867-5309/Jenny
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"867-5309/Jenny" | ||
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Song by Tommy Tutone | ||
from the album Tommy Tutone 2 | ||
Genre | Rock | |
Length | 3:47 | |
Label | Collectables Records | |
Writer(s) | Alex Call and Jim Keller | |
Composer(s) | Alex Call and Jim Keller | |
Chart positions | ||
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"867-5309/Jenny" is a song written by Alex Call and Jim Keller and performed by Tommy Tutone which peaked at Number 4 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1982.
Contents |
[edit] Background
The lyrics imply that 867-5309 was the real phone number of a girl named Jenny, which was acquired from a men's room wall under the legend, "For a good time, call...". The song caused a fad of people dialing 867-5309 (which was then a valid phone number in dozens of area codes) and asking for "Jenny".
Throughout the song, the singer sings about the mysterious Jenny and how happy she makes him. It is more or less implied that the men's room graffiti featuring her name and number mentioned that she was an "easy lay," and that this is the reason for the singer's interest. However in the music video, Jenny gives the singer her phone number along with her name.
The song was released on the album Tommy Tutone 2, on the Columbia Records label. It has been covered by a number of artists, including Less Than Jake.
The guitar riff of the song is almost identical to the one at the end of the intro track on The Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.
Various claims have been made about the number, including:
- +1-415-867-5309 had been a real number in San Francisco of a friend (Sean Fao) of someone in the band, promptly disconnected after the song's release.
- +1-716-867-5309 was the number of the daughter of the Erie County, New York County Sheriff who vigorously investigated prank callers and turned them over for prosecution.
When the song became a hit, listeners began dialing 867-5309 in high volume, with diverse effects on the people who actually had that number:
- subscribers with same or similar numbers in other area codes also ordered them disconnected after receiving many calls
- some radio stations at the time were applying to obtain lines with +1-areacode-867-5309 numbers for promotional purposes (some, WLS in Chicago, actually succeeded)
- Phones in dormitories at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island begin with 867, and students with 867-5309 for a time had to deal with prank calls. The number was later acquired by a local business (see below).
- a more recent attempt to auction the number +1-212-867-5309 on eBay received bids in the $200,000 range before the auction listing was pulled at the request of Verizon
Although Tommy Tutone is primarily remembered for this song and commonly considered a "one-hit wonder", they actually had a Billboard Top 40 hit in 1980—two years before "Jenny" with "Angel Say No", which peaked at #38. "Angel Say No", however, is now almost completely forgotten by the general public.
The band and label eventually changed their story as to the number's origins, claiming it to be a random number that the songwriters came up with. (In fact the number is not quite as random as it may seem; when dialing the number on a standard touch-tone phone, the number forms a consistent upward diagonal pattern on the keypad: 8-6, followed by 7-5-3, followed by 0-9.) Calls to 1-(area code)-867-5309 were still arriving in quantity as late as the end of the 1990s.
Most media companies use a fictitious 555 telephone number, or on rare occasions real numbers that they own, to avoid problems with real telephone numbers. However, in 2003 the movie Bruce Almighty precipitated a situation reminiscent of "867-5309" when it depicted God using "776-2323" to contact Jim Carrey's character. (That number was replaced with "555-0123" in the DVD and television versions of the movie.)
[edit] 867-5309 in popular culture
[edit] In films and television
- In the episode of Family Guy, "Road to Rhode Island," when Stewie is trying to reach Lois, the first number he dials is 867-5309. He then says, "Oh, wait, that's not it. Damn you, Tommy Tutone!"
- In 2004, the song was featured in a TV commercial for Cingular Wireless, which promoted the company's number portability service. Many telephone carriers have refused to assign this number since the advent of this song but it is still valid in some areas.
- On the American show Hit Me Baby One More Time, Tommy Tutone reunited for one night and sang the song for a chance to win money for charity.
- In a first-season episode of the television show Cheers, 867-5309 is given as Diane Chambers' phone number in a bit of men's room graffiti.
- In an episode of The Simpsons, 867-5309 appears on the church billboard.
- In the opener of CNN's The Situation Room, the number 8675309 can be found at the bottom right of the frame in one of the boxes that display otherwise meaningless numbers. The number can be seen towards the end of the opener.
- (801) 867-5309 is used as a fictionalized number in The Singles Ward, The R.M. and Sons of Provo.
- In an August, 2006 episode of The Colbert Report, a satirical news show on Comedy Central, a fake mugshot of Tom DeLay featured 8675309 as his prisoner ID number.
- The stardate in the opening narration of Duck Dodgers s3e02 "Just The Two Of Us" is 86.75.309
- 8675309 was given as Kyle Reese's serial number in the original film treatment for The Terminator.
- In Freddy Got Fingered, Betty's phone number that she gives to Gord is 867-5309.
