Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Constant Reader June 2026: The Outlier by Kai Bird There's A Great History of Jimmy Carter's Presidency To Be Told. The Biases of Bird Fail To Do So – Or Much of Anything

 

 

Looking back one sees many parallels between the political rises and presidencies of Woodrow Wilson & Jimmy Carter. Both men were Southerners, although the fact that Wilson had a long history with New Jersey did much to disguise it from the voters of the time. Both men has dispositions that were described as their contemporaries as moralistic, almost to the point of religious. In Carter's case he was a deeply religious man, more so then Wilson ever was, but there was always a big streak of fundamentalism in how both men, approached life and governing, particularly when it came to utter seriousness approach the office.

Both Wilson and Carter were one term governors when they ran for the White House; Wilson had yet to finish his first term governing New Jersey while Carter had served as governor of Georgia. Both men had made their ambitions clear before they made their original run: Wilson considered it before the 1908 campaign before Bryan ran; Carter put his name forward as McGovern's running mate at the 1972 Democratic Convention. Both Wilson and Carter managed to run in a fairly crowded field in what was a long fight for the Democratic nomination. In Wilson's case it took a brokered convention and a near record 46 ballots before he finally won the nomination. In Carter's he had to run in the first true presidential primary campaign in history; the only approach that could get him the nomination in a crowded field with many liberals and bigger names running.

In both cases they managed to win the Presidency by a narrow margin because of a split in the Republican Party about which direction the GOP should go. For Wilson, TR would run as a Bull Moose candidacy against Taft's rank and file Republicanism and it was only because of that split that Wilson managed to win. For Carter, the battle remained in the party between the incumbent President Gerald Ford and the more conservative California Governor Ronald Reagan. That battle also lasted to the convention floor and while Reagan endorsed Ford he did little to actively campaign for him which was one of the reasons that Carter was able to narrowly win. While Wilson would never have called himself an outsider the way Carter ran as, considering his opponents were both Presidents it was no doubt understood.

The parallels break down slightly after both men were elected. Wilson was immensely successful as President in his first term and did much to get his progressive agenda passed. During his tenure the Federal Reserve was established, amendments were passed that led to the direct election of Senators, the creation of the income tax and while he did very little to directly endorse it the female suffrage finally became part of the Constitution during his tenure. Much of his term was more dominated by European affairs and while his criticism of the leadup to World War I was blatantly attacked by men like TR he was eventually hailed for bringing about peace. It was only after he began to argue for what post-war Europe would look like – and more importantly did so without any input from either Congress or anyone but his most trusted adviser – that the dictatorial nature of Wilson began to become clear.  He was the first President while in office to travel to Europe to negotiate the Treaty of Versailles, something that very few Europeans genuinely respected him for. When he announced his 14 points Georges Clemenceau famously replied: "The Good Lord himself needed only 10." He would be run roughshod in Versailles by Clemenceau in particularly giving up everything in order to preserve his precious League Of Nations, ignoring the disastrous 1918 midterms that had given the Republicans control of Congress. His accomplishments led him to believe that the masses were with him and he didn't need Congressional approval, something that the Republicans who'd come to loathe him made clear they would not give him.

Carter's problems, by contrast, became obvious within weeks of his election and crystal clear after being sworn in. Even though he possessed two-third majorities of both houses of Congress, he felt no need to listen to the input of congressional leaders or even any Democrats when it came to his agenda. He felt no obligation to engage in personal touches or give them any favors when it came to getting the difficult parts of his agenda passed. To him Congressional Democrats should pass his agenda because it was the right thing to do, even if it cost them in elections to come. Furthermore, while sixty years had gone by between his Presidency and Wilson's his White House was just as disorganized: with him never even having a Colonel House to negotiate meetings. He also inherited an economic situation unparalleled in American history as record inflation was setting in. His first priority was to cut the budget, something that infuriated the mostly liberal members of the caucus who believed very much in the FDR New Deal coalition. And he seemed determined to govern as an outsider, rather than campaign as one. Furthermore he'd never done much to unite the Democrats in the aftermath of his winning the nomination and much of the press and the country found his born-again nature fundamentally odd. He also had a mean streak in his governing which was not uncommon with Wilson.

Carter's successes, unlike Wilson, were mostly involving foreign policy – returning the Panama Canal, renewing the SALT Treaty, the landmark Camp David Accords. But at the same time there was an energy crisis that led to rising gas prices and record inflation that eventually took the phrase 'stagflation'.  The public blamed Carter immensely for this and as early as 1978 many Democrats wanted Ted Kennedy to run for the Democratic nomination because he was considered incompetent.

As with Wilson foreign affairs were the death knell for his administration. First the Iranian revolution, after Carter had called the Shah and Iran a model government in the Middle East, then the Shah fleeing to America for treatment and finally the hostage crisis in Teheran that would take up the last year and a half of his Presidency and eventually overwhelmed it. Carter would manage to hold on to the nomination but the party was so divided that Reagan would easily win the Presidency in November.

Both Carter and Wilson would end up winning the Nobel Peace Prize, though in Carter's case it came because of his activities as ex-President. Carter's defeat would lead to him being a pariah among Democrats for the next two decades; he would be persona non grata at Democratic conventions until 2004. Wilson's defeat would issue a decade in of Republican governor that only the Great Depression would eventually lead to the rise of the modern Democratic Party. Carter's loss would officially usher in the Reagan revolution which began the modern conservative movement which we as a country are still reckoning with.

Carter would live an incredible 44 years after leaving the White House, not dying until he made to 100. During that period countless books were written about the Carter Presidency from historians, Washington insiders and politicians from that era alike, trying to reassess Carter and his Presidency.

The Outlier written by Kai Bird and released in 2021 was one such book that had more access to the Carter White House and library than any previous historian had been given. In theory it should have been able to explain from the inside and out what went wrong. In practice it completely failed.

To be sure it has a near day-by-day blow of everything that went on in the Carter white house then any book prior. The problem is not so much that the author has a pro-Carter bias but rather that his own personal politics get in the way. Because while Bird was able to avoid his left-wing politics getting away from telling the life of J. Robert Oppenheimer, he can't do the same when it comes to Jimmy Carter. The irony is that if Bird had lived when Carter had been running for President, he would have endorsed his opponents in the Democratic primary in 1976 and been working for Kennedy or Brown in 1980. And considering how much The Nation for which Bird has been a reporter for years has never really been comfortable putting politicians, even Democrats, as the kind of people they admire it Bird has to leave a lot out to try and make Carter his kind of President. The book says that Carter has a misunderstood legacy. It doesn't help when it disagrees with what the author thought America is during that period.

