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FULL MOVIES ENGLISH SUB (2026) - FULL | Reelshort
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00:01From the Alex Rebeck stage at Sony Picture Studios, this is Jeopardy!
00:14Introducing today's contestants, a commercial real estate broker from Seattle, Washington, Robin Horn.
00:23A poker player from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Emmett Laurie.
00:27And our returning champion, a bureaucrat and law student from Lawrenceville, New Jersey, Jamie Ding, whose 15-day cash winnings
00:38totaled $428,000.
00:43And now, here is the host of Jeopardy, Ken Jennings.
00:49Thank you, Johnny. Welcome back to Jeopardy!
00:52Our champion, Jamie Ding, has had quite a week here on the Alex Rebeck stage.
00:56He's won all four of his games this week in a runaway.
00:59He's added $136,180 to his total.
01:03He's set new season records for biggest final Jeopardy! wager and highest one-game total.
01:08And with a 16th win today, he could join the all-time Jeopardy! leaderboard of legends, both for number of
01:14games won and total earnings.
01:16But first, he has to get through Emmett and Robin, who have a chance to make some Jeopardy! history of
01:20their own today.
01:21Good luck to all three of you. Let's see what the board has for us in the Jeopardy! round.
01:24Your categories will be American History, Phrase and Spoonerism, we also have Biopics, Castling, then KK, Whatever.
01:40Jamie, start us off.
01:42American History for $800.
01:43This former First Lady had a major role in drafting the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
01:50Jamie.
01:50Who was Eleanor Roosevelt.
01:52Right.
01:52Biopics for $1,000.
01:54Sissy Spacek played Loretta Lynn, going from rags to the riches of country singer superstardom in this 1980 biopic.
02:01Robin.
02:02What is it, A Coal Miner's Daughter?
02:03Yes, Coal Miner's Daughter is right.
02:05Biopics, $800.
02:06They may take our lives, but they'll never take our freedom, a blue-in-the-face William Wallace yells in
02:12this 1995 film.
02:14Emmett.
02:14What's Braveheart?
02:15That's the film.
02:16American History for $1,000.
02:17Ida Tarble's reporting on Standard Oil was part of the early 1900s journalism derisively called This Movement.
02:24Robin.
02:25What is Yellow Journalism?
02:26No.
02:27Jamie.
02:27What is Muckraking?
02:28That's correct, for $1,000.
02:30KK for $800.
02:31This author's Merry Pranksters included Beat Generation icon Neal Cassidy and Woodstock MC Wavy Gravy.
02:38Emmett.
02:39Who's Ken Kesey?
02:39Right.
02:40Biopics for $600.
02:41Jennifer Lopez met the Quintanilla family as part of her research in playing the title role in this film.
02:47Jamie.
02:48What is Selena?
02:49Yes.
02:50KK for $400.
02:51Pork and shrimp are forbidden foods for Jews who do this.
02:55Robin.
02:56Was Keep Kosher?
02:57Yes.
02:58KK for $6.
02:59Derived from German, it's another name for Santa Claus.
03:03Jamie.
03:03What is Kris Kringle?
03:04Correct.
03:05Castling for $1,000.
03:07ChrΓ©tien de Troyes' Percival features a mysterious castle that houses the Grail and is the home of this wounded monarch.
03:14Jamie.
03:14Who is the Fisher King?
03:15Very good.
03:16Whatever for $800.
03:18The aptly named Sanguinelli is a variety of this citrus fruit.
03:22Robin.
03:23Was orange?
03:24Can you be more specific?
03:25Was a blood orange.
03:26That's right.
03:26Whatever for $6.
03:28The Museum of Flight in Tukwilla, Washington includes the Red Barn.
03:31This company's original factory building.
03:34Robin from Seattle.
03:35What is Boeing?
03:36Right.
03:37Whatever for $4.
03:39Celebrating diversity, a new Barbie with this condition comes with noise-canceling headphones and a fidget spinner.
03:45Jamie.
03:46What is autism?
03:47Autism Barbie, yes.
03:48Castling for $600.
03:50To these fortifications, men.
