Jon Stewart Departs The Daily Show Tonight

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This evening’s episode of The Daily Show will be Jon Stewart final (at least as the show’s anchor), but he has established The Daily Show as an institution and wrote a new chapter on political satire.

Some may recall The Daily Show’s first anchor Craig Kilborn who first chaired the show in the 1996. Kilborn — who was a funny man in his own right — kept the show lighthearted. When Stewart took over in 1999 he maintained similar content in his first few years, which were more playful than serious in a pre-9/11 and Iraq war era.

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The Daily Show really hit its stride in the early and mid 2000s when it began to lambaste, in a rather jovial manner, American politics and the way they are covered in the news media. The show was often at its best when Stewart revealed hidden truths through mockery, which is at the essence of satire. Here is the The Daily Show’s coverage of the 5th anniversary of the Iraq war. which exemplifies this satire.

The show and its format has become so popular that it has spawned a multitude of similar programs hosted by former members of The Daily Show: The Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore (my personal favorite), The Colbert Report (replaced by The Nightly Show as Coblert moved to CBS), and Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO). Jon Stewart has done to The Daily Show what Johnny Carson did to The Tonight show; they both established television institutions. Winning 18 Emmys did hurt either (Carson only won one).

Trevor Noah will be taking over The Daily Show this year and it will be tough to fill Stewart’s shoes, but Stewart has established that this show will be around for a long time to come no matter who sits in his chair.

Farewell Mr. Stewart.

Fleming: The Man Who Would Be Bond

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BBC America’s Ian Fleming four-part biopic Fleming: The Man Who Would Be Bond was released last week on Netflix. It originally premiered in February on BBC America. The series tells the story of Fleming’s experiences during World War II as a naval intelligence officer.

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As the title suggest, Fleming is illustrated to be as Bond would have been during the war. Although, the Bond novels all take place after the war and never reveal what Bond did during it, the series does a great deal by suggesting that Fleming’s experiences are the source of many of Bond’s exploits. This is far reaching as the real Fleming was admittedly a desk-jockey during the war.

The bitch is dead now.

The series opens with an older Ian Fleming, portrayed by Dominic Cooper, honeymooning with his wife at Fleming’s Jamaican home, Goldeneye. Fleming is seen pounding away on his typewriter, “The bitch is dead now.” These are the final words of Casino Royale, the first Bond novel. Casino Royale appears to be the template for many of Fleming’s experiences in this program. The series immediately flashes back to Fleming’s early years as a would be playboy in London before the war. He is seen gallivanting with his brother Peter in Europe, a travel writer in his own right, and later stumbling as he flirts with women. He even tries to order the traditional Bond martini, as revealed in Casino Royale, but the bartender refuses to make it — a not so Bond experience.

The series moves on quickly and introduces Admiral John Godfrey, portrayed by Samuel West. Fleming is recruited to naval intelligence under Godfrey. And this is where the series takes off, Fleming is characterized as a rebel who bends the rules to Godfreys dismay, but gets the job done — a reoccurring joke in the Bond films. But true to the Fleming experience, Admiral Godfrey is the man would be ‘M’. Fleming has admitted that Godfrey is the inspiration for Bond’s spymaster. The series also presents Godfrey’s personal secretary Miss Monday as the inspiration for ‘M’s personal secretary Miss Moneypenny. Although the series takes artist liberty with the characters, these Fleming experiences and influences are wildly reported. Even Fleming’s military title is the same as his creation — Commander Bond.

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Episode two begins two years later in 1940 with the war escalating in Europe, and the series returns to Casino Royale as a guide. Fleming and Miss Monday are in Lebanon and Fleming gets into a high-stakes game of Baccarat against a Nazi officer. Fleming attempts to disarm the Nazi of his money but ultimately fails. This is more-or-less the plot of Casino Royale. The series suggests that these events are the source material for the novel.

The series quickly veers back to Fleming’s experiences during the war. Fleming goes to France, which is quickly falling to the invading Nazis, to dispose of British documents before it is overran. He further attempts to persuade a French Admiral to turnover their ships to the British; opposed to surrendering the navy to the Germans. Fleming is way out of his jurisdiction and is bluffing. This illuminates Fleming’s skill and foresight to counter the Germans. Although reprimanded upon his return to England Fleming presents a new project to Admiral Godfrey: intelligence commandos — solider-spies that go in ahead of the front lines.

The program is essential a dramatized version of Fleming’s life that turns to the Bond novels for biographical context, which makes the series charming and fun to watch. The only downside of the series is that this same levity creates unbelievable characters and makes the show feel less like a biopic and more like a would be Bond film.

From Russia with Love

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From Russia with Love, Ian Fleming’s fifth James Bond novel bolts past its predecessors. The format, language and characters shift on a new track as it brings Bond to his most exotic location yet — Istanbul. The novel manifests more gadgets and violence that would become staples in the series both on paper and on the silver screen. Fleming also grants greater insight into Bond’s life — when he is not routing his foes. It is no surprise that this is the quintessential Bond book that helped popularize the series, and according to Time Magazine and the John F Kennedy library it was one of the former Presidents favorite books.

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This is the first Bond novel that is truly written in multiple parts,The Plan” and “The Execution.” Although Moonraker (1955) is separated into three parts it only serves the purpose of separating the three days over which the story takes place. From Russia with Love there is a massive change in format that foreshadows a conspiracy against Bond, opposed to a plot that he must foil as is the case in the previous novels.

