Difference between revisions of "Ken Jennings"

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[[Image:Ken_Jennings.jpg|left|150px|alt=Mormon Ken Jennings, quiz show winnings record-holder]]
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[[Image:Ken_Jennings.jpg|left|200px|alt=Mormon Ken Jennings, quiz show winnings record-holder]]
'''Ken Jennings''' was (as of December 2009) the record-holder for the most TV quiz show winnings. He is a member of [[The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]] (sometimes casually called the [[Mormon Church]]).
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'''Ken Jennings''' is the record-holder for the most American television quiz show winnings. He is the second highest-earning contestant on ''Jeopardy!'' He is a member of [http://comeuntochrist.org The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints] (sometimes casually called the [[Mormon Church]]).
  
Kenneth Wayne "Ken" Jennings III was born May 23, 1974, in Edmonds, Washington. Jennings grew up in Seoul, South Korea (1981–1992) and Singapore (1992–1996), where his father worked for an international law firm and then as Asia Pacific Division Counsel of Oracle Corporation. Jennings attended the University of Washington during his freshman year of college and then graduated with a degree in Computer Science and English from [[Brigham Young University]], where he played on the school's quizbowl team for three and a half years. He graduated from Seoul Foreign School where he completed an International Baccalaureate diploma, and achieved honors at Brigham Young. He served a two-year mission for the Church in Madrid, Spain from 1993 to 1995.  He now lives in Seattle, Washington, D.C., and is married to the former Mindy Boam.  They have two children.
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Kenneth Wayne "Ken" Jennings III was born May 23, 1974, in Edmonds, Washington. Jennings grew up in Seoul, South Korea (1981–1992) and Singapore (1992–1996), where his father worked for an international law firm and then as Asia Pacific Division Counsel of Oracle Corporation. He mentions on his website that he watched ''Jeopardy!'' every afternoon after school on the Armed Forces Network. Jennings attended the University of Washington during his freshman year of college and then graduated with a degree in Computer Science and English from [[Brigham Young University]], where he played on the school's quizbowl team for three and a half years. He graduated from Seoul Foreign School where he completed an International Baccalaureate diploma, and achieved honors at Brigham Young. He served a two-year mission for the Church in Madrid, Spain from 1993 to 1995.   
  
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Of his mission, he said “I had the best time on my mission. . . . It was one of those experiences that’s so dense and intense that you can’t really believe how much happened in such a short time. Even the hard or dull times have acquired a rosy, nostalgic glow in hindsight, just because of how valuable the whole experience was to me.” He added, "What I took home from my mission was an increased love for and testimony of the Book of Mormon. I also find it harder to take the Book of Mormon for granted after watching how quickly it can surprise and change the lives of people.”[http://www.ldsliving.com/5-More-Famous-Returned-Missionaries-Where-They-Served/s/79437?page=5#story-content]
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He now lives in Seattle, Washington, and is married to the former Mindy Boam. They have two children.
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==''Jeopardy!''==
 
During his ''Jeopardy!'' winning streak, Jennings was a software engineer for CHG Healthcare, a healthcare-placement firm in Salt Lake City, Utah.  He writes questions for, edits the literature and mythology categories of questions of, and is otherwise active in the National Academic Quiz Tournaments (NAQT), a quiz bowl organization; in particular, he moderated (i.e., read questions) at the 2005, 2006, and 2009 NAQT National High School Tournaments in Chicago.
 
During his ''Jeopardy!'' winning streak, Jennings was a software engineer for CHG Healthcare, a healthcare-placement firm in Salt Lake City, Utah.  He writes questions for, edits the literature and mythology categories of questions of, and is otherwise active in the National Academic Quiz Tournaments (NAQT), a quiz bowl organization; in particular, he moderated (i.e., read questions) at the 2005, 2006, and 2009 NAQT National High School Tournaments in Chicago.
  