 

The 1976 Presidential campaign that led to Jimmy Carter's election was a groundbreaking and historic win. So you would think that any book that had to deal with the Carter presidency would give a fair amount of detail as to how Carter ran for Presidency, the primary campaign, who he ran against and how he managed to defeat Gerald Ford in the general. Considering that far shorter books about Carter's presidency have devoted several chapters and great detail to it, you'd expect Bird would do the same in The Outlier.

There is one chapter called 'Jimmy Who?" which covers in the first section called the Pre-Presidency but most of it has to deal with Carter's assembling a staff and how he chooses to run. And yet there's only ten pages devoted to the campaign, none of it having to do with any of his opponents or even the records of how he ran and won. He doesn't even mention how the decision to make Mondale his Vice President until he's starting to write about Carter's presidency. Considering this one of his biggest strengths that's telling.

None of the political opponents Carter ran in the primary are mentioned: Jerry Brown's name doesn't come up in the entire book, even though he beat him several primaries and ran against him in 1980, Frank Church is mentioned once and the majority of his primary rivals don't get mentioned until the presidency proper begins and even then its rarely in passing. He mentions that the liberal establishment had little use for Carter was running, which was one of the biggest problems the Democratic establishment with him. But he doesn't really seem that interested in that being a flaw or even something worth talking about.

Indeed it sets up a pattern that follows throughout The Outlier: if any Democratic politician is mentioned its only based on why they might have a problem with Carter and to make it seem like it was completely on them, not the President. Considering that Carter's problems with communication with Congress were so critical to his downfall you'd think any good biography would explain why these people thought so. And yet they are either not mentioned in the book at all or if they are only in the rare fragment.  Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd is only mentioned 10 times in the entire book and never in regard to helping him in policy.  Tip O'Neill is set up an adversary more than Speaker of the House. Mondale, who was there to build a bridge between him and the White House, is only mentioned as his Vice President. It's like Bird agrees with John Nance Garner's famous assessment of the office.

 

Carter seems determined to argue that liberals liked Jimmy Carter but he can't come up with a single Democratic officeholder who did. So he doesn't mention them, speaking about how his decision to give Ralph Nader such free reign in the government – the high point of Nader's influence.  Here Bird's leftist indulgence is clear: what he considers an acceptable liberal is a man who ran as a Green Party candidate because he thought there was no difference between the two parties. And because Carter's politics were far to the right of where the Democrats were in the 1970s – but in keeping with where both political parties were about to gi in the aftermath of Carter's election – that makes discussing Carter's actual policies difficult. So he basically doesn't. Much of the book is about how 'the establishment didn't like Carter' which is what the left likes about politicians. But there's a difference when the establishment is not only mostly Democrat, but liberal Democrat which is overwhelmingly was during Carter's administration. A President can't govern as an outsider as Carter tried to do. That seems to be one of the things Bird admires about him even though it limited his effectiveness as President.

One almost wonders if it's Carter's trying to rise above politics that is what Bird finds him the most interesting. Carter's governing style was seen at the time and in retrospect as a man seemed to desire that elected officials follow his agenda even if it cost them politically – which it absolutely did – simply because it was the right thing to do. This is how most leftist see how governing should work in theory. But as Carter carried out, he came across like someone who sounded like he couldn't be bothered to do the messy work.  At one point Bird says: "Two years into his Presidency, most of his legislators still felt they didn't know their own president." In Bird's mind, like Carter's, the fact that he says on their side should be enough and they should follow him blindly and excuse his behavior.

Yet in the next paragraph he's persuaded by an aide to play tennis with Fritz Hollings and Lloyd Bentsen at the White House. He shows up, they play a quick set and then he says goodbye. When Moore later tried gently to point out the awkwardness of leaving the senators so abruptly Carter snaps: "You told me to play tennis with them. I played tennis with them."

This book, I should mention, was written during Trump's first term and published after Biden's election. During this same period The Nation was pointed out how bad tempered and undignified the President was being and how contemptuously he treated members of his own party. Carter's treatment of Bentsen and Hollings – both of whom were fellow Southerners, who he claimed to have more in common with – is at the very least incredibly rude and could be argued as unprofessional for a President. Bird excuses it by saying: "That's not how Carter operated." Carter is always in the right and his fellow Senators, who are trying to get his agenda passed and are facing tough headwinds for election should suck it up. Like so many other Democratic politicians of the time, this is the only time they're mentioned and its too argue that they were wrong and Carter was right.

Now it would be one thing to make this argument if Bird was painting a favorable picture of Carter as President. But that's not what America saw at the time. So Bird basically paints a picture of the Carter administration alone and tries to leave 1970s America basically out of it.

This is clearest when it comes to what was the downfall of his administration the economy. 'Stagflation' is mentioned exactly once in regard to Carter's presidency. The oil embargo is mentioned only once and he barely talks about gasoline shortages. When he does bring it up its only in regard to the famous 'malaise speech'. Tellingly this speech is in a chapter called 'Tilting at American Exceptionalism'. The speech itself only gets two pages and Bird doesn't seem interested in it. (Camelot's End, which I'll get to below, gives the speech itself five.) He honestly seems more interested in attacking Patrick Caddell, a major Democratic political adviser who near the end of his career gave advice to Donald Trump's campaign.

Paradoxically Bird seems determined to look at Carter's triumphs in foreign policy not so much for what they were at the time but rather for how they fit into his progressive doctrine. The ratification of the Panama Canal treaty was not a good thing because of the democratization of Panam but because 'it was a retreat from manifest destiny" and a 'complex postcolonial worldview'. (This view, Bird mentions almost incidentally, would cost five Democratic Senators their seats the following November.) He spends an immense amount time saluting the Camp David Accords but at the end seems determined to undermine Begin at every turn, particularly in regard to settlements in the West Bank as if Israel were the aggressive party who Egypt needed protection from. Both Salt II and the Carter doctrine, both of which were considered key elements in ending the Cold War, are in fact the work of Brzezinski who Bird considers the true boogeyman of the administration because he saw the world through the lens of America vs. the Soviet Union. That this how the entire world operated during the 1970s is something that doesn't interest Bird, who seems more interested in pointing out that Brezhnev was senile by the end of it. (The head of the Soviet Union is mentioned a total of 7 times in The Outlier; by comparison David Rockefeller is mentioned nearly two dozen.) And when it comes to everything involving Iran and the Shah Bird seems determined to argue that this was an influence of conservatives and that Khomeini was just misunderstood.

