Daily Mail

Quizmaster Richard has all the right answers to keep us tuning in

- CHRISTOPHE­R STEVENS Richard Osman’s House Of Games HHHHI Hornby: A Model World HHHHI

Every celebrity quiz show ought to award extra marks for virtue signalling. Then we’d see some real competitio­n for scoring points. roving estate agent Jasmine Harman trounced her rivals on richard Osman’s House Of Games (BBC2) by seizing the tiniest excuse to declare: ‘I’m vegan!’

Jasmine, best-known as presenter of A Place In The Sun: Home Or Away?, was answering one of the tongue-twisters in the final round.

House Of Games airs its 500th edition this week, and every episode ends with a puzzler called AnswerSmas­h. Players get two clues, and win points by compressin­g the two solutions into one word.

For example: What’s a big golf tournament in the States, and who played Margo in The Good Life? It’s . . . the U.S. Openelope Keith. This is a splendidly silly game that leaves players splutterin­g as they try to pronounce the answer.

Jasmine proved quicker than any of her fellow celebs — Professor Suzannah Lipscomb, actor Dave Johns and sports presenter Jason Mohammad. They were scratching their heads when a picture of an exotic fruit flashed up beneath a half-finished nursery rhyme: ‘There was an old lady who . . .’

‘Swallowed a flychee!’ exclaimed Jasmine. everyone gaped at her, richard included. They might have remembered the old woman

‘swallowed a fly’ — but who knows what a lychee looks like?

‘I’m vegan, so the fruits and vegetables are, like, my area,’ Jasmine crowed. She got the next one as well: a picture of a shiny black eggplant, below a question about a French mime artist. Answer: Marcel Marceauber­gine.

House Of Games, with different brainteasi­ng challenges each day, is a great show for playing along at home. The effortless­ly genial Osman keeps viewers involved, turning to the camera and asking us how we’re doing, and congratula­ting us when he suspects we’re winning.

Perhaps there’s a little wizardry in the editing, or maybe celebritie­s are just naturally slow to answer, but no one ever spoils the fun by guessing too quickly. There’s always a second or two of silence before someone buzzes in after each question.

you’ll have to be quick, though, if you want to burnish your credential­s faster than the profession­als. One question (‘When was the Communist Manifesto published?’) gave three of the celebs a chance to tell us what they’d studied at university. None of them got the date right, though. It was 1848. Give yourself a pat on the back if you knew that at home . . . as richard would say.

Pats on the back all round for the toy train executives in Hornby: A Model World (Yesterday) as they came up with, quite literally, a new line. running out of vintage steam engines to recreate in miniature, product director Simon Kohler had the brilliant idea of doing all the same trains . . . but even smaller. Listening to his staff plotting the launch felt strangely exciting, like being an office spy.

Simon’s celebrated range of perfectly faithful replicas has traditiona­lly been at 1:76 scale. The latest models, though, are even tinier, at 1:120 scale, also known as TT or tabletop scale.

That means smaller tracks, smaller accessorie­s and (with a bit of luck) bigger turnover. It seems a counterint­uitive choice: I’d have expected that enthusiast­s would demand bigger models with more visible details . . . but then, I’m not a collector.

I couldn’t help but be impressed by the work of profession­al modeller Kathy Millatt in Solihull, though, as she built a diorama of the Port Dinorwic station near Anglesey, with rolling stock made using a 3D computer printer. A very new-fangled way to celebrate old-fangled technology.

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