 
Jennings holds the record for the longest winning streak on the U.S. syndicated game show ''Jeopardy!'' and, as of October 10, 2008, once again became the all-time leading money winner on American game shows. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_Jennings]  In 2004, he won 74 ''Jeopardy!'' games before he was defeated on his 75th appearance. The length of Jennings's ''Jeopardy!'' run (by airing) totaled 182 calendar days, including his first and last appearances. The TV show's ratings increased considerably during this run.  His total earnings on ''Jeopardy!'' were US $3,022,700.  Jennings has appeared on other TV quiz shows, adding to his earnings and making him the record holder, at a total of US $3,623,414.29. He has also been a guest on various talk shows.
 
Jennings holds the record for the longest winning streak on the U.S. syndicated game show ''Jeopardy!'' and, as of October 10, 2008, once again became the all-time leading money winner on American game shows. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_Jennings]  In 2004, he won 74 ''Jeopardy!'' games before he was defeated on his 75th appearance. The length of Jennings's ''Jeopardy!'' run (by airing) totaled 182 calendar days, including his first and last appearances. The TV show's ratings increased considerably during this run.  His total earnings on ''Jeopardy!'' were US $3,022,700.  Jennings has appeared on other TV quiz shows, adding to his earnings and making him the record holder, at a total of US $3,623,414.29. He has also been a guest on various talk shows.
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Noted on his web page:
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: The streak made Ken Jennings a 2004 TV folk hero, and he appeared as a guest on shows from ''The Tonight Show'' and ''The Late Show with David Letterman'' to ''Live with Regis and Kelly'' and ''Sesame Street''. Barbara Walters named him one of the ten most fascinating people of the year. ''The Christian Science Monitor'' called him "the king of Trivia Nation" and ''Slate'' magazine dubbed him "the Michael Jordan of trivia, the Seabiscuit of geekdom." ''ESPN: The Magazine'' called him "smarmy (and) punchable," with "the personality of a hall monitor," thus continuing America's long national struggle between jocks and nerds.[http://www.ken-jennings.com/about]
  
 
When asked what he intended to do with his streak winnings, Jennings said that he intended to [[Tithing|tithe]] ten percent to his church, donate to public television and National Public Radio, go on a trip to Europe, and invest the rest for his family. H&R Block offered Jennings free tax planning and financial services for the rest of his life.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_Jennings]
 
When asked what he intended to do with his streak winnings, Jennings said that he intended to [[Tithing|tithe]] ten percent to his church, donate to public television and National Public Radio, go on a trip to Europe, and invest the rest for his family. H&R Block offered Jennings free tax planning and financial services for the rest of his life.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_Jennings]
  
Jennings has written two books: ''Brainiac: Adventures in the Curious, Competitive, Compulsive World of Trivia Buffs'', published in 2006; and ''Ken Jennings's Trivia Almanac: 8,888 Questions in 365 Days'', a compilation of trivia questions - with 3 categories and about 20 questions per day of the year. Jennings also has had a column in ''Mental Floss'' magazine called "Six Degrees of Ken Jennings", in which readers submit two wildly different things and he has to connect them in exactly six moves, much in the same vein as the Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon game.  
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Jennings’ success has resulted in him being a popular individual amongst corporations looking for public endorsers.  He has appeared for Microsoft, Cingular Wireless, Allstate Insurance, and others.
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Jennings appeared on ''Jeopardy!'' again in February 2011. An IBM computing system named “Watson” competed against the show’s two most successful and celebrated contestants—Ken Jennings and Brad Rutter. "Watson, named after IBM founder Thomas J. Watson, was built by a team of IBM scientists who set out to accomplish a grand challenge – build a computing system that rivals a human’s ability to answer questions posed in natural language with speed, accuracy and confidence." [http://www.ldsliving.com/story/63059-ken-jennings-vs-computer-on-jeopardy] Watson won the competition, winning $1 million for two charities. Jennings placed second and Rutter third, winning $300,000 and $200,000 respectively. Jennings and Rutter donated half of their winnings to charity.
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Jennings returned to ''Jeopardy!'' in May 2014 to participate in the Battle of the Decades. He finished in second place behind Brad Rutter and won $100,000. That brought his winnings from Jeopardy! to $3,270,700.
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Jennings revealed a new board game in 2019 that he and Richard Garfield, creator of the fantasy card game "Magic: The Gathering," collaborated on. To create the game they launched a Kickstarter goal of $10,000, which they exceeded. The game, "Half Truth," is a “party game that makes you feel smart.” The game includes 500 trivia questions, each of which includes six potential answers — but only three are correct.[https://www.deseret.com/entertainment/2019/8/21/20827214/half-truth-ken-jennings-board-game-makes-trivia-easy]
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In January 2020, Jennings was one of three ''Jeopardy!'' champions in the ''Jeopardy! The Greatest Player of All Time'' competition. Jennings won the required three hour-long matches first, which gave him the title of greatest player of all time and made him the recipient of $1 million, elevating his overall winnings to $4.4 million.[https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/14/arts/television/jeopardy-goat-ken-jennings.html]
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:In his [July 2020] memoir, Trebek wrote that he got to know Jennings better than most contestants. Jennings had a legendary 75-game “Jeopardy!” run in 2004 — meaning Trebek interacted with him significantly more than most contestants.
  