One really wonders why a man who seems determined to at every turn, misread both Carter, domestic and geopolitical events during his administration chose to write a book on him in the first place. The answer comes in a footnote in regard to Carter's press relations. "Carter would hold fifty-nine press conference during his four years in office. By contrast, his successor held only 47 in eight years." He doesn't mention Reagan directly in the book for another eighty pages  but I'm pretty sure that's the real reason Bird wrote The Outlier.

 

The revisionist histories of the left are the opposite of those of conservatives: there are no 'great men', only villains. All of the great sweeping political achievements of American history are irrevocably tainted because everyone from the Founding Fathers until the present day was 'problematic' because they had values that don't fit with today. They have indicted those who lived in the past for the crime of living in the past. This is problematic for them when they try to explain why the liberal values of today which were so popular and worked for Democrats for nearly forty years were rejected so effectively after the 1960s. And because they can never blame themselves for their role in it, they look for straw men and omit parts of history they don't like.

Ronald Reagan has been the progressive boogeyman for half a century, in large part because they can't explain why a man they find so intellectually lacking and who rejects every value they stand for managed to defeat his to Democratic opponents by a combined electoral vote count of 1024-62. Because Reagan's presidency was responsible for tearing down much of the order of the New Deal that they hold dear (even though many of their ancestors felt it didn't go far enough at the time) and more importantly because every Republican who won elected office followed his pattern the left has done much to try and tear him down – mainly because they've never been able to come up with a political figure  who has that same ability to win over the masses.

The problem is in doing so they come across the inconvenient fact: much of the problems that led to the liberal order collapsing had begun a full decade before Reagan won his election. The great inflation had begun in 1971 when Nixon had to take America off the gold standards and multiple Presidents spent the next decade trying to deal with it.  Carter's presidency was considered a failure because he was unable to deal with those problems but because that's an inconvenient truth, Bird mostly ignores it.

Similarly he barely talks about how after the midterms Carter's approval numbers were so low that the entire party was certain if he was renominated Carter would lose in a landslide. Kennedy was reluctant to run for the nomination; he basically had to be talked into it but by the time of the crisis of confidence speech most of the party had lost faith in him.

Even without it Carter's numbers were so low that any Republican who ran against him knew they'd likely win the Presidency in 1980.  Bird pays no real attention to the Republican primary and doesn't mention any of the candidates running. Indeed, outside of Reagan and George H.W. Bush (who he has to mention mainly as Reagan's VP) The Outlier barely mentions any Republican office holders. Howard Baker, the Senate minority leader, is only mentioned twice in the entire book; Bob Dole is only mentioned three times, John Connally isn't mentioned at all and John Anderson is only mentioned when it comes to his third party run. There's no mention of Gerald Ford and his interest in being co-president.

Considering how much the Kennedy candidacy divided the party you'd think this at least would interest Bird. But again its barely mentioned even as the 1980 primary campaign continues. It's one thing to barely mention Kennedy's successes as the campaign progressed but Bird basically frames the issue as though Ted Kennedy, much less the Democratic Party, should have had no reason at all to doubt Carter's leadership even as his approval ratings hit 21 percent. As far as Bird is concerned this bastion of American liberalism was an entitled spoiled brat and he deserved to have his ass whipped. He acknowledges how bad the approval numbers are but as far as Bird as concerned the public is wrong and the party has no reason to reject a candidate who everyone things will lose in November.

Bird basically omits how in the leadup to the convention everyone in the party was certain that Carter would lose in November. He makes its clear his proudest achievements are 'political losers' and that Carter had angered many voters across the political spectrum. But Bird seems unwilling or unable to acknowledge that this should have been a problem for a political party going into November. Carter's campaign was almost certainly saved because of the Iran hostage crisis and the willingness of Americans to rally around the President in that time of crisis. But that's not part of Bird's story of events either.

And its when it comes to the fall campaign Bird makes it very clear how badly he has chosen to misread the actual record. From the start he makes it clear that Carter took Reagan seriously from day one. That's just not true, multiple sources, including Camelot's End – which Bird cites as one of his reference texts – make it clear that Carter thought Baker was his most formidable opponent and he never took Reagan any more seriously than most Democrats. Carter had to deal with a divided party as well as Anderson's third party challenge.

According to Bird's record Carter didn't make a single mistake: other forces were at work. He brings up all the old standards; how a member of the Kennedy campaign worked for Reagan and stole debate prep books for him, how members of the Reagan team did everything possible to stop a release of the hostages in order to avoid an October surprise, how New York put the Liberal Party endorsement for Anderson rather then Carter. But he leaves out all of the mistakes Carter made through the campaign and he made plenty.

There's no mention of how Anderson said if he debated Carter once he'd drop out and Carter refused. He leaves out how Reagan chose to debate Anderson and Carter skipped the debate, which made him look petulant. Bird says Carter's verbal overkill, which turned away many, just made him look churlish compared to Reagan's warmth and humor which he demonstrated many times on the campaign trail.

And he basically says Carter's debate performance was lackluster but writes off Reagan's entire debate performance as not changing anything. What's most telling is how Bird deals with Reagan's famous summation.

"Are you better off then you were four years ago?" Reagan asked.in his closing statement. And many Americans concluded not.

The way Bird puts it if Americans didn't think they were better off under Carter's administration they were too dumb to realize it. It's a conclusion that one could only draw having read Bird's book. For most Americans who lived during that decade and particularly Carter's Presidency, the question was not rhetorical.

Its telling that not listed among the sources of Bird's book is Theodore White's America in Search of Itself which tells how Carter lost the Presidency in 1980 and makes it clear just how badly the New Deal coalition fractured. Bird doesn't deal with the electoral defeat, save to mention Reagan won the 'former Confederacy' which makes it clear what he truly thinks of the South. He argues that he lost the middle class and rich but that poor whites and minorities flocked to Carter – "if they managed to vote'. Bird brags about how he won 83 percent of the African-American vote to Reagan and then glosses over how he only got 36 percent of white voters. He can't find a way to turn Carter's horrible loss into a victory so he turns it around on the electorate:

The pundits would say that the nation had turned its back on Jimmy Carter – but really the numbers showed that it was the white middle class who gave up on the President.

This is an astonishing reading of the situation but its one that any progressive worth his salt would nod at. Economic well-being has always been at the center of any political campaign, right up until the most recent one. For the readers of The Nation for whom Bird writes many of his articles, it's the least important quality for electing a leader. To them if you think the economy should be a reason for choosing a President, you're stupid. That last paragraph pretty much makes that point clear.

