{"id":2315790,"date":"2024-07-30T02:36:01","date_gmt":"2024-07-30T06:36:01","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.conservativenewsdaily.net\/breaking-news\/how-ian-fleming-birthed-james-bond\/"},"modified":"2024-07-30T02:45:12","modified_gmt":"2024-07-30T06:45:12","slug":"how-ian-fleming-birthed-james-bond","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.conservativenewsdaily.net\/breaking-news\/how-ian-fleming-birthed-james-bond\/","title":{"rendered":"How Ian Fleming Birthed James Bond"},"content":{"rendered":"<aside class=\"mashsb-container mashsb-main mashsb-stretched\"><div class=\"mashsb-box\"><div class=\"mashsb-count mash-medium\" style=\"&quot;\"><div class=\"counts mashsbcount\">12<\/div><span class=\"mashsb-sharetext\">SHARES<\/span><\/div><div class=\"mashsb-buttons\"><a class=\"mashicon-facebook mash-medium mash-nomargin mashsb-noshadow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/sharer.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.conservativenewsdaily.net%2Fbreaking-news%2Fhow-ian-fleming-birthed-james-bond%2F\" target=\"_top\" rel=\"nofollow\"><span class=\"icon\"><\/span><span class=\"text\">Facebook<\/span><\/a><a class=\"mashicon-twitter mash-medium mash-nomargin mashsb-noshadow\" href=\"https:\/\/twitter.com\/intent\/tweet?text=&amp;url=https:\/\/www.conservativenewsdaily.net\/breaking-news\/?p=2315790&amp;via=ConservNewsDly\" target=\"_top\" rel=\"nofollow\"><span class=\"icon\"><\/span><span class=\"text\">Twitter<\/span><\/a><a class=\"mashicon-subscribe mash-medium mash-nomargin mashsb-noshadow\" href=\"#\" target=\"_top\" rel=\"nofollow\"><span class=\"icon\"><\/span><span class=\"text\">Subscribe<\/span><\/a><div class=\"onoffswitch2 mash-medium mashsb-noshadow\" style=\"display:none\"><\/div><\/div>\n            <\/div>\n                <div style=\"clear:both\"><\/div><\/aside>\n            <!-- Share buttons by mashshare.net - Version: 4.0.47--><p>The summary elaborates on the\u2063 authorized biography, &#8220;Ian Fleming: \u200cThe Complete \u2063Man,&#8221; written by Nicholas Shakespeare, which\u200d offers an in-depth exploration of the life of\u200c James Bond&#8217;s \u200bcreator, Ian Fleming.\u200b It\u200c highlights Fleming&#8217;s complex character,\u200b characterized by both charm and harshness, and provides \u200dinsight into his family background, particularly his father&#8217;s tragic death \u200cduring World\u2064 War I, which influenced Ian&#8217;s upbringing.<\/p>\n<p>Fleming&#8217;s early years were marked by\u2062 a lack \u200bof direction and a feeling of inferiority compared to his <a href=\"https:\/\/www.conservativenewsdaily.net\/breaking-news\/biden-begged-family-member-to-watch-yourself-in-business-dealings-report\/\" title=\"Biden Begged Family Member To \u2018Watch Yourself\u2019 In Business Dealings: Report\">older brother<\/a>.\u2063 However, his experiences as\u200b a war correspondent \u200bduring the rise of Stalin\u200b and the Nazis led \u200dhim to a\u2063 career in <a href=\"https:\/\/www.conservativenewsdaily.net\/breaking-news\/kevin-mccarthy-calls-on-pentagon-to-restore-nsa-general-counsel-michael-ellis-to-active-service\/\" title=\"Kevin McCarthy Calls on Pentagon to Restore NSA General Counsel Michael Ellis to Active Service\">naval intelligence<\/a> during World War II, where \u2064he played \u200ba\u2063 significant role in British military operations. This duality of bravery and\u2063 introspection shaped the\u2062 character of James Bond, a persona he \u2064crafted \u200bin part\u200d while living \u2062in\u200b Jamaica at his home, \u2063Goldeneye.<\/p>\n<p>His literary\u2064 journey was not without challenges; the initial reception of his Bond novels was lukewarm until external events and serendipitous circumstances\u2063 elevated their popularity, \u2063particularly after endorsements \u2064from\u200b influential \u2063figures like President John F. Kennedy.<\/p>\n<p>Despite his success, Fleming struggled with\u200c personal\u2063 issues, including a troubled marriage and bouts of depression. \u200cHis health deteriorated due to his lifestyle choices, leading to his untimely death at the \u200cage of 56. The\u2062 biography encapsulates Fleming&#8217;s legacy,\u2063 portraying the multifaceted individual behind one of the most iconic literary figures, \u200cand tracing \u2063the \u2064lasting impact of the James Bond series on popular culture.  <\/p>\n<p class=\"readmore\">\n    <button onclick=\"showReadMore()\" id=\"readmorebtn\">Read more&#8230;<\/button>\n<\/p>\n<hr id=\"line\">\n<span id=\"more\"><\/p>\n<div>\n<p>&ldquo;We have all the time in the world,&rdquo; James Bond tells his new bride Tracy in 1969&rsquo;s &ldquo;On Her Majesty&rsquo;s Secret Service,&rdquo; both moments before <em>and<\/em> after she dies at the hand of Bond&rsquo;s nemesis Ernst Stavro Blofield. Unfortunately, like Tracy, Bond&rsquo;s creator&mdash;a brilliant, troubled, complex writer who died at 56&mdash;never had as much time as he, or we might have liked.<\/p>\n<p>This is the first biography authorized by the Fleming estate. It gave English writer Nicholas Shakespeare unprecedented access to his subject&rsquo;s correspondence and to his remaining living family members and friends. In <em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.amazon.com\/Ian-Fleming-Complete-Nicholas-Shakespeare-ebook\/dp\/B0C782XL2X\">Ian Fleming: The Complete Man<\/a><\/em>, an engrossing and definitive biography, we encounter the man in full, contradictions and all.<\/p>\n<p>Fleming&rsquo;s compatriots remember him as a &ldquo;moody, harsh and withdrawn person, habitually rude and often cruel,&rdquo; &ldquo;the most generous, least malicious, most merry, yet most melancholy man I ever knew,&rdquo; &ldquo;most emphatically not a snob&rdquo; (his wife, Ann), &ldquo;a real snob&rdquo; (Sean Connery), &ldquo;completely and utterly irresistible to women,&rdquo; and someone whom &ldquo;nine out of ten women couldn&rsquo;t stand.&rdquo; How could one person contain such multitudes?<\/p>\n<h2>The British Intelligence Machine<\/h2>\n<p>Shakespeare begins by examining the Fleming clan&rsquo;s paterfamilias, Robert, a wildly successful self-made financier. Robert Fleming rose out of Scottish lowland poverty in the late 19th century, founding an important bank in the City of London. He conducted business with J.P. Morgan and other titans. <\/p>\n<p>His son Valentine, Ian&rsquo;s father, joined the upwardly mobile and self-abnegating <em>fin-de-siecle<\/em> English striving class, attending Eton, befriending Churchill&rsquo;s younger brother Jack, joining the family business, and winning a seat in Parliament. Val married Eve, a boisterous and outspoken social climber who bore him four sons. Ian was the second.<\/p>\n<p>Tragedy struck during World War I in 1917 when the courageous Val, a major in the Oxfordshire Hussars who had already survived multiple shellings, returned to the battlefield in France and fell under heavy German bombardment in the Somme. Churchill eulogized him in the <em>Times<\/em>. A bereft nine-year-old Ian maintained the proverbial stiff upper lip and soon followed his late father&rsquo;s example, enrolling in Eton, where he excelled athletically but not academically. He then washed out of the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.conservativenewsdaily.net\/breaking-news\/biden-drops-plan-to-track-chinese-communist-influence-in-american-schools-report\/\" title=\"Biden Drops Plan To Track Chinese Communist Influence In American Schools: Report\">military academy<\/a> at Sandhurst, relocating to the hamlet of Kitzbuhel in the Austrian Tyrol, where an expatriate English couple took him in.<\/p>\n<p>Aimless and floundering, the teenaged Fleming found love, writing, and inner peace in the Alps. He was introduced there to Alfred Adler, the renowned psychologist and acolyte of Freud, who diagnosed him with classic &ldquo;second-child syndrome,&rdquo; a feeling of inferiority to his dashing older brother Peter. <\/p>\n<p>A more confident, mature, and self-aware Ian returned to London, where he began reporting for Reuters, training that he found &ldquo;much more valuable to me than all the reading in English literature I did at Eton&rdquo; and that &ldquo;taught him to write fast and above all be accurate.&rdquo; His assignment took him to Moscow, where he covered a notorious 1933 Stalinist show trial in a series of articles that brought him recognition and instilled both a knowledge of and a loathing for the authoritarian Soviet system. (He was also sent to Berlin to report on Hitler&rsquo;s triumphant election as chancellor.)