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FULL MOVIES ENGLISH SUB (2026) - FULL | Reelshort
#drama #cdrama #romantic #love #movie #shortdrama #showhots #2026
Transcript
00:01From the Alex Rebeck stage at Sony Pictures Studios, this is Jeopardy!
00:14Here are today's contestants.
00:17A children's librarian from Clarkston, Michigan, Catherine Huffman.
00:22An attorney originally from Okemos, Michigan, Eric Hugos.
00:28And our returning champion, a bureaucrat and law student from Lawrenceville, New Jersey, J.B. Ding, whose 21-day cash
00:38winnings totaled $609,000.
00:43And now, here is the host of Jeopardy! Ken Jennings.
00:50Thank you, everybody. Thank you, Johnny Gilbert.
00:52Welcome to Jeopardy!
00:54Last week, we learned that the lucky number of our super champion, Jamie Ding, is six.
00:59And in Friday's game, he made it to lucky number six.
01:02Jamie is now sixth place all-time in two categories, consecutive games won and highest regular season earnings on our
01:08leaderboard of legends.
01:10Jamie has now hit the 21-game mark, something we have not seen here since 2022, when Chris Penulo won
01:1521 in a row.
01:16But here's some potentially good news for Eric and Catherine, the challengers today.
01:20Chris' run was stopped in his 22nd game.
01:23We'll see what happens today as we kick off the week with these categories in the Jeopardy! round.
01:29First category, state government.
01:31Then we have Bon Voyage, B-O-N in quotation marks.
01:36Everyday arrows.
01:38Some 11-letter words follow.
01:40Then it's Trash Talk Hall of Fame.
01:43And finally, there's an app for that.
01:46Jamie, you've been with us a full month.
01:47Start the game.
01:48It's got to be state government for eight.
01:50All right.
01:51Answer there, a daily double.
01:53Your love of state government pays off.
01:56And you can wager up to $1,000 on the first daily double of the game.
02:00$1,000.
02:01Here's your clue.
02:02State government.
02:03Washington and Maine each have a state, one of these officials, to examine accounting records.
02:12What is an auditor?
02:13State auditor, that's right.
02:15Taking you to $1,000.
02:19Everyday arrows for $1,000.
02:21Upvote and downvote arrows are used by them.
02:24Commenters on posts on the social media forum that's the heart of the Internet.
02:28Jamie.
02:29What is Redditors?
02:30Right.
02:3111-letter words are 600.
02:33Some late-night TV ads mention items delivered discreetly.
02:37And this word, erected from words meaning bad and performance.
02:41Jamie.
02:42What is dysfunction?
02:43Correct.
02:44There's an app for that for $800.
02:46Maladjusted?
02:47Explore mindfulness and meditation with this mental wellness app, whose name literally means mindset.
02:54Eric.
02:54What is calm?
02:55No.
02:57Catherine.
02:57What is Headspace?
02:58That's the app.
02:59Very good.
03:00Everyday arrows for $800.
03:02The Moylan arrow, named for the forward engineer whose idea it was, is that little triangle on your dashboard that
03:08tells you this.
03:10Jamie.
03:10What is which side the guest tank is on?
03:12That's it.
03:13Trash talk hall of fame for $1,000.
03:15This boxer, known as Pretty Boy, called then-unbeaten Ricky Hatton nothing but a fat man and said he'd punch
03:21him in his beer belly.
03:23Catherine.
03:24Who is Floyd?
03:25No.
03:26Eric.
03:27Who is Maryweather?
03:29Also incorrect.
03:31Jamie.
03:31Who is Mayweather?
03:32Mayweather.
03:33Floyd Mayweather.
03:34You got it.
03:34There's an app for that for $600.
03:37Were you recently ignored by someone under $14?
03:39They may have been busy with an experience on this game-building app launched in 2006.
03:44Jamie.
03:45What is Roblox?
03:46It is.
03:47State government for $1,000.
03:48Local governments mostly have two tiers.
03:51Cities and towns, aka municipalities, and counties, which in Alaska are called these.
03:58Jamie.
03:58What are Parishists?
03:59No.
04:01Eric or Catherine?
04:02In Alaska, they're boroughs.
04:05Back to you, Jamie.
04:06Bon voyage for $600.