03:51The ones at Barrick Castle were strengthened in the 1500s to try to cope with artillery.
03:57Jamie.
03:57What are ramparts?
03:58To the ramparts, yes.
03:59Frozen Spoonerism for $800.
04:02Arguments for and against, and black corvid birds carrying low-value chess pieces.
04:08Robin.
04:09What are rooks?
04:11No.
04:13Jamie.
04:13What are pros and cons, and crows and pawns?
04:17That's right.
04:17We need both halves.
04:19American History for $400.
04:21Enacted in 1781, this first charter of US government failed to give Congress the power to tax, leaving it largely
04:28ineffective.
04:30Jamie.
04:30What were the Articles of Confederation?
04:32That's right.
04:33Jamie has the lead with $6,200, but Emmett and Robin are off to pretty strong starts against him.
04:36We'll see what happens when we come back.
04:38Much more Jeopardy.
04:39Stay tuned.
04:45Robin Horn is a commercial real estate broker from Seattle.
04:48Yes.
04:48And speaking of Seattle, I understand you almost did not make it here to the Alex Trebek stage today.
04:52It's true.
04:53When I was checking my bag, I put my ID on the glass to have it scan as part of
04:58the process, and as I was pulling it back toward myself, it slipped through a crack and went into the
05:02casework where the machine was housed.
05:05So if not for a long-haired, bespectacled, really cool IT guy that came and rescued it with the magic
05:12key to open that casework, I might not actually be here.
05:15See, nerds can be heroes.
05:16Oh, absolutely.
05:17Got you here to Jeopardy.
05:18Yes, 100%.
05:19Well done.
05:20Emmett Laurie is a poker player from Philadelphia.
05:23What kind of poker player?
05:24Emmett, can you make a living at that?
05:25Yeah, you sure can.
05:26I mean, I play online.
05:27It goes well enough.
05:29You prefer online to casino?
05:30Yeah, I sure do.
05:31I kind of like sunlight and also clocks, but more importantly, I have two young cats at home, and they
05:36don't like the idea of not eating for eight hours, so I'm home all the time.
05:39Fair enough.
05:40You don't want to bring your cats to the casino.
05:41I don't think they'd like it.
05:43You do feel like a Bond villain if you're at a gambling table with cats, right?
05:46Oh, yeah.
05:46Something to try out.
05:47Maybe.
05:47Maybe.
05:48Jamie Dang of New Jersey is our returning champion.
05:51Jamie, I was admiring your penmanship today.
05:53This is very nice.
05:54You have a talent for, what, writing in italics?
05:57Is that right?
05:57Yes.
05:58How does one become a great italic sis?
06:01I don't know.
06:01I mean, it's a talent so boring that I can't really remember how or why I started doing it.
06:07It's been a couple weeks, and we are now into your most boring talents.
06:10Yeah.
06:11But it looks good.
06:12And it's been helpful for law school, because I can write down case names, and it looks a
06:16little nicer.
06:17There we go.
06:18You get extra credit for neat penmanship.
06:20Oh, I wish.
06:21Pick up your signaling devices, you three.
06:22Jamie gave us the last correct response, and we'll select now.
06:25Phrasing spoonerism for 1,000.
06:26To move out of your parents' house, and to shovel soil made of clay, silt, and sand.
06:36Oh, I think Jamie just got it.
06:37To leave home and to heave loam.
06:40Jamie?
06:41Castling for 800.
06:42This European royal dynasty took their name from the Hawks castle they built in Switzerland
06:47in the 11th century.
06:48Emmett?
06:49What is Hohenstaufen?
06:50No.
06:52Jamie?
06:53What is Hohenzollern?
06:54Also incorrect.
06:56Robin, care to try?
06:58Those are the Hopsburgs.
06:59Back to Jamie.
07:00Uh, whatever for 200.
07:03His is the third gospel in the New Testament.
07:05Jamie?
07:06It was Luke.
07:07Yes, it is.
07:08Castling for 400.
07:10Angelenos and tourists who love conjuring try to gain admission to this edifice at the
07:14foot of the Hollywood Hills.
07:16Jamie?
07:16What is the magic castle?
07:17That's correct.