 

It can be difficult to prove that someone is  trying to write a revisionist history. The clearest indication that this is the case is to read Camelot's End: Kennedy Vs. Carter by Jon Ward. Ward was writing his book on the fight that broke the Democratic Party around the same time Bird was doing the same and there is a considerable overlap in sources, including the books that both men read. However looking at the bibliographies of both books one sees omissions in Bird's that are telling.

For one thing Ward has sourced two critical books about the 1980 election: Theodore White's America in Search of Itself and Jack Germond  and Jules Witcover's Blue Smoke and Mirrors. If you were going to write about why Carter lost the 1980 election you'd want to have contemporaries books of the period.

Bird doesn't list them as part of his extensive bibliography.

The second sign comes from the listing of primary sources. Ward spoke to many of the people in the Carter administration that Bird did but he also spoke to many people that Bird didn't including Patrick Caddell and Bob Shrum. He also talked to Joe Biden and two Senators from that period Orrin Hatch and Alan Simpson. Bird didn't talk to anyone outside the Carter administration even though Ward did. He also talked to Craig Shirley who wrote several books about Ronald Reagan. Bird has Shirley's book on the Reagan 1980 campaign but there's no indication he talked to him.

Bird could  explain the latter  by saying that his main interest was in the Carter Presidency. But the former is more telling: if you're going to write about why Carter lost reelection, one would think you'd want to read the two most famous contemporary books of the time. That Bird chose not too is the most glaring omission among an extensive bibliography. Camelot's End is listed as one of his sources but considering that the book, like so many others that Bird lists in his bibliography, make it very clear the flaws in Carter's Presidency and why he lost, is telling.

The biggest sign as to the bias comes involving the 1980 debate. When Carter makes his infamous remark about talking to his daughter Amy about nuclear weapons Bird tries to put it off as something that was overblown. "The pundits later had fun riffing about Carter referring to his daughter Amy."

That's not how Ward reads it. Like Bird he interviewed Gerald Rafshoon for the book and he makes it clear what Rafshoon told him:

Backstage…Rafshoon clapped his hand to his head and exclaimed "Oh my God – not that!" He and others had told Carter not to use the anecdote and the President had ignored him.

The way Carter delivered the line, it sounded like he was asking his thirteen year old daughter for advice. By the distortionary standards of television, it reinforced the image of him as a bumbling buffoon.

Carter's advisers knew after the debate that they were nearly beaten. "You could feel it drifting away," Walter Mondale is quoted as saying. Yet Bird gives the impression that Carter's campaign was still sure they were going to win during October and up until election day. In fact both Ward's book and other sources make it clear that the Carter campaign was pessimistic all the way through the fall campaign. But its clear Bird has no interest in letting the historical record get in the way of telling his story.

 

Bird's epilogue seems more interested in telling his narrative of America than Carter's legacy. He seems inclined to blame Carter for listen to Brzezinski for listening to his 'ideologically driven Cold War views'. He blames without evidence that Reagan administration stole the election from Carter, choosing to ignore the problem of the economic. He acknowledges that FDR's liberalism gave way in the 1970s but Bird gives only two sentences to this, focusing an entire two paragraph on both the Cold War and religious fundamentalism.

Most tellingly Bird uses his final paragraph to do what he no doubt wants to do: blame people.

"He alienated the evangelical voters, the right-to-lifers, the anti-feminists, and a host of other conservative constituencies. He alienated many white Americans who harbored feelings the civil rights movement had gone too far. Affirmative action had gone too far….If the New South proved to be not that new or liberal, the rest of the country proved to be just as conservative on a host of issues."

This is a conclusion that Bird and the readers of The Nation would do well to have learned years ago when it comes to politics. Perhaps that why Bird basically saves it until the very last paragraph, perhaps assuming that none of his followers will get that far.

Ward among others acknowledge the reality of how the country went to the right after the 1970s and that Carter was ahead of that change and the rest of the Democratic Party was not. Bird, as his previous writing has made clear, have drawn the conclusion: that it is the country's fault for not being liberal enough and that the other major groups of American voters are hypocrites who are out and out racists at best.

The Outlier lives up to its name. It's not there to tell an accurate story of Carter's Presidency, either how he managed to win the nomination or the White House. It doesn't want to highlight his accomplishments in the proper light or mention his failures, particularly domestic. It doesn't want to explain the real reason he lost reelection. What Bird seems more interested in doing is throwing shade on the establishment for being too judgmental, for Democratic politicians not being liberal enough, for conservatives being evil, for Reagan being an idiot, to engage in bizarre conspiracy theories and to finally argue that democracy is too important an institution to be left in the hands of voters who will just vote for a former actor. In Bird's telling the voters didn't reject Carter because they thought he was an ineffective president. The voters were too ineffective to realize how good Carter was for them.

 

Monday, June 1, 2026

For Chris D'Angelo Eight Jeopardy Wins Was Enough.

 

As Ken Jennings mentioned as he introduced the contestants Chris D'Angelo had an impressive run to wrap up May: 8 wins, 5 of them runaways and just over $194,000 in earnings. Of course compared to Awkwafina in Quiz Lady, the Emmy winning film his sister Jen had written in inspiration of her brother's lifelong efforts to get on the show, it was still 85 wins short of his fictional counterpart's track record.

Perhaps Ken should have held his tongue though he can't see the future. Because as June began Chris faced off against Camryn Bell and Peter McFerrin, each of whom were looking for 'win number one'.  And it became very quickly they were going to do everything in their power to stop Chris from getting win number 9.

It was clear from the start this was going to be a difficult match. Chris went into the red on the fourth clue of the Jeopardy round and by the first commercial break he was at -$1200 while Camryn and Peter were tied at $4200. When play resumed Peter found the Daily Double and got it right. Chris managed to get out of the red by the end of the round but he was facing an uphill battle: he had but $600 to Camryn's $5000 and Peter's $8300.

It took a while in the Double Jeopardy round for Chris to find his groove or get in ahead of Peter who spent the first half on a tear. He got to the first Daily Double but by that point Peter had $15,700 to Chris's $5400. He didn't have a choice but to bet it all in SIGNS & SYMBOLS:

An interrobang combines these 2 punctuation marks into a single one.

Chris looked relieved: "What is a question mark and an explanation point?" He doubled his score to $10,800 and was in second place.