04:07When in Paris, be sure to get some good buys at this place that some consider the first
04:13department store.
04:17That's the Beaumarchais.
04:19Jamie.
04:2011 letter words for $800.
04:22Showcasing aviation excitement, it's someone traveling from place to place, flying and performing
04:27aerial stunts.
04:28Jamie.
04:29It's a barnstormer.
04:30Good.
04:31There's an app for that for $1,000.
04:32This online marketplace with a Chinese parent company had the most downloaded app in the
04:38U.S. in 2024.
04:40Catherine.
04:41What is Temu?
04:41Temu is correct.
04:43Bon voyage for $200.
04:46This Iberian city is the westernmost capital city in mainland Europe.
04:50Eric.
04:51What is Lisbon?
04:51Right.
04:52Bon voyage $400.
04:54An Iowa city on the Des Moines River was named this in 1841 to honor Napoleon.
04:59Jamie.
05:00What is Bonaparte?
05:01You got it.
05:0211 letter words for $200.
05:04In a schoolhouse rock song, this part of speech is hooking up words and phrases and clauses.
05:10Eric.
05:10What is a conjunction?
05:11Yeah, conjunction junction.
05:13Bon voyage $800.
05:15Franceville and Porgenti are towns in this nation immediately south of Equatorial Guinea.
05:21Jamie.
05:21It was Gabon.
05:22It is Gabon.
05:23You have $6,000 even.
05:24And good news for you three, you get to pause for a moment.
05:26Take a quick break while we break for these messages.
05:35Let's chat with our players.
05:37Katherine Hoffman is a children's librarian from Clarkston, Michigan.
05:40And not the first Jeopardy player in your family, right?
05:44Correct.
05:44My uncle, Terry Curran, was a five-time champion back in the late 90s.
05:49So five-time undefeated champion.
05:50Back then, you could only play five games.
05:52Yeah, you played the five games and won the car.
05:54He came back for the tournament of champions.
05:56He won the first round in a runaway.
05:58And then the second round, he got beat by the woman who won the whole thing.
06:01So can't feel too bad about that.
06:03Did Uncle Terry give you any tips?
06:04Yes.
06:05But you're going to keep them?
06:07Yeah, exactly.
06:08That's a family secret until you win.
06:10Then we can find out what they were.
06:12Also with us from Michigan is Eric Buboltz from Okemos.
06:15A huge Michigan State fan, right?
06:17Basketball in particular?
06:18Yes.
06:18I love Michigan State basketball.
06:20Luckily, they're doing pretty well this year.
06:22Since I've been born, they haven't missed the tournament.
06:23And I hope that continues.
06:24I thought you were going to say you haven't missed the tournament since you were born.
06:27Do you?
06:27No.
06:28Okay.
06:28So you go to a lot of games, I'm guessing.
06:29Yeah.
06:30And our returning champion, we know his name by now, Jamie Ding from New Jersey.
06:33You went to Princeton, I understand.
06:35And there's still a relic of your time there at Princeton.
06:39What is it?
06:39There is a cocktail named after me on the menu at my old eating club.
06:43What is in the Jamie Ding?
06:44It's very attuned to the palate of someone in their early 20s.
06:48It's blue curacao, peach schnapps, and lemonade.
06:51Uh, and the reason it's named after me is because my friend Maya, she brought me this
06:57recipe that had blue curacao, peach schnapps, and orange juice.
07:00This might be the only time that I've ever rejected orange.
07:02Right.
07:02But I was like, well, blue and orange juice, that would look kind of weird.
07:06So let's replace that with lemonade.
07:07And she liked it very much and said, we're going to call this the Jamie Ding.
07:11And I guess they still do.
07:12Jamie, I don't even drink.
07:13And even I can tell that's a terrible idea for a drink.
07:16You have command of the board.
07:17Make a selection.
07:18Uh, state government for six.
07:19Back to state government.
07:21This state has civil law based on French and Spanish law, a holdover from its colonial past.
07:27Jamie.
07:27What is Louisiana?
07:28Yes.
07:29Bon voyage for a thousand.
07:31Kralendijk is the capital of this lovely island, once part of the Dutch Antilles.
07:36Eric.
07:36What is Bonaire?
07:37Well done.
07:38State government, 400.
