Bimb 51 07 22 (072) The David Blaine Murder Case
# The David Blaine Murder Case
Picture this: a humid July night in Manhattan, and Detective Danny Halloran is standing over a corpse in a midtown hotel room, the neon glow from Broadway bleeding through the venetian blinds. The victim is David Blaine, a small-time theater producer with big-time connections—and bigger enemies. As Halloran's gravelly voice narrates the investigation, you'll hear the ambient hum of the city itself: distant sirens, the clatter of the El train overhead, the muffled jazz drifting up from a speakeasy three floors down. This episode plunges listeners into the shadowy intersection of show business and organized crime, where a single murder backstage can unravel a web of blackmail, betrayal, and blood debts stretching from the Bowery to Park Avenue.
*Broadway Is My Beat* captured the authentic grit of New York in the early 1950s with uncanny precision, and this episode exemplifies why the show earned its devoted following. The writers crafted a New York that was simultaneously glamorous and corrupt—where chorus girls and mobsters rubbed shoulders at the same nightclubs, and where the bright marquees on 42nd Street cast shadows deep enough to hide murder. With its jazz-inflected score, snappy dialogue, and the steady presence of lead actor Larry Thor as the world-weary Halloran, the show offered listeners a visceral escape into the mean streets of America's greatest city.
Tune in to "The David Blaine Murder Case" and let the sounds of 1949 New York wash over you. Adjust your dial, settle into your favorite chair, and prepare to solve a murder that only Broadway could orchestrate. This is *Broadway Is My Beat*—where crime never takes a night off.