“Team America: World Police” (2004) is a comedy with the premise that Actors make the best secret agents. They can go anywhere, they have special access, and no one would expect them. Sure it’s a funny idea, but is it really that far-fetched?

John Ford and Julia Childs are just two of the 24,000 people that worked with the Office of Strategic Services, the precursor to the Central Intelligence Agency. Ronald Reagan left the film world to enter politics, ultimately becoming the President of the United States of America, and selected George H. W. Bush, former head of the CIA to be the Vice President. Michelle Obama announced the winner of the 2013 Academy Award for Best Picture, choosing “Argo” (2012) over “Zero Dark Thirty” (2012). “Argo” was specifically about the historical collusion between the CIA and Hollywood, and “Zero Dark Thirty” was seemingly ghost written by the Company.

Recently we have producer Arnon Milchan admitting he is an Israeli spy, and CIA whistleblower John Rizzo discussing the famous actor who offered to work for the CIA in exchange for $50,000 worth of the best Cocaine they could find.

For some people, any discussion of these matters will always be a conspiracy theory, even when there are documents and admissions. However, there will also be those who wonder how and why exactly did the production of “World War Z” (2013) mistakenly ship 85 functional assault rifles into Budapest, or if there is an extra unstated purpose behind the Satellite Sentinel Project.

If history is to be written by the victors, there needs to be a writer, or maybe a writer, producer, director, some actors, and definitely an editor. As the authority on hidden Hollywood, Kenneth Anger, put it, “After all, we do know a lot about our defeated enemy.”