07:39This state's constitution, based largely on one drafted in Montgomery in 1901, is thought
07:44to be the longest in the world.
07:46Jamie.
07:47What is Alabama?
07:47That's right.
07:48Everyday arrows for 600.
07:5118th century cartographer Friedrich Bernhardt Werner used arrows to show this for rivers,
07:56like the odor.
07:57Why doesn't every map do that?
07:59Catherine.
07:59What is the direction that it flows?
08:01Yes.
08:02Um, Trash Chalk Hall of Fame for 200.
08:04Before the 1988 three-point contest, this Celtics legend recalls asking his competitors, who's
08:10coming in second?
08:11Eric.
08:12Eric.
08:12Who is Bird?
08:13Legendary trash talker Larry Bird.
08:15Uh, 11-letter words, 1,000.
08:17Albert Einstein once said, this creative ability is more important than knowledge.
08:25He said imagination is more important than knowledge.
08:28Eric.
08:28Uh, 11-letter words, 400.
08:30This impressive epithet graced a cinematic septet and an Ottoman Suleiman.
08:35Eric.
08:36What is The Magnificent?
08:37That's correct.
08:37You're in positive territory.
08:38Uh, state government, 200.
08:40In every U.S. state and commonwealth, this head of the executive branch is directly elected
08:45by the people.
08:46Catherine.
08:47What is the governor?
08:48Right.
08:48Um, there's an app for that for 200.
08:51If someone IRL says they're swiping left on you, blame this dating app that spawned a
08:56whole new way to say nope.
08:58Eric.
08:59What is Tinder?
08:59It is.
09:00There's an app for that 400.
09:02Over 150 billion messages are sent daily on this meta-owned platform, the world's most
09:07widely used messaging service.
09:09Jamie.
09:10What is WhatsApp?
09:11Correct.
09:11Trash talk for 800.
09:13During 2023 March Madness, Angel Reese and Caitlin Clark both made headlines with this
09:19four-word taunting gesture made famous by John Cena.
09:22Eric.
09:23What is You Can't See Me?
09:24That's correct.
09:25Uh, Trash talk Hall of Fame 600.
09:27Steph Curry popularized this gesture with a double-talk name.
09:31It means the game's over and the other guy's lost.
09:34Jamie.
09:34What is Night Night?
09:35Right, right.
09:36Everyday Heiress for 400.
09:38Fittingly, his arrow is the only one mentioned in Romeo and Juliet.
09:43Jamie.
09:43Who's Cupid?
09:44Good.
09:45Trash talk for 400.
09:47This tennis great was said to be dissing rival Maria Sharapova when she said,
09:51she's not going to be invited to the cool parties.
09:54Jamie.
09:54It was Serena Williams?
09:55That's right.
09:56And the final clue, everyday arrows.
09:59Since the late 60s, the logo of this food chain has had arrows coming out of the S and
10:04the Y.
10:05Jamie.
10:05What is Subway?
10:06That is the Subway logo, bringing you to $9,000 even.
10:09Eric and Catherine have some catching up to do, but so much cash on the board in Double
10:13Jeopardy.
10:13That can happen.
10:14Be right back.
10:20We will have Eric selecting first in the Double Jeopardy round.
10:24Six categories for him to choose from.
10:26They are, first, historic nicknames.
10:29Then we have inspired lit, followed by mammals, ordinal movies, silent bee words.
10:38And finally, this time there's a nap for that.
10:42Eric.
10:43Historic nicknames, 400.
10:45Led by Ivar the Boneless, these seaborne Scandinavians took York in 866 after a surprise attack on
10:52All Saints Day.
10:53Eric.
10:53What are Vikings?
10:54Right.
10:55Historic nicknames, 800.
10:57Afflicted by a hereditary ailment, Piero the Gaudi of this family ruled Florence in the
11:021460s.
11:03Eric.
11:04Who are the Medici?
11:04Right.
11:05Historic nicknames, 1200.
11:07He was the hangman of buffalo before his two presidencies.
11:11Jamie.
11:11It was Cleveland.
11:12That's right.
11:13Mammals are 16.
11:14The young of the platypus and of this spiny monotreme are called Puggles.
11:19Eric.
11:20What is the echidna?
11:20Correct.
11:21Mammals, 2000.
