BTS: Meet the Cast (Part One-A) (Re-)Introducing Kimmi! (Jennifer Garnett)

Jennifer (Jenny) Garnett is an American actress and model. Born in Colorado, she moved to California after her mother's obsession with Bruce Springsteen inspired her to relocate the family to Los Angeles, even though Springsteen hasn't lived there for decades.

Despite being a self-described "shy, dumpy thing", Garnett began modeling as a tween, eventually becoming the face of a local chain of discount Italian restaurants. For her efforts, she was compensated almost exclusively with vouchers for free pizza and breadsticks.

A late bloomer, Garnett was among the last in her class to hit puberty, but quickly developed to nearly her current measurements during a single summer break. Garnett would later attribute this (positively and negatively) to her diet, which at that time consisted almost exclusively of pepperoni and mushroom pizza (her favorite). These "developments" brought her greater career opportunities, including her first movie role: "Victim #3", a non-speaking part in the low-budget slasher film Wrathful Murder 7: The Revenge.

Eventually, Garnett's mother moved back to Colorado, having finally realized she was never going to "accidentally" bump into Springsteen in Hollywood. Garnett stayed behind to continue her film career, landing supporting roles in Car Wash Vixens and The Taste of A Woman, among others.

Garnett's breakout role was in The Sultan's Harem, a political drama set in ancient Persia. Despite controversy surrounding the studio's failure to cast a single person of appropriate ethnic heritage, and criticism for the abundance of full-frontal nudity and use of historically-dubious lesbian power-brokering to drive the plot, the series has a very dedicated fanbase, despite only lasting for one season.

Sadly, the master prints for much of Garnett's early career (along with hundreds of other such works) were lost when the production studio was destroyed in a fire described by authorities as "suspicious". Conspiracy theories within online fan communities claim the Studio Head owed significant sums to less-than-reputable lenders, and may have burned the building as part of an insurance scam, but no concrete evidence has ever come to light.

Few complete copies remain in the wild; most of these are in poor condition or obsolete formats, though clips do occasionally surface online.