
By
Kathryn H. Kidd
If you
have been alive and conscious and living in the USA
this week, you know that Ken Jennings, the Mormon Boy Wonder
of the game show Jeopardy!, was finally toppled from
his throne on Tuesday. Ken’s 74-game winning streak yielded
him $2,520,700 before he was finally stumped by the answer,
“Most of this firm's 70,000 seasonal white-collar employees
work only four months a year.” The correct answer was H&R
Block, but Ken guessed Federal Express.
(H&R
Block, delighted with the unexpected publicity, has offered
Ken a lifetime of free tax preparation.)
Ken’s
fifteen minutes of fame are not yet behind him. As of yesterday,
he was so solidly booked on television shows that his own
Sony Pictures publicists couldn’t reach him. Upcoming television
appearances are scheduled for weeks, but as of today the Jeopardy!
publicists are turning over the care and feeding of Ken Jennings
to Ken’s own personal agent.
The hoopla
surrounding Ken’s victories is something that the self-effacing
winner would probably find amusing. Even the Jeopardy!
publicists who dealt with him for months, and whose very job
was to get Ken Jennings’ name into the news as much as they
possibly could, were not allowed to say anything about him.
The people
who built the Great Wall of China could learn something about
wall-building from the people who are protecting Ken Jennings.
Indeed, it would be easier to get an interview with President
George W. Bush than it would be to get a quote from Ken the
Destroyer.
It would
be safe to say that Ken is looking forward to returning to
his home in Murray, Utah, and his own wife and family. Indeed,
he said several times before he was dethroned that he was
rooting against himself whenever he played.
But if
Ken Jennings himself is relieved that the whole thing is over,
he cannot be nearly as happy as Ken R. Jennings and his wife
Sheila, who also live in Salt Lake City. Ken R. Jennings
has received so many telephone calls for the Jeopardy!
champion that his home telephone goes straight to an answering
machine where a weary voice gives the name of one of the publicists
of the other Ken Jennings before inviting callers for Ken,
Sheila or Ryan Jennings to please leave a message.
Jeopardy!
ratings went up by more than 20 percent during Ken’s winning
streak. Church members were among the fans who watched him
five days a week, although many of them were more interested
in seeing how well he represented the Church than they were
in seeing what questions he could or couldn’t answer.
Fortunately,
Ken never embarrassed the Church with a hard sell, and he
never discredited the Church with any thoughtless words or
actions. If the status of being a public Mormon caused pressure
for him, he never showed it. Being a Mormon was as much a
part of Ken Jennings as his hair color or his self-deprecating
humor. He wasn’t trying to give out copies of the Book of
Mormon to the contestants he left in the dust – and his low-key
persona is what made him so effective as an emissary of the
Church.
Although
Ken may not have gone on Jeopardy! to spread the Gospel,
viewers were well aware that he was a member of the LDS Church.
Interviews on the air with host Alex Trebek
revealed that Ken’s wife Mindy had used flash cards to teach
teetotaler Ken about alcoholic beverages for the popular “Potent
Potables” category. On what turned out to be his last appearance,
Ken posed a question in Spanish – something he may have learned
for his mission in Spain.
Ken has
said he has addressed gospel issues in other ways. He told
Times
and Seasons magazine that, “Many
press interviews I’ve done have brushed on tithing and the
Word of Wisdom, which is about the extent of the Jeopardy!
missionary-ing I’ve done. Alex Trebek is surprisingly
knowledgeable about the Church, and he and I have had many
gospel-themed discussions both on and off camera. And I’ve
received a truly astounding amount of mail from Protestants
and various other ‘friends of other faiths’ complimenting
me on my clean-cut appearance, willingness to tithe, etc.,
with nary a ‘but you’re going to hell. Your biggest fan, Agnes.’
If nothing else, in some parts of the country, I’m sure it’s
good to have a Mormon on TV who evidently doesn’t have horns
and ten wives. So, yes, there have been some opportunities,
and I’m sure there will be more.”
Ken went on to say that it was a lot harder for him to go home and be famous
than it was for him to stand on the set of Jeopardy! and answer questions.
“It is hard to be the momentarily famous guy in an LDS ward,” he said. “It takes
me 20 minutes to get from classroom to classroom on Sundays,
because of the dozens of friendly ward members who want to
ambush me on the way and ask what Alex is like, or whatever.
Many well-meaning folks at church have asked me earnestly
how I’ve changed or if I still have a testimony, which (beyond
being sort of rude) is a little frustrating, since I feel
like I’m exactly the same person, while everyone
else around me seems to have changed their behavior toward
me utterly!
“To be fair, despite all that,” he continued, “church has still changed less
for me than, say, going to the office has, or going to the
grocery store, and there are still ways in which it’s a comforting
respite from the cares of the outside world. But I’m eagerly
waiting for the day when all this will die down, leaving me
free to do the occasional fireside or something, but not necessarily
be “that Jeopardy guy ‘24/7.’”
In his
75 appearances on Jeopardy!, Ken gave more than 2,700 correct
answers and made an average daily paycheck of $34,063.51.
His biggest one-day win was $75,000, and on his worst winning
day he made a measly $10,001.
Jeopardy!
fans have not seen the end of Ken Jennings. Jennings fans
– and there’s a whole cult of them, if Jennings-related weblogs
(or “blogs”) are any indication – fantasize that he will help President
Bush end the war in Iraq, and will ultimately make hundreds
of millions of dollars pushing Nike sportswear for the “intellectual
sportsman.”
But the
ultimate Ken Jennings fix is on its way. Ken himself is writing
a book about his reign as Ken the Destroyer. This book should
tell his fans what Alex Trebek is really like, and how he plans to spend whatever
is left of his $2.5 million after taxes and tithing.
Just in
case any other Latter-day Saints want to try their luck at
Jeopardy!, Ken has a secret for his success. He said,
“When Jeopardy! host Alex Trebek
finishes talking, that's when the buzzer activates. You need
to have your answer in your mind already. If you are too early,
you get locked out. (If you are) too late, you get beat. There
is a narrow sweet spot. It is a rhythm, anticipatory move
you have to make."