11:23With a name adapted from Arabic, this mouse-like desert rodent can leap 10 feet in a single
11:28bound.
11:29Jamie.
11:29What is a jerboa?
11:30It is a jerboa.
11:32Ordinal movies are 12.
11:33Tom Cruise played a disabled Vietnam vet in this 1989 film that isn't the holiday its title
11:39might suggest.
11:41Catherine.
11:41What is Born on the Fourth of July?
11:43That's the movie.
11:44Ordinal movies for 400.
11:46I have a feeling you'll name this movie that brought Oscar nominations for Tony Collette
11:50and Haley Joel Osment.
11:52Eric.
11:52What is the Sixth Sense?
11:53Yes.
11:55Ordinal movies, 1600.
11:57Ingmar Bergman titled his 1957 meditation on mortality, Det schunde in sieglet, but you
12:03can just call it this.
12:04Jamie.
12:05What is the seventh seal?
12:06That's right.
12:07There's a nap for that for 1200.
12:09True parrot heads know the title of his final album, Equal Strain on All Parts, was his grandfather's
12:15way of referring to a nap.
12:16Jamie.
12:17It was Buffett.
12:18Jimmy Buffett.
12:19Silent B words for 2000.
12:20It doesn't mean be unsure again.
12:23It's a small, often temporary military fortification.
12:27Jamie.
12:27What is Redoubt?
12:28Redoubt, right.
12:29Historic nicknames for 16.
12:31Anne of this duchy has been called the great survivor, wife-wise.
12:35John of this, with over 60 illegitimate kids, got the baby maker.
12:40Eric.
12:41What is Burgundy?
12:41No.
12:43Jamie.
12:44What is Luxembourg?
12:45Also incorrect.
12:47Catherine, care to try?
12:48That would be Anne of Cleves.
12:49Great survivor of Henry VIII.
12:51Back to you, Jamie.
12:52Mammals for 12.
12:53Answer there is a daily double for you.
13:00You're way ahead of Eric and Catherine, tied for second.
13:02What do you want to wager, Jamie?
13:044,600.
13:05All right.
13:06You'll have an even 20,000 if you're right.
13:08Here's your clue in mammals.
13:10The lagomorphs are the mammal order made up of the pikas and these two related groups.
13:18Who are the rabbits and the hares?
13:20Rabbits and hares.
13:21You got them both.
13:2220,000 now for you.
13:24Fill your selection.
13:26Ordinal movies for 2,000.
13:28A 1999 BFI poll named this 1949 Orson Welles masterpiece with its sewer chase the greatest
13:35British film of all time.
13:37Jamie.
13:37What is the third man?
13:38It is.
13:39There's a nap for that for 16.
13:41This president's nap divided a two-shift day.
13:44He suffered a fatal heart attack in 1973 after lying down one afternoon at his Texas ranch.
13:50Catherine.
13:50Who is LBJ?
13:52Yes.
13:53Ordinal movies for 800.
13:55Sylvester Stallone made his initial appearance as Rambo in this 1982 movie.
14:00Jamie.
14:01What is First Blood?
14:02Yeah.
14:03Inspired lit for 12.
14:04This parody includes the line,
14:10Jamie.
14:13What is Pride and Prejudice and Zombies?
14:15Right.
14:16Historic nicknames for two.
14:18Predecessor of Isabella as ruler of this Spanish region from 1454 to 1474,
14:23Henry the impotent didn't exactly rise to the occasion.
14:27Eric.
14:28What is Castile?
14:28Correct for 2,000.
14:30Inspired lit for 1,600.
14:31The answer there, a daily double for you now, Eric.
14:36Chance to make up some ground.
14:38What's the wager here in inspired lit?
14:394,000.
14:40All right.
14:41Almost everything at stake going for 8,800.
14:43Here's your clue.
14:44Inspired lit.
14:46Set in contemporary Baltimore, Pulitzer Prize winner Ann Tyler's Vinegar Girl is a retelling
14:52of this 1590s comedy.
14:56What is The Taming of the Shrew?
14:58It is The Taming of the Shrew.
14:59Nicely done.
15:02Select again.
15:03Inspired lit for 2,000.
15:05As depicted here in a woodcut, the tragic sinking of this wailing vessel helped inspire
15:09the writing of Moby Dick.