<\/p>\n<p>When his grandfather passed away and left nothing to his branch of the family, Ian landed a partnership at a city firm and lived a charmed bachelor&rsquo;s life in Belgravia. But as the Nazi storm gathered, Fleming found himself called to duty, and at some point in the late 1930s applied for and received a commission in naval intelligence. <\/p>\n<p>Even now, nearly 90 years later, his role in the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.conservativenewsdaily.net\/breaking-news\/fake-kamala-got-loomered-laura-loomer-catches-kamala-harris-body-double-at-palm-beach-polling-place-video-photos\/\" title=\"FAKE KAMALA GOT LOOMERED! --Laura Loomer Catches Kamala Harris BODY DOUBLE at Palm Beach Polling Place! (VIDEO -PHOTOS)\">secret service<\/a> remains shrouded in secrecy. Shakespeare surveys military historians who&rsquo;ve unanimously assessed that he &ldquo;was at the very centre of the British intelligence machine.&rdquo; He&rsquo;s even credited, persuasively, with influencing the Americans&rsquo; decision to create the Office of Strategic Services.<\/p>\n<p>Specifically, Commander Fleming created and ran the Number 30 Assault Unit, nicknamed 30AU. It was a group of daring commandos who penetrated enemy lines to secure ciphers, encoding machines, and confidential documents, including during the D-Day invasion. One of their most valuable discoveries was the trove of top-secret Nazi naval materials they rescued in the war&rsquo;s waning days from the storied German castle in Tambach, days before the Soviets arrived. While Fleming&rsquo;s wartime travels never put him directly in harm&rsquo;s way, he lost many close to him, including school friends, men under his command, other Service colleagues, and, worst of all, his younger brother Michael, who fell during the Dunkirk evacuation.<\/p>\n<p>The war birthed much of the Bond series. Fleming&rsquo;s boss, Rear-Admiral John Godfrey, whom he praised for his &ldquo;brilliant, unconventional, and labyrinthine mind,&rdquo; was unmistakably the model for &ldquo;M,&rdquo; Bond&rsquo;s handler and superior. Many of their (reported) stratagems involved the use of gadgetry and deception and employed the services of unsavory characters (Guy Ritchie&rsquo;s latest film, &ldquo;The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare,&rdquo; features all of these motifs and depicts a young Fleming toiling behind the scenes in the Admiralty). <\/p>\n<p>The war even furnished the name James Bond in the form of a lieutenant who rescued Peter Fleming when disaster struck his own clandestine intelligence-gathering operation in Greece. A historian of Fleming&rsquo;s unit would later say, of the 007 books, &ldquo;They work because he&rsquo;s a storyteller. They are firmly rooted in convincing details. What we see as inventiveness is part of his naval knowledge.&rdquo; Shakespeare puts it differently: &ldquo;By converting his lived experience into fiction, he released the burden of that knowledge.&rdquo;<\/p>\n<h2>The Quintessential Western Hero<\/h2>\n<p>Shortly after VE Day, Fleming returned to civilian life. He took up a plum posting as foreign manager for the Mercury newspaper group, which owned the <em>Times<\/em> and other outlets. It allowed him to continue to travel widely and, Shakespeare suspects, continue spying, however informally. <\/p>\n<p>But scandal soon cost him his vocation while winning him a wife: his patron, the Viscount Kemsley, discovered Fleming&rsquo;s adulterous relationship with Ann Rothermere when her cuckolded aristocratic husband revealed all to his friend Kemsley, who then essentially disowned Fleming. When Ann divorced and found herself pregnant with Fleming&rsquo;s child, Caspar, they wed.<\/p>\n<p>In parallel, Fleming had grown besotted with Jamaica and purchased a modest bungalow on its north shore that he christened Goldeneye, a property that would later entertain the likes of Graham Greene, Truman Capote, Lucien Freud, Errol Flynn, and Evelyn Waugh. It was there, in 1952, that Fleming brought to life James Bond, a composite of the many figures who&rsquo;d populated his professional and personal lives. <\/p>\n<p>Beginning with <em>Casino Royale<\/em>, over the next 12 years until his untimely death he would sell millions of copies of his fast-paced, gripping thrillers that would later become beloved films. Bond became the quintessential Western hero: famously elegant, dashing, audacious, clever, and committed to defending freedom.