Casey49 11 17315theupholsterer
Picture this: the rain hammers against the windows of a seedy Manhattan apartment as Casey rushes through the darkened streets, his camera slung around his neck and his police scanner crackling with urgent dispatch calls. Tonight's mystery centers on an unassuming upholsterer found dead in his workshop, surrounded by fabric scraps and broken furniture—but what starts as a simple case of mistaken identity spirals into a web of blackmail, betrayal, and a killer hiding in plain sight. With nothing but his wits, his trusty Graflex camera, and his connections down at police headquarters, Casey must piece together the sinister truth before the real murderer strikes again. This is vintage crime drama at its finest—the kind that kept millions of listeners glued to their radios on November 17th, where every shadow could conceal a suspect and every clue leads deeper into the underworld.
Casey, Crime Photographer captured the post-war American imagination like few shows could, running for thirteen years on CBS and spawning a feature film. The program's genius lay in its protagonist—not a private eye or a cop, but a newspaper cameraman documenting the city's seedy underbelly through his lens. This was journalism noir, grounded in the gritty reality of 1940s New York, where the camera itself became as important as the crime-solving. Listeners loved Casey's everyman appeal and his ability to stumble into danger while simply doing his job.
Tune in now and experience the crackling tension, the period-perfect sound design, and the stellar performance that made this show a classic. "The Upholsterer" awaits—and somewhere in the Manhattan night, a killer is still at large.