- The song is played in a TV commercial for the chocolate bar Milky Way. It shows a man having difficulty singing the song because he is eating a Milky Way.
- In the show My Gym Partner's a Monkey in the episode The Spiffanos it is implied that Bull Sharkowski's locker number is 8675309.
- In the 1984 film "CHUD", a little girl's uncle dials 867-5309 before getting eaten by a CHUD.
[edit] In computer games
- In the MMORPG Everquest, players can obtain an item named "Jenniy's Two-tone Cuirass" from the zone boss Grieg Veneficus. This item is a breastplate, and grants the wearer 8 strength, 6 dexterity, 7 stamina, 5 charisma, 30 wisdom, and 9 intelligence, among other benefits.
- In the Monolith Productions computer game No One Lives Forever, an enemy sub has the number "8675309" painted on the side.
- In the video game MDK2, the first level takes place in "sector 8675309," which is also identified as Edmonton, Alberta, Canada - home of BioWare, the game's development team.
- In the video game Duke Nukem 3D, "867-5309" can be found on the wall of the theater bathroom in Hollywood Holocaust (E1L1) next to the left urinal.
- In the New World Computing computer game Heroes of Might and Magic II, typing the code "8675309" in-game reveals the whole map.
- In the video game NetStorm, typing ".cheatorama 8675309" enables the game's cheat mode.
- In the video game Soldier of Fortune, one of the Suni engineers tells John Mullins the access code for the Suni mainframe, which is 8675309.
- In the video game Splinter Cell, a CIA employee is counting the batteries in a warehouse. He counts them as, "0J-8675307, 0J-8675308, 0J-8675...hold up....aww, man." He never quite reaches the famous number.
- In the video game Deus Ex, the only 7-digit keypad lock in the game can be opened by entering the combination "8675309".
- In the arcade game San Francisco Rush 2049, entering "8675309" on the numeric keypad during play immediately terminates the race.
- In the video game Tony Hawk's Underground 2, the New Orleans level features a dumpster with 8675309-E-INE painted on it.
[edit] Other sightings
- The song was parodied by Christian parody band ApologetiX to tell the story of Abraham's test in Genesis 22. The parody is titled "Genny 22" in the album Spoofernatural.
- The number appeared on a package for a dry-erase message board sold by Wal-Mart.
- The telephone number (213) 867-5309 was available for sale from a marketing firm in Los Angeles.
- In a screenshot on page 12 of the Nintendo Wi Fi Connection Instruction Booklet distributed with online-capable Nintendo DS games, "8675309" is entered as the example WEP key.
- In 2003 the song was covered by singer/songwriter Mark Weigle on his album Different and the Same, though his version changed the name (and gender) of the song's subject to "867-5309/Jimmy".
- The song was covered by Less Than Jake and is available on the album Losers, Kings and Things We Don't Understand
- On the first "Extras" disk to AnimEigo's release of You're Under Arrest!, 8675309 is the code that has to be typed in on the on-screen keypad to access the Easter egg.
- Typing 8675309 on Microsoft WebTV (such as the original EchoStar DishPlayer), UltimateTV and newer MSN TV 2 units when in off/standby mode would cause them to call home to download Microsoft TV software.
- Near the end of Kid Radd, the password to the controls for the Chimera program was 8675309.
- Dallas plumbing company, Benjamin Franklin Plumbers, has obtained a toll free telephone number and has chosen 867-5309 as its main number (radio and television advertising features clips from the song).
- Rhode Island Gem Plumbing has the number 401-867-5309 as a primary contact, featuring numerous radio and television ads utilizing a jingle version of the song.[1] The complete number is a registered trademark of the company.[2]
- In several magazine advertisements for the Mac OS X operating system, 867.5309 appears in the calculator window.
- An image of SpongeBob SquarePants' mugshot on a school folder shows his ID number to be 8675309.
- In the English dub of the anime series Paradise Kiss, 867-5309 is announced as Yukari's cell phone number. (See episode 3.)
- The integer 8675309 is the 52,196th twin prime along with 8675311.
- Comedy musician Stephen Lynch once ended the song "Kill a Kitten" by repeating "8675309."
[edit] Charts
Year | Single | Chart | Peak |
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1982 | "867-5309/Jenny" | Mainstream Rock | 1 |
1982 | "867-5309/Jenny" | Billboard Hot 100 | 4 (Gold) |
[edit] See also
- 555 - the telephone exchange used for fictional numbers
- Bruce Almighty telephone controversy
- List of songs whose title includes a phone number
[edit] External links
- Jenny 867-5309 - The Tommy Tutone song "Jenny (867-5309)" drove the phone companies (and their customers) nuts. (snopes.com)
- SongFacts
- Lyrics
- The "867-5309/Jenny" Awareness Center
- Jenny, Are you there? - Calling 867-5309 with every area code in the US and Canada
- Alex Call
- 867-5309/Jenny Music Video on YouTube