Moe Berg: The Spy Behind Home Plate

Daily Dose Documentary
Daily Dose Documentary
5.6 هزار بار بازدید - 2 سال پیش - Moe Berg was a mediocre
Moe Berg was a mediocre journeyman baseball player who leveraged his education and multilingualism to travel to Japan and provide espionage for the FDR administration ahead of the outbreak of WWII.

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Today's Daily Dose short history film covers Moe Berg, who spied for the U.S. government during a goodwill exhibition baseball series in pre-World War Two Japan. The filmmaker has included the original voice over script to further assist your understanding:

Today on The Daily Dose, The Spy Behind Home Plate.

Born into a Jewish immigrant family in 1902 Harlem New York, Morris “Moe” Berg excelled at both academics and baseball, first at NYU before matriculating to Princeton University, where he batted a respectable .337, while his batting average against archrivals Harvard and Yale soared to a dazzling .611. Graduating magna cum laude in 1923, Berg signed a $5,000 contract as a backup shortstop with the Brooklyn Robins—soon to be renamed the Brooklyn Dodgers—where one teammate recalled that “Berg could speak 12 languages, but he couldn’t hit in any of them.”

Exiled to the minor leagues after hitting a dismal .186 his first season with the pros, Berg spent the next two years developing as a player with the Minneapolis Millers, the Toledo Mud Hens and the Reading Keystones, earning his law degree from Columbia before signing with the Chicago White Sox from 1926 to 1930, the Cleveland Indians during the 1931 and 1934 seasons, the Washington Senators from 1932 to 1934 and later the Boston Red Sox from 1935 to 1939.

During his time inside the beltway, Berg became a frequent guest at embassy cocktail parties, where his good looks, quick wit and prodigious language skills caught the attention of the incoming administration of Franklin D. Roosevelt, and while history has failed to reveal who officially put him on the roster, Berg was selected to join an all-star team bound for an 18-game goodwill exhibition trip to Japan, where he carried a letter signed by U.S. Secretary of State Cordell Hull, instructing the staff at the American consulate in Tokyo to give the catcher “all due cooperation, official and otherwise.”

He also carried a 16mm movie camera provided by Movietone News, who contracted with Berg to film his trip for moviegoers back home. During his down time, Berg traded his baseball uniform for a kimono, and while the Japanese government strictly forbade photography of any kind by visiting foreigners, the six foot one baseball player slicked back his hair and boldly filmed much of Tokyo’s industrial and military infrastructure, including footage that would later be viewed by U.S. Army Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Jimmy Doolittle and his raiders before their now famous 1942 bombing raid on Tokyo, making Moe Berg, both a mediocre journeyman baseball player, and an excellent pre-war spy.

And there you have it, the spy behind home plate, today on The Daily Dose.
2 سال پیش در تاریخ 1401/10/21 منتشر شده است.
5,657 بـار بازدید شده
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