Fibber Mcgee And Molly 43 04 27 Black Market Meat
# Fibber McGee and Molly – "Black Market Meat" (April 27, 1943)
Step into the McGees' homey living room on Maple Avenue as wartime rationing reaches its most absurd—Fibber has somehow gotten his hands on a mysterious cut of meat from a shadier-than-usual source, and Molly smells trouble in more ways than one. What follows is a delicious tangle of neighborly eavesdropping, hasty excuses, and Fibber's increasingly elaborate fabrications as he tries to keep his black market score hidden from the authorities and, more importantly, from his sharp-witted wife. With the great Doc Gamble and Gildersleeve lurking about, plus the perpetual threat of discovery, tensions mount in that uniquely McGee way—where comedy bubbles up from genuine domestic panic. The writing crackles with period authenticity, capturing the real anxieties Americans faced about wartime shortages while mining pure comic gold from Fibber's desperation.
By 1943, *Fibber McGee and Molly* had become America's favorite married couple, their half-hour adventures a weekly escape during the darkest days of the war. Created by Don Quinn, the show succeeded because it grounded its humor in recognizable middle-class life—the nosy neighbors, the creaky closet that always erupted in a cacophony of sound effects, the verbal sparring between husband and wife that felt both loving and razor-sharp. This episode exemplifies the show's genius for turning everyday anxieties into comedy gold; rationing was no joking matter for listeners, yet the McGees made it laugh-out-loud funny while remaining genuinely relatable.
Whether you're a radio enthusiast or new to the Golden Age of Comedy, this episode demonstrates why *Fibber McGee and Molly* captivated millions. Tune in to hear how Fibber's latest scheme unravels, and rediscover the wit and warmth that made this show a national treasure.