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I Was a Communist for the FBI: The Unhappy Life and Times of Matt Cvetic,Used
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Who is Matt Cvetic? Hero? Scoundrel? Mole? The man who loosely provided the inspiration for the BGrade cult movie I Was a Communist for the FBI had a life that was marred by alcoholism, damaged expectations, and greed.Cvetic, at the request of the FBI, joined a Pittsburgh branch of the CPUSA in 1943. He became one of many plants in the Party during that decade and gained the nickname 'Pennsylvanias most significant mole.' However, because of his erratic behavior, the FBI fired him in 1950, at which time he surfaced and suddenly became a celebrity through his testimony before the HUAC hearing. Journalist Richard Rovere described Cvetic as a 'kept witness,' a term that fits those who 'made a business of being witnesses,' thereby 'befouling due process.'Cvetic was the subject of a multipart series in the Saturday Evening Post. The articles bordered on fiction, but they gave Cvetic the national exposure he needed to secure a screen deal. Warner Brothers bought the story, made the movie, and enhanced Cvetics celebrity as pop icon. In the mid1950s, Cvetic was discredited as a witness by the courts. His career ended and he found a new niche on the Radical Right, yet he died in 1962 after years of fighting to uphold his image with the media. Today Cvetics image is dimly remembered as he continues to fight 'the Red Menace' on latenight television.Leab juxtaposes Cvetics real life with his reel life. He chronicles his fall from grace, yet admits that Cvetics life offers fascinating and useful insights into the creation, merchandising, and distribution of a reckless professional witness. Leab also writes about Cvetics life prior to his involvement with the FBI, his glory days, and shows that there is much to be learned from the story of an 'antiCommunist icon.'
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