15:11Jamie.
15:12What is The Essex?
15:13Very good.
15:14Silent B words for 16.
15:15This unit of electric charge is equal to the quantity of charge carried by a current of
15:201 ampere for 1 second.
15:22Eric.
15:22What is a watt?
15:23No.
15:25Jamie.
15:25What is a coulomb?
15:26That's right.
15:27There's a nap for that for 800.
15:29By coincidence, this literary character known for napping had the same last name as Washington
15:34Irving's publisher, Jamie.
15:36Who is Rip Van Winkle.
15:38Right.
15:38Silent B for 1,200.
15:40Doing things in this way means elusively and indirectly messaging your intent.
15:45Jamie.
15:46What is subly?
15:47Correct again.
15:48There's a nap for that for 2,000.
15:49During sleep, your brain is busy moving new memories from this part of the brain to the
15:54neocortex for long-term storage.
15:57Jamie.
15:57What is the hippocampus?
15:58Right.
15:59Inspired lit for 400.
16:00Young women learned to fight with swords and to protect France in Lily Lainoff's One
16:05for All, a gender-bending take on this novel.
16:08Eric.
16:08What is the Three Musketeers?
16:09Yes.
16:10Inspired lit 800.
16:11South African writer J.M.
16:13Kutsi added a woman to the deserted island in Faux, a reworking of this Daniel Defoe novel.
16:19Jamie.
16:20What is Robinson Crusoe?
16:21That's it.
16:22Silent B for 400.
16:24To attach the new calendar to the bulletin board, use one of these that the Brits call a
16:28drawing pin.
16:29Jamie.
16:30What is a thumbtack?
16:31Right.
16:32Mammals for eight.
16:33Weighing up to 90 pounds, the male of this colorful species is the world's largest monkey.
16:38Eric.
16:39What is a baboon?
16:40No.
16:41Jamie.
16:42What is a mandrel?
16:43You got it.
16:44There's a nap for that for four.
16:45This word for an afternoon nap derives from Latin for sixth, because workers often rested
16:50about six hours after dawn.
16:53Jamie.
16:53What is a siesta?
16:54Origin of siesta.
16:55Silent B for eight.
16:56The front of the U.S. $1 bill states that it is legal tender for all these, public and
17:01private.
17:02Jamie.
17:03What are debts?
17:04All debts.
17:04We have one more mammal clue for you three.
17:06In 2021, China created the national park encompassing 67 nature reserves to protect these bamboo eaters
17:13and their habitat.
17:15Eric.
17:15What are pandas?
17:16It is the giant panda.
17:17You finish in second place with 7,200.
17:19A big lead again for Jamie.
17:20Here's your final Jeopardy category, players.
17:23Country names.
17:24Not too many of those.
17:25Think about that and make your wagers.
17:26And then we'll come back with the clue.
17:29We are back with final Jeopardy.
17:31Country names is the category.
17:33This is the clue.
17:35In the 1850s, it was part of the Granadine Confederation.
17:40Today, it's named for a man who never set foot in the country.
17:4330 seconds.
17:44Good luck.
18:09Good luck.
18:14We'll begin on the end with Catherine Hoffman, who had $4,400 coming into final and wrote
18:19down as her response, what is Columbia?
18:22Well done, Christopher Columbus.
18:24Never set foot in modern day Columbia.
18:26What did you wager, Catherine?
18:27Almost everything.
18:28That'll bring you up to $8,400.
18:30You're now in second place.
18:32Let's see if Eric Buboltz got this one.
18:33It was 7,200.
18:34Did he know it was Columbia?
18:36Ah, he guessed Dominica.
18:37No.
18:38What did you wager, Eric?
18:40All but a dollar.
18:41So you'll be left with a buck.
18:42Jamie Ding with a big lead.
18:44$34,800.
18:45And the chance to add to it if he has Columbia.
18:48Ah, he thought of Bolivia.
18:49Simone Bolivar.
18:50So you're going to drop down how much?
18:53$16,200.
18:54The bad news, Jamie, is you have a mere $18,600 now as today's winnings.
18:58The good news, you're a 22-game champion.
19:00Your total, $627,600.
19:05We'll see if he can make it 23 in a row tomorrow.
19:07Join us then.
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