PLAYERS on The 1% Club were left stumped by a tricky question surrounding a “common phrase”.
The quiz show, hosted by , is known for being notoriously difficult with the latest episode being no exception.


Those players lucky enough to make ithad a real challenge on their hands when Lee asked them to decipher a commonly used phrase from a board of seemingly random letters.
Seeming simple, the question read: “What well-known phrase can you see here.”
12 letters then appeared in a box and at first glance would not appear to be in any clear order.
With 30 seconds on the clock, the remaining players had to see if they could see what the phrase was.
With just seven remaining in play, Lee was left stunned when it managed to wipe out six contestants with just one player, named Steve, getting it correct.
It was soon revealed that there were hidden words doing an action that is required of them in the said well-known phrase.
The answer that Lee was looking for was: “What goes up must come down.”
It was then highlighted how the word “what” was featured in the first column of the box of letters beginning with the letter W at the bottom – thus reading as “what” going in an upwards direction.
The other two columns featured the words “must” and “come” descending down the column.
It therefore exemplified how literally “what” was going up” and “must come” was going down.
With only Steve getting the difficult question correct, he successfully managed to pass to the final round – the all-important 1% question.
But for the other six players, were dashed.
Steve landed £10,000 for being the last player standing in order to be in with a chance of winning the £100k.
His decision took Lee by surprise, but he then revealed the 1% question which was: “What two letters replace the question marks?”
Underneath the rest of the puzzling question read: “TE times T equals MESSAGE. TO times IN equals POISON. E times ?? equals LEAVE.”
After his 30 seconds were up, Steve revealed he had locked in his answer as “NE.”
There was a dramatic pause, then Lee revealed he had got it wrong, with the correct answer being “IT” and the explanation: “If you replace ‘times' with ‘X', you form words with the same meaning as the words on the right.”