07:18KK for 1,000.
07:19After conquering China, he founded the country's Yuan dynasty.
07:23Jamie?
07:24It was Kublai Khan.
07:25Good for 1,000.
07:26American history for 600.
07:27Answer there.
07:28Is the daily double in the round?
07:33Some more good daily double luck for you, Jamie.
07:35You have 7,000 to wager.
07:375,000.
07:38All right.
07:38You'll have 12,000 if you're correct.
07:40The category is American history.
07:41This is the clue.
07:42The Battle of San Juan Hill was the bloodiest for U.S. forces in this war.
07:47Our foe had half as many casualties.
07:50What was the Spanish-American War?
07:52Correct.
07:53Taking you to $12,000.
07:57Where now?
07:58Whatever for 1,000.
08:00The American Kennel Club describes this breed as having a thick all-white coat impervious
08:05to cold and a perpetual smile.
08:07Robin?
08:08What is a Samoyed?
08:09Well done, yes.
08:10Awesome.
08:11KK for 2, please.
08:13For a new version of Cabaret, Broadway's August Wilson Theatre was redone in the round to transform
08:18it into this nightclub.
08:19Emmett?
08:20What's the Kit Kat Club?
08:21Yes.
08:22Phrase and Spoonerism for $600.
08:24To bathe beneath a spray of water and to jiggle a structure in a cellular network.
08:31What are take a shower and the less common expression shake a tower?
08:36Back to you, Emmett.
08:37Uh, sure.
08:38Biopics for $400.
08:39Got this?
08:40The role of a gay rights activist and politician Sean Penn did in this 2008 film.
08:45Jamie?
08:46What is milk?
08:46Yes.
08:48Castling for $200.
08:49This 1964 act outlaw discrimination based on race, color, religion, or national origin.
08:55Jamie?
08:56What is the Civil Rights Act?
08:57Right again.
08:58Phrase and Spoonerism for $400.
09:00The one who pulls the strings and a spiritual guide for Beaker and Gonzo.
09:05Jamie?
09:05What are puppet master and muppet pastor?
09:08That's right.
09:10Castling for $200.
09:12This castle in Scotland was purchased by the British royal family in 1852 for about 32,000 pounds.
09:18Jamie?
09:19What is Balmoral?
09:20That's it.
09:21Biopics for $200.
09:22Peter O'Toole became an international star when he played the title British officer in this epic film.
09:28Jamie?
09:28What is Lawrence of Arabia?
09:29Yes.
09:30And we have one more of everyone's favorite category, phrase and spoonerism.
09:34A morning after hangover beverage and a risky challenge offered by a large pig.
09:39Robin?
09:40What is hair of the dog and a dare of the hog?
09:44That's right.
09:45You made it to the end there.
09:46$2,200 for you for second place.
09:49Jamie's in the lead.
09:50Emma will select first when we come back.
09:52Stay tuned for Double Jeopardy.
09:58It's time for the Double Jeopardy round.
10:00Twice as much money this time.
10:02Here are your new categories, players.
10:04We begin on the left with Giants of Music.
10:07From there we go to ten letter world capitals.
10:10A game of fictional character who said it.
10:13Then alliterative animals.
10:16Constant dogged unrelenting persistence.
10:19And finally Ish.
10:20I-S-H.
10:22Emmett?
10:22Can we start with fictional character for 2000?
10:25Oh Jake.
10:26We could have had such a damned good time together.
10:28Emmett?
10:29Who is Lady Brett Ashley?
10:30Yes, to Jake Barnes in The Sun Also Rises.
10:33Fictional character 1600.
10:34All that die from the praying of the undead become themselves undead.
10:42It's from Dracula.
10:43The speaker is Professor Van Helsing.
10:45Emmett?
10:46Ten letter world capitals for 2000.
10:48Rick Steve says this Danube city was a damaged husk under communism.
10:52It revived since 1993 and becoming the capital of its own country.
10:56Jamie?
10:57What is Bratislava?
10:58Very good.
10:58Giants of Music for 1200.
11:00Best known for this singing technique,
11:02Jimmy Rogers was in the first class of inductees to the country music hall of Faye-ay-ay-ay.
