When Fidel Castro Went on The Tonight Show and The Ed Sullivan Show
There was a time when many Americans perceived Cuba's late leader as a hero.


Fidel Castro ousted Fulgencio Batista's regime on January 1, 1959. Within a little more than a month, he had promoted his revolution on both The Tonight Show and The Ed Sullivan Show.
That Tonight Show interview—a warm conversation with then-host Jack Paar—doesn't seem to be online, so you'll have to take my word when I tell you just how strange it looks from the vantage point of 2016. But Sullivan's segment has been preserved on YouTube, and it's one hell of a the-past-is-another-country artifact. Sullivan opens by asking Fidel about his religion (Castro replies that he was raised a Catholic) and inquires about what sports the guerrilla leader used to play ("undoubtedly the exercise you did at school prepared you for this role"). Then it's on to exchanges like this one:
SULLIVAN: In Latin American countries, over and over again, dictators will come along. They rape the country; they have stolen the money, millions and millions of dollars; tortured and killed people. How do you propose to end that here in Cuba?
CASTRO: Very easy: not permitting any dictatorship to come again to rule our country.
By the end of the interview, Sullivan has compared Castro to George Washington:
My point in sharing this isn't to mock Sullivan. (Or Paar, who later joked: "I interviewed Fidel Castro once and he immediately turned anti-American. Of course, it may have been coincidental.") With hindsight, I know that Castro would himself soon be a self-enriching dictator who tortured and killed people. But without hindsight, I probably would have been enthusiastic about the Cuban revolution at that point too. Lots of people were enthusiastic: The rebels had just ousted a thuggish tyrant, and it wasn't yet obvious that they were about to establish a different flavor of tyranny. When you watch that interview, take it as a glimpse at how Castro looked to many Americans right after he came to power.
Over the next decade, that support gradually fell away. By the time Castro proclaimed himself a Marxist-Leninist in 1961, he had lost most of his mainstream boosters. The hip lefties stuck with him for a while after that (listen to a young Bob Dylan singing "Who Killed Davey Moore" at Carnegie Hall in 1963, and check out the crowd's vigorous response when he invokes "Cuba's door/where boxing ain't allowed no more"), and much of the New Left spent the '60s imagining Cuba as an alternative to the Soviet model. But a steady drip-drip of ugly developments, especially Castro's endorsement of the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, lost him a lot of those New Left fans. By the '70s, overt support for Castro was much less common. It was still around, mind you—in 1975, Francis Ford Coppola wrote but never sent the dictator a letter that began with the words "Dear Fidel, I love you"—but it was considerably more rare than it had been in the '60s, let alone in those first months of 1959.
But it never disappeared. As a college student, back around 1989, I befriended the sole active member of Michigan's chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America. (I was, for all practical purposes, the sole active member of the student libertarian group, so we had that in common.) He sincerely believed in human rights and civil liberties; so when he gave a presentation on campus about a trip he'd just taken to Cuba, he took care to mention some of the more unsavory facts about the regime—remarking, for example, that it was forcibly confining people with HIV.
At that point an old fart by the wall piped up. "They're not imprisoned," he said. "They're quarantined." When I saw the apologetics that greeted Castro's death over the weekend, I thought of that guy.
* * * * *
Bonus links: I'd like to report that libertarians saw through the Castro regime quickly, and for the most part they did. But there was an element that enjoyed the romantic vision of an island standing up to the American empire, so some Fidelista sentiments did circulate through one wing of the movement in the '60s. When Che Guevara died in 1967, one former Objectivist sent Murray Rothbard a letter that declared, "I am sure that his memory will live to haunt both Latin America and the U.S. for decades to come. Long live Che!" And as late as 1971, future gun-rights maven Stephen Halbrook hailed Castro's network of informants, the Committees for the Defense of the Revolution, as an anarchistic alternative to "huge central bureaucracy." Points for novelty, I guess.
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The Jetsons' dog Astro was actually a metaphor for Castro, who would not be a lap dog to the American metaphor George, but rather force him to run a treadmill for eternity.
Discuss.
Would bang Judy.
Seconded. Jane too, for good measure.
I call dibs on Fergie Furbelow.
People didn't have the benefit of hindsight in 1959. They are forgiven. People in 2016, on the other hand.....
^^^ THIS
My own father fell for Castro's George Washington bit early on, and even entertained the idea of supporting La Revolucion. His sentiment may have been influenced by this video. After Castro came out as a pro-Soviet, Leninist commie, my disillusioned father had nothing but contempt for the guy, and began to wonder whether the John Birch Society was on to something.
The revolutionary has always been a romantic figure in the US. We are a nation founded by revolutionaries, after all.
