Cisco Kid 53 11 10 137 Angry Uncles
# Cisco Kid Episode: Angry Uncles
The dusty trails of the Southwest come alive with intrigue and danger as the Cisco Kid and his faithful companion Pancho stumble upon a family feud that threatens to explode into bloodshed. When a wealthy ranchero's brothers clash over inheritance and honor, accusations fly like bullets, and an innocent man stands accused of a crime he didn't commit. Our charming caballero must navigate the treacherous waters of family pride and old grudges, using his quick wit and silver tongue to uncover the truth before justice miscarries. With a mysterious letter, a disputed will, and tempers running hotter than a desert noon, "Angry Uncles" delivers the kind of morally complex storytelling that made *The Cisco Kid* far more than simple shoot-'em-up entertainment—it's a character study wrapped in western adventure.
Since its debut in 1942, *The Cisco Kid* carved out a unique niche in radio drama by presenting a Spanish-Mexican hero during an era when Hollywood rarely offered Latino protagonists in heroic roles. Unlike the crude stereotypes that plagued contemporary westerns, Cisco emerged as cultured, intelligent, and genuinely sympathetic to the struggles of common people against corruption and injustice. This 1940s episode exemplifies the show's strength: weaving genuine human conflict into thrilling narratives while celebrating a character who outsmarted adversaries through cleverness rather than violence alone. The chemistry between Jackson Beck's smooth Cisco and Leo Carrillo's endearingly bumbling Pancho created radio magic that audiences tuned in for night after night.
Step back into an evening in the 1940s and experience *The Cisco Kid* as millions once did—gathered around their radios, transported to a romanticized West where heroism meant standing up for what's right, even when family ties pulled in the opposite direction. "Angry Uncles" awaits.