Peter, however, maintained his lead throughout the round. He had $19,900 in front of him when Chris found the other Daily Double in THE GLORIOUS FIRST OF JUNE. It was his last chance and while he had $13,600, he bet just $3600. That was probably wise:

1533: No. 2 in a series, she's crowned Queen of England, briefly."

Chris paused for a long time. His final guess was the same as mine: "Who is Lady Jane Grey?" It referred to Henry VIII's second wife, Anne Boleyn, and he dropped to $10,000.

It was only due to getting the last three clues correct that he stopped Peter from running away with the game. Peter finished with $20,700 to Chris's $11,2000 while Camryn was still very much alive with $10,200.

It came down to Final Jeopardy. The category was IDIOMS & EXPRESSIONS: In the 1830s cities on the Mississippi banned cardsharps, creating more of these, now meaning one who takes big risks.

Camryn's response was revealed first. "What are big spenders?" It was wrong. It cost her everything.

Chris was next. He wrote down a good guess: "What are high rollers?" That was also wrong and he also lost everything.

Peter was now in good shape. His response was: "What are mavericks?" In a weird way Peter was closest. As Ken put it: "When cities instituted gambling bans, it created more riverboat gamblers." (I was right at home, but don't put me above the contestants: it was a last second wild guess and I was sure it was wrong.) It cost Peter just $1701 and he finished with $18,999 to dethrone Chris and become the new champion.

Chris seems to have bad timing yet again. Had he managed this many wins and this much money last season he would have automatically gotten a bye to the semifinals of the 2026 Tournament of Champions. Instead he's going to have to fight it out just to see if he can make it to the finals. On the upside when his sister Jen is asked for the inevitable sequel to Quiz Lady her brother has now given her enough material to turn into a franchise. I look forward to seeing who they cast to play Jamie Ding. (And be original: don't just go to Bowen Yang.)

On a more serious note while Chris couldn't quite become a super-champion he did manage to most impressive record of any 'giant-killer' in Jeopardy history since Jonathan Fisher managed to take down Matt Amodio and win eleven games back in October of 2021. Just for fun let's look at Chris track record compared to every super-champion who managed to get 10 wins or more since Fisher did it when they won their eighth game:

 

AFTER 8 WINS

Chris D'Angelo: $194,201

Jonathan Fisher: $193,800

Amy Schneider: $295, 200

Mattea Roach: $182,801

Ryan Long: $160,401         

Cris Panullo: $275,502

Ray Lalonde: $219,300

Adriana Harmeyer: $183,100

Scott Riccardi: $201,301

Harrison Whitaker: $218,600

Jamie Ding: $222,203

Tristan Williams: $158,501

 

Honestly that looks pretty good. Granted he was nowhere at the level of Hannah Wilson after eight games or Ben Chan but still it's pretty good comparison.

In addition he managed to get $50,000 in one of his wins a figure Tristan never got to once in any of his ten games and he won roughly as much money in eight games and Paolo Pasco did in seven.

And if we go back a little further he managed more money then Ben Ingram did in 8 games or Buzzy Cohen and Dan Pawson did in nine and all of them went on to win the Tournament of Champions against some pretty impressive competition. In the case of Ben and Buzzy they both managed to win competitive finals against several players who on paper were far superior to them.

Of course Season 42 isn't over yet and we're a long way from the 2027 Tournament of Champions. But let's not kid ourselves that already the roster for that one is way more impressive then last years. I'll be doing a refresher course next Friday just before the final six weeks of the seasons but the fact that Chris D'Angelo is only the fourth best qualified player so far shows you the level of competition were likely to see in a few months' time.

Awkwafina, get ready to be asked a lot of questions about Chris D'Angelo in the next few weeks.  Truth just became stranger then fiction in a good way.

 

Sunday, May 31, 2026

Now That I Know How Old Phil Mushnick Is, I Understand His Bias…Even Less

 

I don't know if I've written this before but its worth repeating if I have. Sports-writing, more than any other genre of media, is by definition usually overwhelmingly conservative.

Because many of the best writers have been fans of sports long before they started writing about it professionally they have nostalgia baked into their blood. Therefore they will more often then any writer be inclined to look at the past with rose-colored glasses even if they know better. I don't always agree with this logic but unlike any other form of media I can find it understandable if not always excusable.

If I read the work of Roger Angell or Shirley Povich and see that they are nostalgia for sports in the era when they were young men I will grant them the respect that you must grant to those who saw Babe Ruth swing a bat or Jackie Robinson steal home.  And if Bob Costas writes, as he did in 1995, that the expanded postseason has robbed baseball of much of its magic I will take him seriously because he's spent his entire career watching the game and has an understanding of it that's deeper that mine.

This brings me, as it does more often than I want to admit, to Phil Mushnick of the New York Post. I agree with the masses that his so-called morality, which involves the worst kind of race baiting and cultural criticism, pushes the line of decency in a way that I'm not even sure those on Fox News or The Nation do. That said I was willing to cut him some slack because based on his writing and his nostalgia for the players of the 1960s, I'd assumed that he was at the very least in his early eighties, roughly the age of Doris Kearns Goodwin. I figured he'd been in a Yankees fan while she was a Dodger fan and that he tacitly agreed with Yankee ownership decision to delay integration as long as possible. It didn't excuse his behavior but it explained it.

Then for reasons I will get to in the essay I found myself looking Mushnick up online and I found his Wikipedia entry. And I stopped dead. Mushnick just turned 74. And apparently he's been the New York columnist been sports-writing for the Post since 1982.

Everything I thought about Mushnick makes less sense. That quote I'm found of from A New Leaf : "You have devoted yourself to a way of like that perished long before you were even born" now seems to sum up every Mushnick has done. Which is a bizarre attitude for him in particular.

Just to give a chronology of events,  some involving New York for those who might not know:

Mushnick was five in 1957 when the Dodgers and Giants left New York for the West Coast.

He was nine when major league baseball expanded for the first time.

When he was twelve Mel Allen was fired and Red Barber the following year.

When he was fourteen the first Super Bowl took place.

When he was seventeen the Jets won the Super Bowl for the first and only time.

When he was 20 Title IX was created.

By the time he joined the Post as a copy editor in 1973 Ted Turner had bought the Atlanta Braves and had turned TBS into a super station where they were broadcast.  So his entire adult life cable has always existed.

When he was 23 and serving as a beat reporter, the Seitz decision which created free agency was handed down.

In 1976 the ABA folded and the NBA became one big family.