But Nietzsche gets it right, yet again: "He who fights with monsters should be careful lest he thereby become a monster. And if thou gaze long into an abyss, the abyss will also gaze into thee."
You can hate what your country does in your name without apologizing for dictators just because they are marginally on your side.
amsoc doesn't understand....
Sure he does - he approves. Eggs, omelette.
He doesn't because he's unprincipled, incoherent and lacks any...le mot juste...
"But Nietzsche gets it right, yet again. . . ." Does he now, ape?
"When thy goest to woman, forget not thy whip."
Wise words.
10. Diogenes on Plato
(Stamping all over Plato's fancy carpet, Rick James style): "Thus I trample on the pride of Plato!"
Plato Is A Bore.
-Nietzsche
I really dig on Diogenes style, living in a jug and all that, but you know his neighbors in the next jug over probably hated him.
No kidding, one of the stories told about him was that he used to masturbate in public.
Life must be pretty nice up there in your ivory tower, huh?
Crusty?
I was talking about Diogenes. At least, I thought I was.
Ivory tower, eh? Talk about white privilege euphimism!
"Plato Is A Bore." How come when I told this to my Philosophy 101 prof, he gave me a D?
Something something dangerous plaything.
"But he was anti-imperialist!"
/american derpulist
Wait. Dylan saw through the murderer?
Also. E tu, Coppola? One can only hope he matured and evolved. You know, celebrities for the most part are indeed progressive louts and every time a story like that emerges it makes McCarthy not look so crazy.
'How dare you call me a communist? I LOVE YOU CASTRO!"
This photo has probably been making the rounds, but it's Castro in Moscow, sitting at a table with Kruschev and others, lighting a cigar while wearing two Rolex watches on one wrist.
Christ, what an asshole.
The real crime is being that gauche, two watches on a single wrist? my god.
Even worse = it was claimed he did it to keep track of time-zones - even though the watches he regularly wore included Rolex GMTs & Explorers, both of which have 2 time-zones available via the bezel or 3rd hand
another apocryphal theory - "he wore 2 in case one broke/stopped". makes less sense, because you wouldn't necessarily need to wear it to have a backup.
It's also worth noting that there's little need to constantly keep a different time zone in mind, to the point of doing something as awkward as wearing two watches.
The broken/stopped is silly, who has a watch emergency so bad they can't go a day without one? especially a dictator who has people who can keep him appraised of the time.
"Math is hard."
None of them communist revolutionaries have been particularly bright, except in fighting their opponents. Their core competencies were not in building societies but instead in tearing them down. It is not a coincidence that the latter is much easier than the former.
them communist revolutionaries
Beverly Hillbillies imitation unintentional
Get the quote right!
Math class is tough! -- Teen Talk Barbie
It's hard to tell if the other commies in that room are sucking up to Castro or wondering who let this bum in. He really played up that look forever, didn't he.
The Left = "first you kill the words; then you can kill whatever you want"
Every libertarian was the sole member of the libertarian group at their college, even if they were at the same college....
WEIRD, WILD STUFF
Hey-oh!
So Jesse with your call for an Anti-Trump Popular Front you are aware that you are in danger of doing exactly what the 1950s Cuban liberals did with Castro?
Interesting fact: the Cuban Communists initially supported Batista. Oh and they also supported Machado the Liberal dictator that Batista overthrew...
They like winners.
Useful idiots, or supremely useful idiots?
"The worse, the better."
It's an old commie revolutionary slogan going back to Marx's Critique of the Gotha Programme. The sentiment being that the worse the condition of the working class becomes, the closer the time is for the revolution to begin and prevail. Commies love it when working class suffers and they yearn for the time when the suffering becomes unbearable.
the Cuban Communists initially supported Batista
So I guess that's the opposite of what the 1950s Cuban liberals did, eh?
Is that supposed to be some sort of gotcha at me previous post?
Well, it deliberately inverts the previous post. I didn't rub my hands together with glee & shout "gotcha."
RE: When Fidel Castro Went on The Tonight Show and The Ed Sullivan Show
Castro was Ed Sullivan's greatest comedian of all time.
Too bad the laugh was on the Cuban people and the loony tune leftists here in the USA and around the world.
Does the Jack Paar-Castro interview still exist?
Yes. I saw it (or part of it) on a retrospective years ago. The Paley Center appears to have it.
My takeaway from this extraordinary video of Ed Sullivan's interview with Fidel Castro is that the mainstream media has been in the fake news business for longer than I thought.
Also, look at Whisper cover. Is Sullivan flashing a gang sign?
Barry Farber has more than once said the same thing: that, given what was known, he'd've still supported Castro in overthrowing Battista.
Nice story with real facts that people would otherwise not know.
Wow. Journalism.