Jennings’ success has resulted in him being a popular individual amongst corporations looking for public endorsers. He has appeared for Microsoft, Cingular Wireless, Allstate Insurance, and others.  
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:Trebek admitted he was a little emotional when a question about H&R Block finally dethroned the 30-year-old software engineer from Salt Lake City.
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:“I had tears in my eyes,” he wrote. “It just all happened so quickly. Ken lost. . . . The show ended. I remember thinking, ‘Ken’s gone. My buddy. My pal. This was getting to be ‘The Ken and Alex Show.’”[https://www.deseret.com/entertainment/2020/11/23/21611762/ken-jennings-jeopardy-host-alex-trebek]
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==Hosting ''Jeopardy!''==
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On November 23, 2020, the "Jeopardy!" show announced that Jennings would be the first interim host of the show following host Alex Trebek's passing.[https://www.deseret.com/entertainment/2020/11/23/21611762/ken-jennings-jeopardy-host-alex-trebek] Jennings had joined the Jeopardy! show's current season as consulting producer. His first run as interim host lasted for six weeks beginning in February 2021.[https://www.today.com/popculture/ken-jennings-thanks-fans-jeopardy-hosting-gig-ends-will-he-t209576] in November 2021, he returned a second time. "Compared to the first time around, he seemed largely at ease as he bantered with the contestants, read the clues aloud and kept the game moving along at a good pace. And during that game, there was at least one clue that had an interesting connection to Jennings. During the second round of the game, a contestant landed on the following Daily Double clue under the category “National Historic Landmarks”: “Temple Square in this state capital was designated a landmark in 1964. The answer — Salt Lake City — is where Jennings lived and worked as a software engineer when he had his legendary 74-game winning streak in 2004.”[https://www.deseret.com/2021/11/9/22772355/ken-jennings-returns-to-host-jeopardy-how-long-is-he-hosting]
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According to USA Today, Jennings will host “Jeopardy!” for the next three weeks, rotating the position with Mayim Bialik for the foreseeable future.[https://www.usatoday.com/story/entertainment/tv/2021/11/08/jeopardy-ken-jennings-returns-host-year-after-alex-trebek-death/6287733001/] On July 27, 2022, ''Jeopardy!'' announced that Jennings and Bialik will continue as permanent hosts.[https://www.msn.com/en-us/tv/news/jeopardy-announces-both-ken-jennings-and-mayim-bialik-as-its-permanent-hosts/ar-AA102acN]
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Jennings was nominated for the Outstanding Host for a Game Show, and he’s part of an Emmy first — two hosts of the same game show competing against each other. Mayim Bialik, who rotated with Jennings as a “Jeopardy!” host, was also nominated. Nominations were announced by the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences on July 12, 2023. This is Jennings’ first nomination.
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Sony, the parent company of "Jeopardy!" announced in December 2023 that Jennings would be the sole host of the show.[https://www.deseret.com/2023/12/29/24017005/jeopardy-what-happened-to-host-mayim-bialik-fired-ken-jennings?dicbo=v2-q96XmOl]
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==Bestselling Author==
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Jennings has become a bestselling author with books that include: ''Brainiac: Adventures in the Curious, Competitive, Compulsive World of Trivia Buffs'', published in 2006; ''Ken Jennings's Trivia Almanac: 8,888 Questions in 365 Days'', a compilation of trivia questions - with 3 categories and about 20 questions per day of the year; ''Maphead'', about his lifelong love of geography; ''Because I Said So!'', debunking parenting cliches; ''Planet Funny: How Comedy Took Over Our Culture'', which explores how everything modern life has to be funny. He is also the author of the series Ken Jennings' Junior Genius Guides.[https://www.amazon.com/Ken-Jennings/e/B001IGO4O8%3Fref=dbs_a_mng_rwt_scns_share]
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Jennings also has had a column in ''Mental Floss'' magazine called "Six Degrees of Ken Jennings", in which readers submit two wildly different things and he has to connect them in exactly six moves, much in the same vein as the Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon game.
  
