Here’s What Netflix’s ‘The Business of Drugs’ Host, Amaryllis Fox, Did for the CIA – Men’s Health

Longer than the nearly two-decades long War on Terror, notes Amaryllis Foxhost of Netflix's newest documentary series, The Business of Drugsis the War on Drugs (declared by Richard Nixon in 1971).

And whats been profitable for syndicates and cartels is also profitable for television and Netflix, which has an almost-unending queue of narcotics-based documentaries: Dope, Drug Lords, Inside the Real Narcos, the practically celebratory Have a Good Trip, the list goes on.

Helping us navigate this series of drug investigations is Fox, who introduces herself and her career:

Fox worked primarily on weapons. That algorithm she described used a variety of metrics to identify hotbeds for terrorist activitya ratio of hookah bars to madrassas and percentage beneath livable wage a border guard gets paid, Fox told the New York Times in an interview for her novel, Life Undercover: Coming of Age in the CIA. She was recruited by the agency at 22.

Life Undercover: Coming of Age in the CIA

For eight years, Fox posed as an art dealer abroad, recruiting assets for the CIA and helping prevent terror groups from acquiring weapons of mass destruction. (For a separate operation in Shanghai, Fox writes, she and her husband allowed themselves to be surveilled by the Chinese government while the CIA also watched; the CIA was spying on the spies.)

Fox left the agency in 2010. She now lives in Los Angeles with her daughter from a previous marriage; her now-husband is Robert F. Kennedy III, son of Robert Kennedy Jr. (the two met at Burning Man).

Foxs book is currently being adopted into a an Apple TV series starring Brie Larson. There is no release date yet.

The book met some criticism, however, when former intelligence officers questioned some of Foxs accounts (of course, Fox had to change details to protect sensitive information, an editorial decision she says accounts for any discrepancies.)

Since leaving the agency, Fox has covered current events, appearing on news outlets like CNN, Al Jazeera, and the BBC. She also co-hosted American Ripper on the History Channel.

Fox said she shot most of the Netflix series while in her third trimester of pregnancy; she gave birth in January 2019.

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Here's What Netflix's 'The Business of Drugs' Host, Amaryllis Fox, Did for the CIA - Men's Health

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