11:08Robin?
11:08Was yodeling?
11:09Right.
11:10Giants of Music 8.
11:12Beyonce's 32nd Grammy broke the record of Sir George Schulte,
11:15longtime music director of this Illinois Z group, the CSO.
11:19Jamie?
11:20What is the Chicago Symphony Orchestra?
11:22That's it.
11:22Fictional character for 1200.
11:24Our names are worn away to Derby Field.
11:30That's Tess of the D'Urbervilles.
11:32Back to you, Jamie.
11:33Constant Dogged for 1600.
11:35Failure was not an option for this Jersey-based guy, often quoted as saying,
11:40I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work.
11:42Jamie?
11:43It was Thomas Edison.
11:44Yeah.
11:45Ish for 800.
11:45This part of a chicken is actually the fusion of the two clavicles.
11:50Robin?
11:50What's the wishbone?
11:51Right.
11:52Ish for 16.
11:53In the Russian book title,
11:55Prestuplenye y Nakazanye, Nakazanye translates to this.
11:59Robin?
12:00Peace?
12:01No.
12:03Jamie?
12:03What is punishment?
12:04That's right.
12:05Different novel.
12:05Alertive animals to 1200.
12:07The U.S. is home to about 40 species of this insect that expels a toxic ant repellent when
12:13under attack, hence its name.
12:18That's the bombardier beetle.
12:20Back to Jamie.
12:21Persistence for 2000.
12:22The 2026 documentary Queen of Chess shows Judith Polgar finally beating this legendary
12:28player in 2002 on her 15th try.
12:31Robin?
12:32Who's Bobby Fischer?
12:33No.
12:33Emmett?
12:34Who's Garak Kasparov?
12:35Kasparov is correct.
12:36Ten-letter world capitals for 16.
12:38Empress Taitu, the wife of Menelik II, had a house built at the site that would become
12:43this world capital.
12:45Jamie?
12:45What is Addis Ababa?
12:46Right.
12:47Fictional character for 800.
12:49I thought you knew, old sport.
12:50I'm afraid I'm not a very good host.
12:52Jamie?
12:53Who is Jay Gatsby?
12:54Yes.
12:55Alliterative animals for 1600.
12:56The answer there is a daily double for you, Jamie.
13:01You're wagering from the lead once again.
13:03How big do you want to go?
13:05Alliterative animals.
13:063,200.
13:08Okay.
13:08Going for 25,000.
13:10Here's your clue.
13:11Alliterative animals.
13:12With a wingspan nearing 10 feet, this magnificent bird once ranged across most of the western
13:17United States.
13:20What is the California condor?
13:22Is correct.
13:23You have 25,000.
13:28Ish for 2,000.
13:29A principal deity in Mesopotamian and Babylonian myth, she's the goddess of both love and war.
13:35Emmet.
13:36Who's Ishtar?
13:372,000 for you.
13:37Ten-letter world capitals for 12.
13:39Answer.
13:40The other daily double.
13:44An opportunity for you here, Emmet, wagering from second place.
13:48All of it, I guess.
13:49You're going for the true daily double.
13:50All right.
13:50Going for 14,000.
13:52Here's your clue in ten-letter world capitals.
13:55A port city on the Rio de la Plata, it's the southernmost capital in South America.
14:01What is Montevideo?
14:03Uruguay.
14:04That is correct.
14:0414,000 now for you.
14:06Big move.
14:08Let's go ten-letter world capitals for eight.
14:11Mount Victoria rises over 600 feet above this capital at the southern end of North Island.
14:16Emmet.
14:16What's Wellington?
14:17Yes.
14:18Constant dogged for 1,200.
14:20This mythical guy is a symbol of perseverance, even in the face of an impossible task.
14:25Robin.
14:26Who is Sisyphus?
14:26It is.
14:27Ish for 1,200.
14:29Members of the Mevlevi order of Sufi Muslims are popularly known as the whirling these.
14:34Robin.
14:35What's a dervish?
14:36Correct.
14:37Ish for four.
14:38In other words, quench a fire.
14:40Emmet.
14:41Oh.