Jennings will appear on ''Jeopardy!'' again in February, 2011. An IBM computing system named “Watson” will compete on ''Jeopardy!'' against the show’s two most successful and celebrated contestants — Ken Jennings and Brad Rutter.  "Watson, named after IBM founder Thomas J. Watson, was built by a team of IBM scientists who set out to accomplish a grand challenge – build a computing system that rivals a human’s ability to answer questions posed in natural language with speed, accuracy and confidence." [http://www.ldsliving.com/story/63059-ken-jennings-vs-computer-on-jeopardy]
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==Bucket List==
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“I’m aware that I have a very weird and specific bucket list, but this was a biggie: I get to play on the next season of ‘Pyramid!’” Jennings tweeted in June 2022. Jennings competed in the episode of The $10,000 Pyramid that aired on July 24.[https://www.deseret.com/2022/7/14/23219299/ken-jennings-hosting-jeopardy-again-who-will-be-permanent-host-announcement] As the celebrity player, he helped a contestant win $50,000. Jennings’ and his contestant's Winners’ Circle finish was the second-fastest in “The $100,000 Pyramid” history.
  
*[http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/books/2016249470_litlife19.html Ken Jennings, the "Maphead"]
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*[http://ken-jennings.com/blog/ Ken Jennings' Blog]
  
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==What Keeps Him Balanced==
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Jennings credited his upbringing as a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in helping him stay balanced amid the fame and fortune. He even cited a scripture from the [[Doctrine and Covenants]], which reads, “The glory of God is intelligence, or, in other words, light and truth.”[https://www.deseret.com/2022/11/1/23435384/ken-jennings-jeopardy-host-lds]
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[https://www.washingtonpost.com/arts-entertainment/2022/10/31/ken-jennings-jeopardy-host-interview/]
 
[[Category:Famous Mormons]]
 
[[Category:Famous Mormons]]
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Jennings, Ken}}

Latest revision as of 15:52, 31 December 2023

Mormon Ken Jennings, quiz show winnings record-holder

Ken Jennings is the record-holder for the most American television quiz show winnings. He is the second highest-earning contestant on Jeopardy! He is a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (sometimes casually called the Mormon Church).

Kenneth Wayne "Ken" Jennings III was born May 23, 1974, in Edmonds, Washington. Jennings grew up in Seoul, South Korea (1981–1992) and Singapore (1992–1996), where his father worked for an international law firm and then as Asia Pacific Division Counsel of Oracle Corporation. He mentions on his website that he watched Jeopardy! every afternoon after school on the Armed Forces Network. Jennings attended the University of Washington during his freshman year of college and then graduated with a degree in Computer Science and English from Brigham Young University, where he played on the school's quizbowl team for three and a half years. He graduated from Seoul Foreign School where he completed an International Baccalaureate diploma, and achieved honors at Brigham Young. He served a two-year mission for the Church in Madrid, Spain from 1993 to 1995.

