Will
the Real Ken Jennings Please Stand Up?
By
Kathryn H. Kidd
Ken
Jennings’ fifteen minutes of Jeopardy! fame have
been about fourteen minutes too long for one Cottonwood
City, Utah resident. Ken R. Jennings is no relationship
to Ken “Jeopardy” Jennings, but the Jeopardy! champ’s
fans either don’t know that, or they don’t care.
Unlike
the Ken Jennings you watched on Jeopardy!, Ken R.
Jennings is neither young nor rich. He has a good life,
though – or at least he did have a good life, before he
was stalked by the other Ken’s fame.
Like
his famous namesake, Ken R. Jennings is a member of the
Church. A returned missionary from the Japan Fukkoka Mission
(he served in 1972-1973), he is currently his ward’s employment
specialist. He is also a Primary teacher whose wife is
Sheila and whose son is named Ryan.
As coincidence
would have it, Ken R. is also involved with show business.
The owner of a sign shop, he produces signs that are put
on buildings in movies and television shows to convince
viewers that the restaurant on the show is, say, “Alphonse’s
Steakhouse” instead of the place that local residents know
as “Mom’s Greasy Grill.” If you ever watched “Touched by
an Angel” or “Everwood,” both of which were filmed in Utah,
you have probably seen the work of Ken R. Jennings. Look
for more of his handiwork in the upcoming Anthony Hopkins
movie, The World’s Fastest Indian.
Ken
R. was innocently making signs, teaching his Primary class,
and living life as an anonymous husband and father when
the mother of a lifelong friend asked him if he was related
to the Ken Jennings on Jeopardy!. Ken R. had never
heard of the Jeopardy! winner, but he responded that
all the Jenningses are undoubtedly related, if you go back
to Noah. He didn’t think any more about it.
Soon
enough, however, he got a phone call from yet another Ken
Jennings. This Ken Jennings is the father of the Jeopardy!
champ, and he made an apologetic call to Ken R. when his
son was about four weeks into his winning streak. “He said
he felt bad that I might be getting a lot of phone calls,”
Ken R. reported later.
Ken’s
father didn’t know the half of it. Ken R. estimates that
“every radio station in the country and every TV” has called
him – either during the Jeopardy! winning street
or after the other Ken Jennings lost. “They’d start calling
at 6 a.m. and they’d still be calling at midnight. I leave
for work at seven o’clock, and I was getting two or three
calls before work. I was getting phone calls at 12:30 in
the morning, too. It was kind of bad. Everyone thinks I
know how to get hold of him, but I don’t.”
It got
so bad that Ken R. finally had to take matters into his
own hands. Armed with the telephone number of one of the
Jeopardy! publicists, which had been given to him
by Ken’s father, Ken R. routed his home phone through an
answering machine. Callers to the home line heard Ken R.’s
weary voice saying, “If you’re calling for Ken, Sheila or
Ryan Jennings, please leave a message. If you’re calling
for the Ken Jennings from Jeopardy!, you need to
call this number.”
Despite
the call screening, many of Ken’s fans have gotten through
to Ken and his family. They don’t particularly care when
they learn that the Ken Jennings they have reached is not
the Ken Jennings of Jeopardy! fame. “People just
want to talk,” he said. “They ask what it’s like in Utah.
They ask if you’re a Mormon, too.
“Ken
Jennings has made a good impression on people of the Church,”
Ken R. continued. “He’s a good man. People who call ask
me about the Church. Someone came into town from Florida
and called me, and she started telling me about how she
was in town at Temple Square and how much she enjoyed it.”
She didn’t need to talk to the Ken Jennings – she
was just happy to talk to a Ken Jennings. “She appreciated
that I was decent to her, too.”
Piqued
by curiosity, Ken R. watched Jeopardy! “a couple
of times at first to see who the other Ken Jennings was.
Then I watched occasionally to see how he was doing.” Ken
R. was relieved to see that his namesake was “a good influence,
and a good example. I was glad for him.”

Nevertheless,
being glad for the other Ken Jennings could only go so far.
The calls kept coming. A few, Ken R. said, were from “Mormon
haters. I got a book in the mail that said the Church was
wrong. I got that from a preacher.
“Also,
a lot of people ask for money. One lady called and said
she was having trouble with her credit cards. She was one
of the ones who asked for money.”
Not
all the phone calls are bad, however. One caller announced
he will be running for president of the United
States in 2008. He wanted Ken Jennings
to be his vice-presidential candidate. He may accept Ken
R. Jennings if the Jeopardy! winner isn’t available.
Although
Ken R. admits he is pleased with the good fortune of the
other Ken Jennings, “I wanted him to lose,” just so the
telephone calls would end. To his dismay, the calls only
increased after Ken Jennings lost game number seventy-five.
So did the letters.
“I feel
happy for the other Ken Jennings,” Ken R. said. “I'd like
to meet him, because I have a whole box of mail for him.”
Ken
R.’s son Ryan may not feel as charitable about the whole
situation, however. Ken R. admitted that when Ryan answers
the phone after midnight and someone asks if he is Ken Jennings,
Ryan is likely to answer, “What is ‘no’?”