Fibber Mcgee And Molly 36 03 23 Spring Cleaning
# Fibber McGee and Molly: Spring Cleaning (March 23, 1936)
As March winds sweep through Wistful Vista, Molly McGee decides it's time to tackle the house from top to bottom, and Fibber—never one to let opportunity pass—hatches a scheme to avoid the drudgery. What follows is a masterclass in domestic comedy as our hero weaves an increasingly implausible tale to justify his absence, while Molly cuts through his fabrications with withering wit and a rolling pin. Listeners will delight in the peculiar sound effects of household chaos: the crash of overturned furniture, the rattle of pots and pans, and the thundering arrival of the infamous hallway closet—that bottomless repository of absurdity that has become the show's signature running gag. The tension between Fibber's desperate improvisations and Molly's patient, exasperated pragmatism crackles with the energy of a marriage that knows each other's rhythms all too well.
By the late 1930s, *Fibber McGee and Molly* had become America's beloved comedy institution, a show that proved radio audiences craved characters as real and recognizable as their own neighbors. Jim and Marian Jordan's creation transcended typical vaudeville gags through genuine chemistry and sharp writing that captured the truth beneath the laughs—the everyday negotiations, affections, and compromises of married life. This particular episode, with its focus on spring cleaning, taps into a deeply American ritual, making the fantastical misadventures feel anchored in lived experience.
Don't miss this timeless comedy of errors, where an ordinary household chore becomes an occasion for Fibber's greatest flights of fancy and Molly's sharpest comebacks. Tune in and discover why millions of listeners made this show an appointment they never missed.