<\/p>\n<p>The series failed to take off at first. Of the first five Bond books, none sold more than 12,000 copies in hardback, and by 1955, he had earned less than &pound;2,000 in royalties, forcing him to hold on to his dead-end job at the <em>Times<\/em>. He despaired of &ldquo;that ass Bond&rdquo; and planned to kill him off. <\/p>\n<p>Then good fortune struck: the 1956 Suez Crisis drove an addled Prime Minister Anthony Eden to convalesce at Goldeneye, and the publicity rocketed Bond to instant popularity. The <em>Express<\/em> agreed to serialize the next novel, and when <em>From Russia with Love<\/em> emerged, it sold tens of thousands of copies. Bond&rsquo;s fame migrated stateside in 1960 when a young Massachusetts senator running for president, &ldquo;mesmerised&rdquo; by Fleming, invited him to Georgetown for an extended discussion. Once inaugurated, JFK told <em>Life<\/em> magazine he counted <em>From Russia <\/em>among his ten favorite books (he and RFK even plotted with Fleming outlandish ways to assassinate Castro).<\/p>\n<p>After that, it was off to the races: <em>Thunderball<\/em>&rsquo;s first U.S. printing sold out in a week. A massive movie deal with United Artists followed, with a little-known, charming, and charismatic working-class Scottish actor named Sean Connery chosen to play the hero. &ldquo;Dr. No&rdquo; opened to massive success in 1962, juicing sales of the other Bond books and related merchandise, including toothpaste, snorkels, and even lingerie. Other blockbusters followed, and the franchise flourishes into the 2020s. By some estimates, more than half the world&rsquo;s population has seen a Bond film, and more than 100 million of his books have been sold.<\/p>\n<p>Fleming scarcely managed to enjoy his success. His and Ann&rsquo;s marriage was troubled from the start, with both spouses conducting long-running affairs. They quarreled over money (even with the book and film revenue, they spent millions renovating a Wiltshire manor), the anxious Caspar (who would later take his own life), and pretty much everything else. <\/p>\n<p>He fell out with Kevin McLory, the ne&rsquo;er-do-well Irish producer to whom he&rsquo;d assigned early film rights, who failed to deliver, and who, embittered, sued Fleming. Depression gripped him, especially later in life, when he commissioned from friends entries into <em>The Gloom Book<\/em>. These struggles, along with copious smoking and drinking, exacted a heavy toll on his health, largely incapacitating him and contributing to his premature demise. He succumbed to heart disease in 1964 after one final round on his beloved Royal St. George&rsquo;s golf course.<\/p>\n<h2>Bond&rsquo;s Remarkable Longevity<\/h2>\n<p>Like Fleming, Shakespeare&rsquo;s crisp prose, combined with his many chapter breaks (70, across 700 pages), propels the narrative across his subject&rsquo;s short but highly eventful life. Shakespeare also casts light on underappreciated aspects of Fleming&rsquo;s career, including that 007 was originally named &ldquo;James Secretan&rdquo;; Fleming sold to MGM for &pound;1 the rights to a storyline that would become &ldquo;The Man from U.N.C.L.E.&rdquo; and, later, &ldquo;Charlie&rsquo;s Angels&rdquo;; Lee Harvey Oswald adored the series and so did the president he assassinated; and Fleming was an avid if secretive collector of rare, first-edition books.<\/p>\n<p>The book also successfully appraises its subject&rsquo;s cultural and geopolitical importance. &ldquo;It is impossible to overstate [Fleming&rsquo;s and Bond&rsquo;s] quite extraordinary influence in making something English seem important in the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.conservativenewsdaily.net\/breaking-news\/im-a-democrat-who-thinks-bidens-anti-democratic-rhetoric-has-gone-too-far\/\" title=\"I\u2019m A Democrat Who Thinks Biden\u2019s Anti-Democratic Rhetoric Has Gone Too Far\">21st-century world<\/a>. James Bond has a stature to which no modern prime minister, nor royal, nor indeed anything can lay claim,&rdquo; historian Max Hastings tells Shakespeare. <\/p>\n<p>The timing of Bond&rsquo;s emergence, too, was no coincidence. &ldquo;Britain had lost an empire,&rdquo; Shakespeare writes of the 1950s and early 1960s, &ldquo;yet all at once, through Bond, it discovered a different way of being reunited with the world.