In 1978 a landmark decision was handed down that allowed women to go into locker rooms for professional sports. By that time Mushnick would have been a beat reporter himself. I've no idea how he reacted to that.

When he was 27 ESPN was created which changed sports reporting forever.

By the time he was reporting Muhammed Ali's career was on the downside and would be over at the age of 28.

And by the time he became the sports TV and radio columnist for the Post in 1982 at which point talk radio had been formed.

 

So just so we're clear at no point in Mushnick career did he ever know a time when athletes weren't getting paid millions of dollars, when media frenzies didn't exist around athletes at a huge level, when cable wasn't covering sports or for that matter when women weren't allowed to be invited into men's lockers room to cover sports.

Mushnick's has always defined himself as a self-appointed watchdog and roving moralist. One of his recurring themes is that broadcasters should serve the event they are calling rather then themselves. Considering that his only memories of broadcasters doing this were when he was a child and he never lived in a period when they didn't serve themselves (Howard Cosell had been part of sports the entirety of Mushnick's career to that point, just the use the most obvious example) one wonders how he could have reached this decision and what basis he made it on. He didn't grow up in the 1930s and listen to Red Barber for the Dodgers and Mel Allen was gone from baseball when he was 12.  

He's basically arguing that a model that was never in affect when he was in sports should be the only model going forward. This is the flipside of everything left-wing scholar I've read who argues the Founders should have had values that were in alignment with the 21st century. Both are ludicrous the moment you think about it and considering Mushnick's age, it's just as hypocritical.

Mushnick hasn't been in a locker room for a very long time. He actually stopped covering sports beats in the late 1980s according to his own interviews. This makes his behavior all the more bizarre. He's holding athletes and commentators to a professional standard – and he doesn't even bother to show up at events or interview them.  A recent Yankee sports writers has confirmed as much as do multiple other New York sportswriters. One of the perks of being a sportswriter, I'd think, is that you could go to any game you wanted for free and watch from the good seats. Mushnick seems to spend his entire career watching TV and criticizing the commentators and the behavior of the players.

This would seem to be a bizarre way to cover sports, particularly considering he seems to hate every network, radio commentator and cable broadcaster as covering sports 'wrong' . Can you imagine Mushnick watching a game at a sports bar? Its bad enough when the customers are complaining about how lousy the team is; Mushnick would be there saying: "Who cares how the Giants played? The announcers are ruining the game!"

That actually brings me to what inspired this article. As even the casual sports fan might be aware of the New York Knicks are on one of the greatest runs, not just in franchise history but the history of basketball. I don't really pay much attention to the sport, but even I'm aware of just how dominant the Knicks have been playing the game especially in the postseason. They won eleven consecutive playoff games and are currently beating their opponents by an average of 23.2 points a game. Over the last week and a half they managed one of the most impressive comebacks in basketball history in Game 1 against of the Eastern Conference Finals. (Yes I know it was historic.) They then destroyed the Cleveland in increasing fashion beating them by more then 40 points in Game 4.  This led to them clinching their first finals since 1999. The Knicks haven't won it all since 1973 – which is when Mushnick starting working at the Post.

Now last year when Tom Thibideaux was fired after losing the Eastern Conference finals despite being the first coach to get there in a very long time everyone in New York – and I include myself – thought ownership was stupid beyond words. Now just one year later ownership looks very smart having hired Mike Brown and everyone who thought otherwise – again, myself included – looks like an idiot. As someone who can barely remember the last time the Knicks were this close to a championship in 1999 and who has a very clear memory of what it means for other teams in professional sports – not just those in New York – I know how much this means to the city, not just sports fans. And you would think that a New York sportswriter whose career began the last time the Knicks won a championship would note the significance, be happy about it, or at the very least write about it in his column.

So imagine my utter shock when I looked at Mushnick's column today and found his major article was about The World Cup and FIFA's horrible prices. There was no mention of the Knicks at all. The only mention he made of basketball had to do with an ESPN reporters bad reporting of why the Celtics blew a 3-1 lead to Cleveland. There were 15 pages about the finals, in large part because the Spurs finally won yesterday and we finally know who we're playing against this week. For Mushnick it might as well not be happening.

Indeed while the NBA playoffs were going on the only column Mushnick wrote about basketball was to judge Commissioner Adam Silver for not punishing an Victor Wembayama for committing a vicious foul on May 11th.   The entire week of the Knicks championship he wrote two columns arguing about a Brewers relivers on the mound behavior and how Commissioner Manfred gave a barely passing suspension. He argued that the commentator during the Knicks playoff run 'speaks too often, too long and too confusingly of much value." That's all he had to say about the Knicks three days after they got to the finals. He was more upset about the Knicks not being able to watch games on TV rather then streaming. In the last month the only time the Knicks playoff ran came up was when he thought the commentators or the commissioners were lacking.

To be clear something that hasn't happened in 52 years is happening to New York city basketball fans right now, something joyous, something we should all be united about. For Mushnick it matters less to him then how a player in San Diego is performing bad behavior on the pitchers mound. That is the kind of attitude you might expect from a conservative or a radical progressive but for a sportswriters whose writing for a New York newspaper it really makes you question his priorities.  One wonders if the Knicks win the championship the only thing that he'll care about is that TV spent too much time doing focus on Spike Lee during the victory celebration.

And for a guy who spends so much time glorifying sports figures of the past as if he was in Ebbets field when the Dodgers won their only championship and got champagne splashed on him in the locker room the fact that Mushnick doesn't seem to care about a significant moment in New York's present really makes you wonder what he's doing reporting on sports at all.  For Mushnick it's not whether you win or lost, it's about how overpaid the players are, how the commissioners coddle them, how the sportscasters badly broadcast it, and how undignified the fans are.  

I've had my issues with Mushnick's moralizing before and I've been willing to share them. But in this case I truly wonder what the point of him on the Post is. If something that hasn't happened in the lifetimes of most fans, something that is from a period of something Mushnick lived through in his home state is less important to him to report rather than the lack of morals of an athlete in San Diego and if the commentary on the game play is more important to him that the play on the field then really its time for Murdoch and the editors to cut him loose.

And I say this as a New Yorker. I get the entitlement that comes with living here and the idea that if you gives you the idea that you have the ability to look down on everyone else because you live in New York. I'm aware that in recent years New York hasn't been able to back it up with championships to match its media market and revenue stream. Perhaps that might lead to you looking down on your field.  But if you can't do the good part of sports – embrace the joy when the home team does something impossible -  then you're not a sports writer. You're not a fan. You're just a prick.  I grant you New York has more than its share but you don't have the athletic gifts to balance it out.

