From being a player with the longest and unbeaten winning streak on “Jeopardy!” to becoming the host, Ken Jennings’s rise has been meteoric. But before becoming the G.O.A.T. on the show and replacing the legendary Alex Trebek, hosting a game show wasn’t something Jennings planned for. While speaking to the Los Angeles Times, Jennings got candid about his initial career plans and how his dream run on “Jeopardy!” changed everything.

Speaking about his new book, “The Complete Kennections,” Jennings shared some personal details of his life and “Jeopardy!” When asked if hosting the show and writing books were his childhood goals, Jennings shared that neither was. “It’s easy to imagine the same kid in an elementary school library, reading about these things in the World Book encyclopedia during a rainy recess. That’s my origin story. I was just a sponge for weird information. That’s my origin story right there,” he said.
He further added that he only thought of his appearance on “Jeopardy!” as a fun, crazy summer thing, and he never thought of it becoming his life. “So I tried making each book less about ‘Jeopardy!’ and trivia than the one before it,” he mentioned.
Speaking of his childhood goal, Jennings shared that his plans were rather modest. “I was an English major in college. I wanted to write and to teach, but writing didn’t seem like a practical choice. I was also doing a double major in computer science, and in 2000, it was absurdly easy to get a job at a friend’s startup, even if you were a terrible programmer, which I was,” he told the publication.
While “Jeopardy!” wasn’t always his end game, Jennings did have an inherent love for trivia. “I’m a believer that trivia is not just a bar pastime, or even a way for little Lisa Simpsons to get told they’re smart into adulthood. I always felt trivia was kind of a universal social good, a way to enjoy cultural literacy,” he said.
Speaking on the fun way of learning, Jennings expressed that learning should be fun, and that’s what he aims for with his books. “You need to remind people that learning is not a chore. If it’s not fun, you’re doing it wrong. And trivia is very good at that,” he said. He added that “Jeopardy!” works on the same lines as well, and that’s the beauty of the show.
Stressing on the importance of narrative in learning, Jennings said, “Every good ‘Jeopardy!’ clue tells a story in some way, saying, here’s why you should want to know this or here’s what this might have to do with life and the reason why this is not random minutia, which I think is a lot of people’s stereotype of trivia nerds. A trivia question can help you connect it to other things. Trivia is just an art of connections.”
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