game]]s and a [[conundrum]], with two advertising breaks during which Word Mixes (eight-letter anagrams similar to [[Teatime Teaser]]s) are displayed for viewers. The rounds were arranged in the format LLNWLLNWLNC, with W representing a Word Mix.
  
Note:  Former ''Countdown'' contestant [[Andrew Fisher]] appeared on episode 15 of ''Letters and Numbers''.
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On the Australian show, daily champions were capped at six wins instead of eight, similar to the [[viscount]]s of [[Series 46]] of ''Countdown''. All standard series comprised exactly 100 shows, including 93 preliminaries (heats) followed by a 7-episode knockout finals stage identical to ''Countdown'''s. Winners of each series received a hard copy of the ''Macquarie Dictionary'', against which all words on the show were judged.
  
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The show's original run comprised four 100-show series, each lasting roughly four months, followed by a ''Masters'' tournament (analogous to a ''Countdown'' [[Championship of Champions]]; unrelated to the morning [[Countdown Masters]] programme) comprising all four previous series champions, three runners-up and a semi-finalist. This event was won by the Series 4 champion Sam Gaffney.
  
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Former ''Countdown'' contestant [[Andrew Fisher]] appeared on episode 15 of ''Letters and Numbers'' and went on to become the #1 seed and champion of the first series.
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On the Australian version's numbers games, 2 large and 4 small numbers (known as the "Family Mix", as the 2 large numbers were analogous to a pair of parents) evolved to become the most common selection, in contrast to the British show where 1 large and 5 small is most popular.
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==

Revision as of 12:32, 17 June 2016

Opening titles
The host, Richard Morecroft
The maths guru, Lily Serna
The word expert, David Astle

Letters and Numbers is an Australian version of Countdown. It originally ran from 2 August 2010 to 27 June 2012 on SBS One, having been repeated in its entirety since, and is the third English-language version of the show so far. It was adapted from Des chiffres et des lettres in the same way that Countdown was in 1982. The host is Richard Morecroft.

Format

The show followed a layout inspired the British version. Shows had five letters games, three numbers games and a conundrum, with two advertising breaks during which Word Mixes (eight-letter anagrams similar to Teatime Teasers) are displayed for viewers. The rounds were arranged in the format LLNWLLNWLNC, with W representing a Word Mix.

On the Australian show, daily champions were capped at six wins instead of eight, similar to the viscounts of Series 46 of Countdown. All standard series comprised exactly 100 shows, including 93 preliminaries (heats) followed by a 7-episode knockout finals stage identical to Countdown's. Winners of each series received a hard copy of the Macquarie Dictionary, against which all words on the show were judged.

The show's original run comprised four 100-show series, each lasting roughly four months, followed by a Masters tournament (analogous to a Countdown Championship of Champions; unrelated to the morning Countdown Masters programme) comprising all four previous series champions, three runners-up and a semi-finalist. This event was won by the Series 4 champion Sam Gaffney.

Former Countdown contestant Andrew Fisher appeared on episode 15 of Letters and Numbers and went on to become the #1 seed and champion of the first series.

On the Australian version's numbers games, 2 large and 4 small numbers (known as the "Family Mix", as the 2 large numbers were analogous to a pair of parents) evolved to become the most common selection, in contrast to the British show where 1 large and 5 small is most popular.

See also