The Ideas Of March
On a fog-shrouded evening in 1940s Manhattan, a brilliant playwright sits alone in his study, wrestling with an idea that seems to possess a life of its own. What begins as creative inspiration curdles into something far more sinister when he discovers that his fictional murder plot—a tale he's crafted in meticulous detail—is being enacted in real life, scene by scene, by someone who has read his manuscript. As the body count rises and his characters step off the page and into the cold, hard world, our protagonist finds himself trapped in a labyrinth of his own making, unable to prove his innocence or stop the real-world killer who seems determined to follow his script to its final, tragic curtain. The Ideas of March is a masterwork of paranoia and irony, where the power of words becomes as dangerous as any weapon, and an artist discovers that some ideas, once unleashed, can never be reclaimed.
CBS Radio Mystery Theater thrived during the golden age of audio drama, bringing sophisticated, intelligent storytelling to millions of Americans during the 1970s and early 1980s—a period when television had seemingly made radio drama obsolete. Yet creator Himan Brown refused to let the medium die, crafting over 1,400 episodes that proved audiences still craved the intimacy and imaginative power of a well-told tale heard through speakers, where sound effects and voice acting could paint more vivid pictures than any camera ever could. This episode exemplifies the show's signature blend of psychological horror and literary cunning, exploring the blurred line between fiction and reality.
Tune in now and step into the shadow of artistic obsession. The Ideas of March awaits—a chilling reminder that some creations are far too dangerous to share.