The Great Gildersleeve 51 04 04 (402) Bullard Needs Boat Access
# The Great Gildersleeve: Bullard Needs Boat Access
Picture yourself settling into your favorite chair on an April evening in 1951, tuning the dial to NBC just as the familiar theme music swells—and Throckmorton P. Gildersleeve's distinctive voice booms into your living room with all the bluster and good-natured scheming you've come to know and love. In this episode, the great man himself finds himself entangled in one of his most delightfully absurd predicaments yet: neighbor Bullard needs access to the water, and naturally, Gildy's involved. What begins as a simple neighborly request spirals into a comedy of misunderstandings, elaborate plans, and the kind of well-intentioned chaos that only Gildersleeve can orchestrate. Expect the usual supporting cast to muddle through—Judge Hooker, Leroy, and the rest of the Summerfield gang—each adding their own layer of confusion to the proceedings. The humor crackles with that distinctly American small-town sensibility: property lines, social standing, and the eternal struggle between doing right and doing what seems easiest.
The Great Gildersleeve stands as one of radio's most enduring comedies, spun off from the character's success on *Fibber McGee and Molly* into his own thriving universe. Hal Peary's creation became the template for countless sitcoms to come—the bumbling authority figure whose heart outweighs his common sense, forever creating mayhem while maintaining absolute confidence in his own wisdom. These episodes are windows into 1940s-50s American life: the humor, the values, the casual pace of small-town existence before television reshaped entertainment forever.
Don't miss this classic slice of American radio comedy. Tune in and discover why audiences made Gildersleeve a household name—where every episode promised laughter, warmth, and the reassuring voice of a man who always meant well, even when everything went wonderfully wrong.