Night Of The Howling Dog
When darkness falls on the isolated Blackwood estate, no locked door or barred window can keep out the terror that stalks the foggy moors. In this chilling installment of CBS Radio Mystery Theater, a family finds itself imprisoned by something far more sinister than any human intruder—a creature whose anguished howls pierce the night, growing closer with each passing hour. As the family's nerves fray and suspicion turns neighbor against neighbor, listeners will be drawn into a claustrophobic nightmare where the boundary between animal instinct and human madness becomes perilously thin. The brilliant sound design—those bone-chilling howls echoing through the static, the creak of floorboards, the frantic whispered conversations—creates an atmosphere of mounting dread that will keep you glued to your radio well past midnight.
CBS Radio Mystery Theater revolutionized supernatural storytelling for a generation weaned on vintage pulp tales and Hitchcockian thrills. Running from 1974 to 1982, the series brought theatrical production values and literary ambition to radio drama precisely when the medium seemed destined for extinction. Despite the episode's 1940s setting, it represents the show's golden era—when writers understood that radio's greatest power lay not in what you could show, but in what you could make listeners imagine. Each episode was a masterclass in atmospheric tension, featuring seasoned character actors and sound technicians who understood that a well-placed pause or distant cry could be more terrifying than any visual effect.
Settle into your chair, dim the lights, and prepare yourself for a journey into the unknown. "Night Of The Howling Dog" awaits—a reminder of radio's golden age when audiences gathered around their sets to experience fear transmitted through nothing but sound and imagination.