&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p>Finally, the series&rsquo; remarkable longevity attests to the enduring virtues of its hero and his creator. In some quarters of the post-modern world, integrity, daring, loyalty, and patriotism may be dead, but in the highly entertaining and profoundly inspiring literary and cinematic universe Ian Fleming created&mdash;so deeply rooted in the heroic, multifarious author&rsquo;s personal and professional upbringing and so adroitly documented here by his extraordinary biographer&mdash;they still reign supreme.<\/p>\n<hr>\n<p>      Michael M. Rosen is an attorney and writer in Israel and an adjunct fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. Reach him at michaelmrosen@yahoo.com.<\/p>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<p><\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>In the 1969 film &#8220;On Her Majesty&#8217;s Secret Service,&#8221; James Bond tells his new wife Tracy, \u201cWe have all the time in the world,\u201d just moments before and after she is killed by his arch-enemy, Ernst Stavro Blofeld. Regrettably, much like Tracy, Bond\u2019s creator\u2014an exceptionally talented yet troubled writer who passed away at 56\u2014also did not have as much time as he or we would have wished. This biography is the first to be authorized by Fleming&#8217;s estate and provides English author Nicholas Shakespeare with unique access to Fleming\u2019s letters and surviving family members and friends. In &#8220;Ian Fleming: The Complete Man,&#8221; an engaging and comprehensive biography, we see a full portrayal of Fleming, complete with his contradictions.<\/p>\n<p>Fleming&#8217;s contemporaries describe him in various ways: some recall him as a \u201cmoody, harsh and withdrawn person\u201d who was often rude or cruel; others view him as \u201cthe most generous, least malicious, most merry yet most melancholy man I ever knew\u201d; one described him as \u201cmost emphatically not a snob\u201d (his wife Ann), while Sean Connery labeled him \u201ca real snob.\u201d He was seen as someone who was both \u201ccompletely irresistible to women\u201d yet also someone whom \u201cnine out of ten women couldn\u2019t stand.\u201d How could one individual embody such diverse traits?<\/p>\n<p>Shakespeare begins by exploring Robert Fleming, Ian\u2019s father\u2014a self-made financier who rose from poverty in Scotland during the late 19th century to establish an influential bank in London. Robert conducted business with major figures like J.P. Morgan.<\/p>\n<p>Ian\u2019s father Valentine followed a path of upward mobility typical of their class; he attended Eton, befriended Churchill&#8217;s brother Jack, joined the family business and became a Member of Parliament. Val married Eve Rothermere\u2014a vibrant social climber\u2014and they had four sons; Ian was their second child.<\/p>\n<p>Tragedy struck during World War I when Val died on the battlefield in France after already surviving multiple attacks. Churchill honored him publicly in The Times. A grieving nine-year-old Ian maintained composure but soon mirrored his father&#8217;s path by enrolling at Eton where he excelled athletically but struggled academically before failing out of Sandhurst military academy. He then moved to Kitzbuhel in Austria where an expatriate couple took care of him.<\/p>\n<p>During this aimless period in his teenage years spent among the Alps, Fleming discovered love for writing and found inner peace while being diagnosed with classic &#8220;second-child syndrome&#8221; due to feelings of inferiority compared to his charismatic older brother Peter.<\/p>\n<p>Returning more confident to London after this transformative experience led Ian into journalism at Reuters\u2014an opportunity he valued more than any academic education from Eton\u2014as it taught him speediness and accuracy essential for reporting on significant events like Stalinist trials that shaped his views on authoritarianism.