Dangerous Assignment 49 07 16 002 Sunken Ships
# Sunken Ships
Picture yourself huddled close to your radio on a July evening in 1949, the amber glow of the dial casting shadows across your living room as Steve Mitchell's gravelly voice cuts through the static. Tonight, he's diving—quite literally—into the mystery of *Sunken Ships*, where the ocean floor guards secrets that powerful men would kill to keep buried. A salvage operation in dangerous waters becomes a deadly game of cat and mouse as Mitchell discovers that recovering lost cargo isn't the real mission at all. Someone wants these wrecks to stay forgotten, and they're willing to eliminate anyone who gets too close to the truth. The sound design crackles with authenticity: the groan of metal hulls, the ominous lap of black water, coded radio transmissions that lead nowhere good. Every shadow could conceal a bullet; every deal could be a double-cross. You won't know if Mitchell will surface alive until the final commercial break fades away.
*Dangerous Assignment* was born from post-war restlessness, when returning servicemen craved thrills and exotic locales without leaving their living rooms. The show's creator, Phillips Lord, crafted a vehicle for genuine adventure—Mitchell wasn't a costumed superhero but a freelance troubleshooter tackling espionage, smuggling, and geopolitics with the grit of a real operative. Each episode was international intrigue at its finest, reflecting Cold War anxieties and American curiosity about a suddenly small world. Brian Donlevy's world-weary interpretation of Steve Mitchell made every assignment feel credible, urgent, and perilously personal.
Tune in to *Sunken Ships* and discover why radio audiences made *Dangerous Assignment* a syndication powerhouse. In thirty minutes, you'll understand why people believed anything could happen on the other side of the world—especially when Steve Mitchell was involved.