Oh and by the way Whitey Ford and Mickey Mantle had multiple affairs and got drunk every night. If you don't know that now and you think players behavior is crude today, you never had any standards for morality to begin with.

 

 

 

Saturday, May 30, 2026

Ken Jennings Is The Most Famous Jeopardy Player of All-Time… But Was He Ever The Best? (2800th Article)

 

 

I once tried to write a long book of the 100 greatest Jeopardy players of all time for many reasons but at the core was a simple one: I was never convinced even after Ken Jennings incredible run that he was the greatest Jeopardy player of all time.

Part of this was naturally due to the rule change. Jennings came on to the scene in Season 20 the year that Jeopardy lifted the five game limit for Jeopardy champions that had been present since the show debuted in 1984 and went back to the original program. As Alex Trebek himself once argued prior to the Ultimate Tournament of Champions: is it possible that had any of the other players prior to Jennings played with no limits they would have gone on as long as him or been better than him?

The former question will never be answered satisfactorily and honestly the UTC didn't really answer that question either. It proved one thing: Brad Rutter, the first playing to win a million dollars in a tournament, was a better player then Ken Jennings and that would be a constant on Jeopardy for the next fifteen years through the Battle of the Decades and the Jeopardy All-Star Games. It wasn't until the Greatest of All Time Tournament took place in January of 2020 that Jennings finally defeated Brad (and James Holzhauer who we'll get to) and after that he immediately retired from active play.

If we use the transitive property of Jeopardy tournaments, arguing that if Jennings beat other Jeopardy champions in a special tournament he was de facto their superior, we get an answer of sorts. Jennings was able to beat Jerome Vered out for second place in the UTC Finals but since he only played against him and Brad in that tournament that didn't prove much. Jennings was able to beat five other Tournament of Champions winners to get to the finals of the Battle of the Decades and they were pretty good ones:

 

Michael Falk, 2006 Tournament of Champions

Rachael Schwartz, 1994 Tournament of Champions

Tom Cubbage, 1989 Tournament of Champions

Russ Schumacher, 2004 Tournament of Champions

Chuck Forrest, 1986 Tournament of Champions

 

Of those five only Chuck gave him a hell of a scare in the semi-finals, in what was the only non-runaway victory he had during the semi-finals. When he got to the finals he was up against Brad and Roger Craig, who among other things had broken Ken's one-day record of $75,000 in his run. There were times in the finals where Roger had both Brad and Ken where he wanted them but in both cases going all in on a Daily Double beat him and he ended up losing to both.

The Jeopardy All-Star Games didn't give a conclusive answer. Ken did do better than Austin Rogers in the Jeopardy round of one game and Double Jeopardy round of another one and was considerably better than Ben Ingram and Julia Collins in both of those games as well.  Beyond that we can't really extend his ability as being better then many of the other players in that tournament very well because he was part of a team. In the finals he went up against Brad Rutter and Pam Mueller in the Jeopardy round of Game 1 and the Double Jeopardy round of Game 2. In Game 1 he actually was better than Brad for once but Team Brad ended up ahead of his team by the end of Game 1 and in Game 2 Brad annihilated Ken allowing himself a runaway. Pam Mueller, who is also an impressive Jeopardy player in her own right, was trounced on both occasions.

Brad was for nearly 20 years the only player in Jeopardy history who never lost a game (to a human). That streak wasn't continuous the same way Ken or any other super champion and essentially amounted to 29 consecutive victories over 19 years. It was always enough for me to consider Brad the greatest Jeopardy player of all time mainly because it led to him being the biggest money winner in Jeopardy history, a figure he still maintains to this day. If we exclude his defeats in both the GOAT and the 2025 Masters Tournament Brad won just over $4.5 million dollars going up against human competition.

And it's not like the players he was up against were exactly pikers. None of them may have been the caliber of Holzhauer or Schneider or even Matt Jackson or David Madden but by the time he got to the GOAT he'd beaten no less than seven other TOC winners to that point in addition to Roger Craig:

 

Million Dollar Masters

Bob Verini: 1987 Tournament of Champions

 

Battle of The Decades

Mike Dupee: 1996 Tournament of Champions

Mark Lowenthal: 1988 Tournament of Champions

Dan Pawson: 2009 Tournament of Champions

Leszek Pawlowicz: 1992 Tournament of Champions

Tom Cubbage: 1989 Tournament of Champions

 

Jeopardy All-Star Games

Colby Burnett: 2013 Tournament of Champions

 

His undefeated streak is actually more impressive because in two of these games he went into Final Jeopardy in a distant third and still managed to win. In the second of these in the Jeopardy All-Star Games both Pam Mueller and Alex Jacob humiliated him in the Double Jeopardy round of the Jeopardy All-Star Games.

Alex Jacob won the 2015 Tournament of Champions in dominant fashion and was superb against Brad in the Jeopardy round of Game 1 until Brad found the Daily Double very late in that round to take the lead.  Both Alex Jacob and Roger Craig had the better of Brad for much of their appearances on Jeopardy and the two of them are considered by their peers as among the most dominant players of all time despite each only winning six games in their original runs. In both cases Brad knew he was lucky to get past them and win.

It was for that reason I always considered Brad a better player then Ken. That being said I was always impressed by many of the players who reached double digits in the last six years of the post Trebek era. But I'm not sure I would ever have considered them at Ken's level even given their prowess in short runs. For one let's look at those players who reached 11 or more wins just for comparison with Ken.

 

Ken Jennings: $376,158

David Madden: $269,101

Arthur Chu: $297,200

Julia Collins: $231,310

Matt Jackson: $339, 411

Seth Wilson: $245,002

Austin Rogers: $394,700

Jason Zuffranieri: $332,243

 

Yes I left James Holzhauer's total out of the discussion in this case. I'll get to it below.

With the exception of Austin Ken was a better player than everyone else at this point in their run and as I mentioned Ken trounced Austin the Jeopardy All-Star Games and did the same to Julia Collins. Seth Wilson was on Julia's team along with Ben Ingram but Ken never played against him in competition. I suspect he knew what he was doing when he made Matt Jackson his first draft choice when picking his team and while Brad would chose David for his team, the two never competed. Arthur and Jason never got a chance to go against him, to the regret of millions like me who would have loved to see the two face off.

Of course as the GOAT played out Ken managed to beat James three times out of four while James beat Ken once. I do wish he'd stop ducking a rematch – and no autocorrect was involved there. (Jeopardy Masters humor.)