<\/p>\n<p>After inheriting nothing from his grandfather&#8217;s estate but landing a partnership at a city firm allowed for an enjoyable bachelor life until WWII prompted enlistment into naval intelligence where details about his role remain largely classified even today; historians agree that he played a crucial part within British intelligence operations including influencing American strategies leading up to OSS formation.<\/p>\n<p>As Commander during wartime efforts overseeing Number 30 Assault Unit (30AU)\u2014a group tasked with securing vital enemy documents\u2014Fleming experienced loss firsthand through friends\u2019 deaths including that of younger brother Michael during Dunkirk evacuation which deeply affected him emotionally while inspiring elements found later within Bond series narratives crafted post-war alongside experiences shared under Rear-Admiral John Godfrey\u2014the model behind M character known for unconventional tactics involving gadgets &amp; deception reminiscent throughout cinematic portrayals today still thriving decades later despite initial struggles selling early novels until public interest surged following Suez Crisis publicity leading ultimately towards massive success across media platforms worldwide showcasing enduring appeal stemming directly back towards original creation rooted firmly within personal history documented thoroughly here through Shakespeare\u2019s insightful lens capturing complexities surrounding both man &amp; myth alike over span covering nearly entire lifetime filled richly textured experiences shaping legacy left behind long after passing away prematurely due heart disease shortly following final round played upon beloved golf course Royal St George\u2019s prior departure leaving indelible mark upon culture forevermore immortalized via iconic figure known simply now only evermore fondly remembered simply just\u2026James Bond!<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":751,"featured_media":2315791,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_mo_disable_npp":"","fifu_image_url":"https:\/\/thefederalist.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/07\/Ian-Fleming-Book-Review-cover-image.png","fifu_image_alt":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[546],"tags":[36607,36603,36604,36605,36606],"class_list":["post-2315790","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-the-federalist","tag-author-biography","tag-ian-fleming","tag-james-bond","tag-literary-history","tag-spy-fiction"],"fifu_image_url":"https:\/\/thefederalist.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/07\/Ian-Fleming-Book-Review-cover-image.png","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.conservativenewsdaily.net\/breaking-news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2315790","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.conservativenewsdaily.net\/breaking-news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.conservativenewsdaily.net\/breaking-news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.conservativenewsdaily.net\/breaking-news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/751"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.conservativenewsdaily.net\/breaking-news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2315790"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.conservativenewsdaily.net\/breaking-news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2315790\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.conservativenewsdaily.net\/breaking-news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/2315791"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.conservativenewsdaily.net\/breaking-news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2315790"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.conservativenewsdaily.net\/breaking-news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2315790"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.conservativenewsdaily.net\/breaking-news\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2315790"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}