Of his mission, he said “I had the best time on my mission. . . . It was one of those experiences that’s so dense and intense that you can’t really believe how much happened in such a short time. Even the hard or dull times have acquired a rosy, nostalgic glow in hindsight, just because of how valuable the whole experience was to me.” He added, "What I took home from my mission was an increased love for and testimony of the Book of Mormon. I also find it harder to take the Book of Mormon for granted after watching how quickly it can surprise and change the lives of people.”[1]

He now lives in Seattle, Washington, and is married to the former Mindy Boam. They have two children.

Jeopardy!

During his Jeopardy! winning streak, Jennings was a software engineer for CHG Healthcare, a healthcare-placement firm in Salt Lake City, Utah. He writes questions for, edits the literature and mythology categories of questions of, and is otherwise active in the National Academic Quiz Tournaments (NAQT), a quiz bowl organization; in particular, he moderated (i.e., read questions) at the 2005, 2006, and 2009 NAQT National High School Tournaments in Chicago.

Jennings holds the record for the longest winning streak on the U.S. syndicated game show Jeopardy! and, as of October 10, 2008, once again became the all-time leading money winner on American game shows. [2] In 2004, he won 74 Jeopardy! games before he was defeated on his 75th appearance. The length of Jennings's Jeopardy! run (by airing) totaled 182 calendar days, including his first and last appearances. The TV show's ratings increased considerably during this run. His total earnings on Jeopardy! were US $3,022,700. Jennings has appeared on other TV quiz shows, adding to his earnings and making him the record holder, at a total of US $3,623,414.29. He has also been a guest on various talk shows.

Noted on his web page:

The streak made Ken Jennings a 2004 TV folk hero, and he appeared as a guest on shows from The Tonight Show and The Late Show with David Letterman to Live with Regis and Kelly and Sesame Street. Barbara Walters named him one of the ten most fascinating people of the year. The Christian Science Monitor called him "the king of Trivia Nation" and Slate magazine dubbed him "the Michael Jordan of trivia, the Seabiscuit of geekdom." ESPN: The Magazine called him "smarmy (and) punchable," with "the personality of a hall monitor," thus continuing America's long national struggle between jocks and nerds.[3]

When asked what he intended to do with his streak winnings, Jennings said that he intended to tithe ten percent to his church, donate to public television and National Public Radio, go on a trip to Europe, and invest the rest for his family. H&R Block offered Jennings free tax planning and financial services for the rest of his life.[4]

Jennings’ success has resulted in him being a popular individual amongst corporations looking for public endorsers. He has appeared for Microsoft, Cingular Wireless, Allstate Insurance, and others.

Jennings appeared on Jeopardy! again in February 2011. An IBM computing system named “Watson” competed against the show’s two most successful and celebrated contestants—Ken Jennings and Brad Rutter. "Watson, named after IBM founder Thomas J. Watson, was built by a team of IBM scientists who set out to accomplish a grand challenge – build a computing system that rivals a human’s ability to answer questions posed in natural language with speed, accuracy and confidence." [5] Watson won the competition, winning $1 million for two charities. Jennings placed second and Rutter third, winning $300,000 and $200,000 respectively. Jennings and Rutter donated half of their winnings to charity.

Jennings returned to Jeopardy! in May 2014 to participate in the Battle of the Decades. He finished in second place behind Brad Rutter and won $100,000. That brought his winnings from Jeopardy! to $3,270,700.