It's far tougher to make the argument Brad was better than any of these super-champions because he never faced off against any of them in the All-Star Games: for better or worse all of the double digit players in that tournament only ended up in competition with Ken Jennings or as part of his team or Brad's.  And considering how thoroughly James Holzhauer trounced Brad in the GOAT tournament there's no question that Holzhauer is by far better than Brad as well. Would Brad have done well had he faced off against so many of those super-champions? We may never know.

This brings me to the players in the post-Trebek era where the super-champions have come at a frankly ridiculous rate and because of that we may want to use bigger numbers. During the first fourteen years after Ken's run ended only one players Julia Collins, managed to win 20 games, which was the second place total for five years. Since 2019 six players have won 21 games or more including the reigning super-champion Jamie Ding. For that reason its worth looking at  Ken in comparison to the five players on the Leaderboard of Legends who are now directly below him with that many wins and see where they were at 21 because the results will surprise you. They certainly surprised me and I'm supposedly an expert.

Jamie Ding: $609,000

Cris Panullo: $748,286

Mattea Roach: $506,584

Amy Schneider: $806,000

Matt Amodio: $740,001

James Holzhauer: $1,608,627

Ken Jennings: $697,760

 

I first noticed just how much Ken was lagging behind so many of the all-time greats when I wrote about Cris Panullo nearly four years ago. That was a celebration of Panullo's greatness but I didn't think to compare it to Jennings. Now's the time to do just that.

That means looking at their track record when it comes to runaway victories to that same point in their run:

Mattea Roach: 16

Ken Jennings: 16

Cris Panullo: 17

James Holzhauer: 19

Matt Amodio: 17

Amy Schneider: 19

Combining these two factors increasingly makes it difficult to argue that Ken Jennings was better than any of the five people directly behind him in wins. So now let's ask the million dollar question (chump change to four of the players on this list, I know): are these five super-champions better than Ken Jennings?

Let's go one by one.

With Cris Panullo its clear he was more dominant a player in his original appearance both in terms of money won and runaway victories. The reason I can't speak with any real confidence is that Cris's postseason record is very short, having been humiliated in the 2024 Tournament of Champions.

With Mattea Roach, in terms of money won Ken is far better than them and dead even in terms of runaways. However we do have to consider the critical factor of their postseason record which is considerable. Roach won the exhibition match of the 2022 Tournament of Champions against Amy Schneider and Matt Amodio. And in the inaugural Jeopardy Masters Tournament they more then held their own. Mattea beat Amy twice and Matt once managed to get into the semi-finals of the Jeopardy Masters and while they never defeated Holzhauer they came this close to doing so in the final something Holzhauer acknowledged. Given their track record against so many players who were superior to them on paper, it doesn't take much conjecture to argue Mattea Roach could do just as well against Ken.

As for Jamie Ding who completed his run in fifth place in both games and money won we'll have to wait until the Tournament of Champions to see how it plays out. However considering that in his 31 games Jamie didn't even come close to a million dollars – a figure that Ken reached on his 30th game – I'm inclined to ran Ken ahead of him at the present moment

If, when it comes to Mattea and Cris I can't speak with certainty and Jamie has yet to prove himself, then  with the three players directly behind Ken in wins there is absolutely no doubt in my mind. James Holzhauer, Amy Schneider and Matt Amodio are absolutely better players than Ken Jennings. It's not a difficult or close question.

Consider this odd bit of trivia that I only recently discovered. On their 28th appearance in their original runs both Matt Amodio and Amy Schnedier passed $1 million in earnings. On his 27th appearance James Holzhauer passed two million dollars in earnings.

It took Ken 30 games just to get to the million dollar mark. On his 38th win he set the single day record for $75,000 but he was at $1,321,660. By that point Matt Amodio had won $1,518,601. Amy Schneider was basically tied with him at $1,307,200.

Ken after 40 games was at $1,353,461. Amy was at $1,382,800 when her streak ended, which means she's at least his equal but for reason I'll get to I think she's better.

With James Holzhauer the question of whether he was better than Ken is almost a moot point. On just his 32nd game he had $2,462,216. Ken Jennings must have a generosity in spirit that I can't comprehend: if I were him I'd be sending a birthday card to Emma Boettcher every day for the rest of both their lives. (I wouldn't mind seeing her invited back for either an Invitational or Masters myself.)

So in their original runs all three of the players immediately behind Ken money won and games won are clearly better than him. And that's before you consider the postseason.

To repeat it took fifteen years for Ken Jennings to win a postseason tournament of anytime. Both James Holzhauer and Amy Schneider did so their first time out when each of them won the Tournament of Champions.  James Holzhauer had to defeat the only player to that point in history who'd ever defeated him to do so, Emma Boettcher and she made it very difficult for him. And while he may have lost the GOAT to Ken Jennings he did beat Brad Rutter and Ken once.

That was before he won the very first Jeopardy Masters in impressive fashion, though it did get tougher with each advancement. And despite losing the second Jeopardy Masters to Victoria Groce and Yogesh Raut, it doesn't change the fact that he did finish in third in the quarterfinals and had the highest score in the semifinals. Considering that put him ahead of the three former Masters that's impressive in its own way.

Amy has a different notch on her belt: she's the first player in Jeopardy history to win the Tournament of Champions in its new format of first to three wins. She did so against Andrew He and Sam Buttrey who would become Masters in their own right because of their performances. That's a more impressive triumph then James's in his victory even if she has never done as well as him in the Masters.

And while Matt Amodio has joked about his inadequacy in the postseason in the last few years, there's always been a certain amount of self-deprecation. He did manage to become the first active player to notch a win against James Holzhauer in the inaugural Jeopardy Masters and he did beat Amy Schneider and Mattea Roach quite a few times in that inaugural run even if he did finish first. And he did manage to win the second Jeopardy Invitational Tournament over by beating some pretty impressive players, among them Hannah Wilson and Roger Craig. That's still better than Ken's track record no matter how you slice it.

It's unlikely that Ken will ever deign to stop ducking a rematch and face off against the other challenger behind him, as he spent between 2005 and 2020 doing so with everyone else who came before him. But at this point in time its clear that while Ken may have won more games then anybody in Jeopardy history he was never the greatest Jeopardy player of all time. Brad Rutter had his number for fourteen years and James Holzhauer, Matt Amodio and Amy Schneider have proved it multiple times and will again. Perhaps someday soon, someone like Jamie Ding will add to that discussion and I think Ken can appreciate better than anyone if it did.