The first half of the novel introduces SMERSH and its operators. Fleming writes, “SMERSH is the official murder organization of the Soviet government.” A contraction of two Russian words, SMERSH translates to “death to spies”. It consists of several Soviet intelligence and security ministries such as the MGB (the predecessor of the KGB). As in many bond novels, realty blends with fiction for great story telling; SMERSH, despite its cartoonishly ominous name, was a real organization, although it possibly disbanded by the time the novel was written (1956). This is the third Bond novel to involve SMERSH; the others being Casino Royale (1953) and Live and Let Die (1954).

It is no good killing a man unless you also destroy his reputation

In the novel, SMERSH constructs a plan to dispose of Bond and humiliate the British Secret Intelligence Service. They set in motion a trap to lure Bond with a woman who wants to defect and bring over a Spektor machine — the highly coveted Soviet cipher machine. This introduces Tatiana Romanova, a young MGB Corporal, who is instructed to fall in love with Bond in order to deceive him, hence the book’s title. Romanova lives up to other bond girls: she is beautiful, seductive, and dangerous. But most importantly it’s hard to tell whose side she is on, which is reminiscent of the first bond girl Vesper. In fact Tatiana’s surname is that of the last Royal family of Russia that were brutally executed during the 1917 Bolshevik revolution. This family name reinforces her duplicitous nature. Is she truly a Soviet or a double agent?

Fleming begins the second half of the novel a year after the events of Diamonds are Forever (1956). Tiffany Case, the last Bond girl, has left him, and “the blubbery arm of the soft life had Bond round the neck and they were slowly strangling him” (95). Bond here is weary from dullness, but more noteworthy he is suffering from heartbreak. Miss Case has left him for another man, and Bond acknowledges this is the source of his pain. Fleming also depicts the drudge of Bond’s routine. It is these early scenes of the second part of the novel that grants a glimpse into Bond’s life in London. This also highlights one of the better aspects of the novels over the films: James Bond is not a superhero. He loses, suffers and scars — scars that are highly visible. Later in novel Bond is disgusted by a murder that involves him, “Bond had never killed in cold blood, and he hadn’t liked watching, and helping, someone else do it” (175). This reveals a dimension of Bond that is unfamiliar. He finds the violence in his craft repulsive — he values human life. He questions why he sacrifices so much for his country and ponders why he cannot have lasting relationships with people.

Fleming ends an early chapter, “a curious quotation slipped from nowhere into Bond’s mind. Those whom the God wish to destroy, they first make bored.” This beautiful summarizes the lethargic state of Bond, and illuminates the talent of Fleming. He has Bond intentional misquote an old proverb, and at the same time Fleming reinvents it.

Q pulls out its first bag of tricks in this book — literally and figuratively. First off, Q is not a singular person as most often portrayed in the films by Desmond Llewelyn. Secondly, Q simple stands for quartermaster, and is a branch of the Secret Intelligence Service. Q branch has made appearances before but this time it develops its first significant gadget: an attaché case that hides all of the following: 50 rounds of .25 ammunition, a throwing knife, a cyanide pill, 50 gold sovereigns, and silencer for Bond’s Beretta. All told not bad for Q in 1957.

I quite agree with you about the Russians. They simply don’t understand the carrot. Only the stick has any affect

This is the first Bond novel set in a distant land. Fleming takes Bond to Istanbul where the East and West meet and the spy games differ immensely. Fleming writes of Istanbul like a travel guide revealing the hidden world of this ancient city, as Bond traverses a secret cavern beneath the Great Horn and is welcomed to a feasting Gypsy camp that becomes embattled by a Soviet allied gang. Fleming brings the story onto the historic Oriental Express that travels from Istanbul to Paris. These trains scene are possibly the best of the novel, as Fleming distorts the characters aboard causing the reader to question when the trap will be sprung, which leads to Bond becoming the first literary spy to fight on a train: a motif now commonplace in spy or action stories.

SPOILERS

Farewell, Mister Bond…. Count on SMERSH to have the last word.

What is likely the most unsettling event in the novel is the conclusion. When Bond finally foils the plot to assassinate him, he goes after his would-be assassin’s handler who is waiting in a hotel in Paris. This SMERSH agent, Rosa Klebb, kicks Bond in the shin with a retractable boot knife hidden in her sole that poisons him. Bond doesn’t realize he is poisoned as he is speaking to a fellow agent, the book concludes on him talking of his lovely Tatiana Romanova as he buckles to the ground. The book closes with James Bond dying on the floor. This ending departs drastically from the previous novels. Although Fleming began writing the sequel soon after finishing this novel, to the public Bond’s fate was unclear.

A little trivia

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The film version of From Russia with Love is the closest adaption of any of the novels in both story and events: one change is substituting SMERSH for SPECTRE, an organization not yet invented in the series. The most significant change from is that Bond is not poisoned at the finales although Rosa Klebb does try to stab him with the boot knife. According to Rotten Tomatoes, it is the highest rated of the Bond films.

The TV series Archer borrows heavily from Bond films and novels. The Archer character Katya Kazanova is an homage to Romanova, on top of their physical descriptions, they both fall in love with their respective spies and defect from Russia.