14:42Nope.
14:43What's squish?
14:44Nope.
14:45Jimmy.
14:46What is extinguish?
14:47There we go, yes.
14:49Alert of animals for 800.
14:51Delicious to both humans and bears.
14:53This fish of the North Pacific sounds like it's been punched in the peeper.
14:57Jamie.
14:58What is sockeye salmon?
14:59Yes.
15:00Ten-letter world capitals for 400.
15:01This city is located on the islands of Zeeland and Amair, just west of MalmΓΆ, Sweden.
15:07Jamie.
15:07What is Copenhagen?
15:08Right.
15:09Giants of music for 1,600.
15:11Hal Blaine played drums on 150 top 10 singles, including his classic opening on this group's Be My Baby.
15:17Jamie.
15:18Who are the Ronettes?
15:19Yes.
15:20Fictional character for 400.
15:22If the little gray cells are not exercised, they grow the rust.
15:26Jamie.
15:27Who is Poirot?
15:27Yes.
15:28Persistence for 800.
15:30In this movie, Ray Kinsella is very determined to take Terrence Mann to a Red Sox game and to complete
15:35a landscaping project.
15:37Emmet.
15:38Oh, what's Field of Dreams?
15:39Right.
15:40Giants of music for 2,000.
15:41The 2026 centennial of this trumpeter is planned to include reissues, multimedia shows, and a film on his romance with
15:48Juliet Greco.
15:50Emmet.
15:51Who's Miles Davis?
15:53It is Miles.
15:54Constant for 400.
15:56If you're hectoring someone persistently, you're said to be this burrowing weaseling the person.
16:01Jamie.
16:02It was badgering.
16:03Right.
16:04Alliterative for 2,000.
16:05This dwarf antelope of Eastern Africa has a name that's both alliterative and repetitive.
16:10Robin.
16:11What's a dick dick?
16:12Yes.
16:13Alliterative animals for four.
16:14If you took AP Bio, you may well have studied Drosophila, these insects, to learn about heredity.
16:20Robin.
16:21What are fruit flies?
16:22That's correct.
16:23And Giants of Music, the final clue awaits.
16:25He sang, I did it my way, and my way to get to the New Jersey rest area named for
16:29him is to head north past the Atlantic City Reservoir.
16:32Jamie.
16:33It was Sinatra.
16:34Sinatra is correct.
16:35You finished at 29,400, but your streak of runaways has come to an end, thanks to Emmet and his
16:40daily double.
16:40Let's see what the final Jeopardy category will be to decide this.
16:45Nineties television.
16:46Think back to nineties television while we pause for this break.
16:49Clue in a moment.
16:51Final Jeopardy today deals with nineties television.
16:54Is that your era?
16:55Is that our players' era?
16:56Let's find out with this clue.
16:59Northwest Passage was a working title of this series that was renamed for Mountains.
17:04You have 30 seconds, players.
17:05Good luck.
17:38What could it be?
17:39We'll begin with Robyn Horne from the Pacific Northwest with $5,400.
17:42She wrote down Twin Peaks.
17:45Yes, that is the show.
17:47How much will you add, Robyn?
17:49$4,600 takes you to an even $10,000.
17:52Emmet Laurie was in second place with $17,200.
17:54Great poker face there, poker player.
17:57Do you have Twin Peaks?
17:59He didn't get it.
18:00Hi, Zoe.
18:00What did you wager, Emmet?
18:02He went big as he had to.
18:04That'll knock him down into third place.
18:06Jamie Ding had $29,400 today, but not a runaway.
18:09Does he know it's Twin Peaks?
18:12He's correct.
18:14What did he wager?
18:16$5,001.
18:17As they say on Twin Peaks, it is happening again.
18:20$34,401.
18:22And now a 16-day total for Jamie Ding.
18:26$462,401.
18:27Welcome to the leaderboard of legends.
18:30Thanks for being with us this week on Jeopardy.
18:32Have a great weekend.
18:33We'll see you on Monday.
19:07We'll see you again next time.
19:08Bye.
19:08Bye.
19:13Bye.
19:17Bye.
19:20Bye.
19:22Bye.
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