MPD for the FBI
Bill Geerhart of Conelrad has a long, fun, video-heavy post about I Led 3 Lives, the McCarthy-era TV thriller about a man who "did lead three lives: average citizen, high-level member of the Communist Party, and counterspy for the Federal Bureau of Investigation." Geerhart does a decent job of outlining the show's background and content, but he leaves out one of the most interesting facts about it. In his terrific 2003 book Cold War, Cool Medium, Thomas Doherty notes that
I Led 3 Lives speaks to the blacklist with suspicious frequency: to the moral dilemma of the informer, to the problems of the prodigal politico, and to the plight of the duped liberal smeared by his past associations. As [protagonist Herbert] Philbrick's party comrades might put it, this is no accident. According to producer Frederick Ziv, blacklisted screenwriters wrote for the show under assumed names. Likes moles burrowing from within, they commented on their own dilemma, doubtless savoring the irony of using the premiere anticommunist series on television to critique anticommunist paranoia. In another episode, when Philbrick ia assigned responsibility for party security, his lesbian-coded cell leader, Comrade Jenny, orders him to hunt for subversive elements. "I needn't remind you that one of the greatest threats to communism is internal--from the party itself. Diversionists, traitors, opportunists, social patriots, reformers--you'll make every effort to discover these enemies and report them to me." The camera holds tight on her severe face as she tells him to name names: "And should you fail to report them--I'll be forced to conclude that you're one of them yourself!"
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In the 50s, there was also a radio show called "I Was a Communist for the FBI", which claimed to be the true story of an FBI agent undercover in the Communist Party. It's obvious propaganda, and hilarious at times. Every episode, the protagonist would pretend to be a member of the party while secretly sabotaging whatever their goal of the week is (in half of them, barely avoiding capture/notice that he's a spy), which would be followed by a soliloquy on how inferior the Commies are.
Wonder if that was something similar.
I've heard some, actually pretty good.
I think it was a sort of a sister show.
Is that... is that man smoking on that poster? What kind of message does this send to our children?
I like the intrigue. This is the way I thought Lost was going to be.