Jennings revealed a new board game in 2019 that he and Richard Garfield, creator of the fantasy card game "Magic: The Gathering," collaborated on. To create the game they launched a Kickstarter goal of $10,000, which they exceeded. The game, "Half Truth," is a “party game that makes you feel smart.” The game includes 500 trivia questions, each of which includes six potential answers — but only three are correct.[6]

In January 2020, Jennings was one of three Jeopardy! champions in the Jeopardy! The Greatest Player of All Time competition. Jennings won the required three hour-long matches first, which gave him the title of greatest player of all time and made him the recipient of $1 million, elevating his overall winnings to $4.4 million.[7]

In his [July 2020] memoir, Trebek wrote that he got to know Jennings better than most contestants. Jennings had a legendary 75-game “Jeopardy!” run in 2004 — meaning Trebek interacted with him significantly more than most contestants.
Trebek admitted he was a little emotional when a question about H&R Block finally dethroned the 30-year-old software engineer from Salt Lake City.
“I had tears in my eyes,” he wrote. “It just all happened so quickly. Ken lost. . . . The show ended. I remember thinking, ‘Ken’s gone. My buddy. My pal. This was getting to be ‘The Ken and Alex Show.’”[8]

Hosting Jeopardy!

On November 23, 2020, the "Jeopardy!" show announced that Jennings would be the first interim host of the show following host Alex Trebek's passing.[9] Jennings had joined the Jeopardy! show's current season as consulting producer. His first run as interim host lasted for six weeks beginning in February 2021.[10] in November 2021, he returned a second time. "Compared to the first time around, he seemed largely at ease as he bantered with the contestants, read the clues aloud and kept the game moving along at a good pace. And during that game, there was at least one clue that had an interesting connection to Jennings. During the second round of the game, a contestant landed on the following Daily Double clue under the category “National Historic Landmarks”: “Temple Square in this state capital was designated a landmark in 1964. The answer — Salt Lake City — is where Jennings lived and worked as a software engineer when he had his legendary 74-game winning streak in 2004.”[11]

According to USA Today, Jennings will host “Jeopardy!” for the next three weeks, rotating the position with Mayim Bialik for the foreseeable future.[12] On July 27, 2022, Jeopardy! announced that Jennings and Bialik will continue as permanent hosts.[13]

Jennings was nominated for the Outstanding Host for a Game Show, and he’s part of an Emmy first — two hosts of the same game show competing against each other. Mayim Bialik, who rotated with Jennings as a “Jeopardy!” host, was also nominated. Nominations were announced by the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences on July 12, 2023. This is Jennings’ first nomination.

Sony, the parent company of "Jeopardy!" announced in December 2023 that Jennings would be the sole host of the show.[14]

Bestselling Author

Jennings has become a bestselling author with books that include: Brainiac: Adventures in the Curious, Competitive, Compulsive World of Trivia Buffs, published in 2006; Ken Jennings's Trivia Almanac: 8,888 Questions in 365 Days, a compilation of trivia questions - with 3 categories and about 20 questions per day of the year; Maphead, about his lifelong love of geography; Because I Said So!, debunking parenting cliches; Planet Funny: How Comedy Took Over Our Culture, which explores how everything modern life has to be funny. He is also the author of the series Ken Jennings' Junior Genius Guides.[15]

Jennings also has had a column in Mental Floss magazine called "Six Degrees of Ken Jennings", in which readers submit two wildly different things and he has to connect them in exactly six moves, much in the same vein as the Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon game.

Bucket List

“I’m aware that I have a very weird and specific bucket list, but this was a biggie: I get to play on the next season of ‘Pyramid!’” Jennings tweeted in June 2022. Jennings competed in the episode of The $10,000 Pyramid that aired on July 24.[16] As the celebrity player, he helped a contestant win $50,000. Jennings’ and his contestant's Winners’ Circle finish was the second-fastest in “The $100,000 Pyramid” history.

What Keeps Him Balanced

Jennings credited his upbringing as a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in helping him stay balanced amid the fame and fortune. He even cited a scripture from the Doctrine and Covenants, which reads, “The glory of God is intelligence, or, in other words, light and truth.”[17] [18]