Fibber Mcgee And Molly 39 02 21 After Dinner Speaker
# Fibber McGee and Molly: "After Dinner Speaker"
Picture this: it's a quiet evening at 79 Maple Street when opportunity comes knocking at the McGees' door. Fibber's been invited to deliver an after-dinner speech at the town's prestigious civic club—a chance to finally prove himself as an orator of distinction. What could possibly go wrong? Everything, naturally. As Molly wisely observes from the sidelines, her husband's talents for embellishment and self-promotion are about to collide spectacularly with reality. Listeners will delight in the mounting chaos as Fibber's preparations spiral into increasingly ridiculous mishaps, punctuated by the show's famous sound effects and the perfectly-timed comic interventions from the McGees' cast of neighborhood characters. By airtime, the question isn't whether Fibber will give a good speech—it's whether he'll survive long enough to reach the podium.
For nearly a quarter-century, *Fibber McGee and Molly* remained one of America's most beloved radio programs, and episodes like this one show why. Jim and Marian Jordan created something genuinely magical: a show grounded in the recognizable rhythms of middle-class American life, yet perpetually surprised by the comic possibilities lurking within everyday situations. In 1940, as the nation faced uncertain times, families gathered around their radio sets to spend thirty minutes with characters who felt like neighbors—genuine, flawed, and utterly endearing. The show's humor transcended slapstick; it was rooted in character and the warm recognition of how people actually behave when ambition meets circumstance.
Don't miss this masterclass in radio comedy. These are the broadcasts that defined the medium, that brought laughter into living rooms across America, and that proved radio's greatest asset was the unlimited stage of the imagination. Tune in to hear why Fibber McGee remained appointment listening for over two decades.