NSA in fiction
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The signals intelligence body of the United States, the National Security Agency (NSA), has featured in more and more spy fiction over the past two decades, as public awareness of its existence has grown.
Even by the standards of spy fiction, the NSA is probably the most inaccurately portrayed agency of the U.S. government. Most spy authors lack an understanding of cryptography and cryptanalysis, even at a non-mathematical layman's terms. They often portray NSA personnel conducting extensive, risky, violent field operations which, if actually performed, would most likely be done by other organizations such as the CIA or various branches of the US military.
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[edit] Books
- In the novel Zeitgeist by Bruce Sterling, the physical world could be shaped by ideas, and the NSA's orbiting cameras forced the normal rules to apply, and were used as a threat against the main character, who understood and used the true nature of the universe.
- The novel Digital Fortress by Dan Brown is based mainly in a (fictitious) part of the NSA's facility.
- In the 2003 novel Warpath by Jeffry Scott Hansen[1] the character of Terrance Stewart is an undercover NSA operative who infiltrates a Detroit drug gang.
- In the 2005 novel 'The Circumference of Darkness'[2] by Jack Henderson, the NSA attempts to coopt a hacker for its Total Information Awareness program.
- In the Tom Clancy novel Red Storm Rising the character Robert Toland is an NSA analayst. Typical for his books, he properly depicts the NSA as an agency specializing in SIGINT.
[edit] Films
- The 1992 film Sneakers features NSA agents.
- The 1997 film Good Will Hunting mentions the NSA offering Will Hunting a job as he turns them down.
- The 1998 film Enemy of the State shows rogue NSA agents tracking a man, using advanced microphones and real-time video from spy satellites.
- The 1998 film Mercury Rising, based on a book of the same name, shows multiple NSA agents working on a cryptography code known as "Mercury." It also shows the attempted assassination of a child who breaks the NSA's unbreakable encryption code that he found in a magazine.
- The 2002 film Die Another Day shows an NSA agent named Giacinta 'Jinx' Johnson working with James Bond to defeat a villain.
- The 2004 film The Incredibles featured NSA agents protecting the identities of superheroes and supplying them with technology. However, in this film NSA stood for National Supers Agency, which seems to only share its three-letter acronym.
- The 2004 film The Forgotten featured NSA agents working in conjunction with an alien race, allowing them to kidnap human children.
- The film XXX (and its sequel) has the main character being recruited by the NSA.
[edit] Games
- In the 2000 Nintendo 64 video game Perfect Dark, Trent Easton, the corrupt head of the agency, uses agents to do his dirty work.
- The NSA also was included as a base for the fictional character Sam Fisher, the main character in Ubisoft's video game series Splinter Cell.
- The game James Bond 007: Everything or Nothing featured NSA agent Mya Starling working with James Bond.
[edit] Radio
- In the radio drama Adventures in Odyssey, the main character's son (John would get hired to write programs from time to time) is a former employee of the NSA, a fact that plays into story arcs from 1989 through 1996.
[edit] Television
- In the 1968 Star Trek episode Assignment: Earth, Agent Gary Seven has an ID card from the NSA.
- The 1998-2001 UPN TV series Seven Days followed a fictional "special branch" of the NSA - "BACKSTEP" - involved with using time travel for national security.
- In the 1999 Highlander: The Raven episode The Rogue, Bert Myers claims to be from the NSA.
- Season 2 of the television series 24 featured the NSA as one of the organizations responsible for preventing the detonation of a nuclear bomb in Los Angeles. Roger Stanton, the fictional director of the NSA, is found to be a traitor, and the president ordered his interrogation and torture. In season 5 there is also a reference to communications intercepted by the NSA.
- In Numb3rs TV series, mathematician Charlie Eppes was mentioned in several episodes to have worked with the NSA as a consultant.
- In Jake 2.0 TV series, main protagonists work for the NSA.