Bimb 49 12 31 (016) The John Lomax Murder Case
# The John Lomax Murder Case
Picture this: December 31st, 1949. The ball is about to drop in Times Square, but on your radio dial, there's murder most foul in the glittering underbelly of Broadway itself. In "The John Lomax Murder Case," Detective Danny Clover finds himself threading the needle between crooked theater producers, desperate showgirls, and a corpse that refuses to stay buried—figuratively speaking. The victim is John Lomax, a Broadway fixture whose connections run as deep as his secrets, and every lead seems to pull our detective further into the neon-soaked shadows where legitimate theater business bleeds into racketeering. It's New Year's Eve, and there's no better time for the guilty to scramble, for motives to emerge from the darkness, and for one hard-boiled detective to separate truth from the opening night lies.
*Broadway Is My Beat* captured something essential about post-war American crime drama that still crackles across the decades. Airing on CBS during radio's golden age, the show used the Great White Way itself as both playground and crime scene, blending the glamour and grittiness of legitimate theater with the criminality lurking beneath. This particular episode, from the show's second season, represents the program at its peak—when writers had mastered the delicate balance between atmospheric mystery and genuine procedural detail, all delivered through the assured narration of star detectives and the evocative sound design that made listeners feel the rain-slicked pavement beneath their feet.
Whether you're a devoted collector of classic crime radio or a newcomer seeking to understand why audiences were riveted to their sets night after night, "The John Lomax Murder Case" is essential listening. Let Detective Clover guide you through a murder case where every suspect has a standing ovation to protect—and everything hinges on finding what really happened in the theater's darkened wings.