Fibber Mcgee And Molly 45 04 03 Fibber The Poet
# Fibber McGee and Molly: "Fibber the Poet" (April 3, 1945)
When Fibber McGee decides he's discovered his true calling as a poet, havoc descends upon the little house on Madison Street like a spring thunderstorm. In this delightful episode from 1945, our lovable fibber becomes convinced that his doggerel verses are destined for literary immortality, enlisting poor Molly as both muse and reluctant editor. What follows is a cascade of comic misunderstandings, with Fibber's preposterous poems and tall tales colliding spectacularly with reality. The creaky sound effects, the well-timed groans from the live studio audience, and the rapid-fire banter between husband and wife create an intimacy that only radio could deliver—you're right there in the living room as Molly rolls her eyes at yet another outrageous fabrication.
*Fibber McGee and Molly* was America's living room during the Golden Age of Radio, a weekly escape that ran for nearly a quarter-century and became NBC's most popular situation comedy. Jim and Marian Jordan's chemistry was incomparable; their ability to build gags around Fibber's chronic exaggeration and Molly's exasperated common sense made them beloved across the nation. By 1945, America was deep in World War II, and these broadcasts offered crucial moments of laughter and normalcy. The show's format—sketch-based humor, running gags, and unexpected guests—became the template for radio comedy itself, influencing everything that followed.
Tonight, settle in and experience radio as audiences did seventy-five years ago: no laugh track, no canned interruptions, just two talented performers and an orchestra creating an entire world from nothing but words and sound. Hear why *Fibber McGee and Molly* remained America's favorite comedy for so many golden years.