The Great Gildersleeve 52 09 24 (465) Hooker And Peavey Are Feuding
# The Great Gildersleeve: Hooker and Peavey Are Feuding
Picture this: it's a warm September evening in 1949, and across America, families are settling into their living rooms as the familiar theme music of *The Great Gildersleeve* crackles through their radio speakers. Tonight, the town of Summerfield is in an uproar—two of its most prominent citizens, the cantankerous Hooker and the stubborn Peavey, have locked horns in a feud that threatens to tear the community apart. Thimble Theater's favorite busybody, Gildy himself, finds himself caught in the crossfire, desperately trying to broker peace while inadvertently making matters hilariously worse. What listeners can expect is a masterclass in comedic timing: sharp-tongued dialogue, slamming doors, mistaken intentions, and that perfect blend of small-town warmth and domestic chaos that made audiences roar with laughter week after week.
*The Great Gildersleeve* represented something uniquely American in the golden age of radio—a show that transformed its lead character from a supporting player on *Fibber McGee and Molly* into a standalone phenomenon. Thronton Gildersleve's mix of pomposity and genuine heart, his elaborate schemes and inevitable comeuppances, resonated deeply with listeners navigating their own everyday conflicts. This episode, broadcast in the late 1940s when the show was hitting its stride, captures the series at its finest: topical humor grounded in universal themes of neighborly dispute and reconciliation.
Don't miss this delightful slice of Americana. Tune in for "Hooker and Peavey Are Feuding" and discover why *The Great Gildersleeve* remained one of radio's most beloved programs for over fifteen years. In a world increasingly divided, Gildy's earnest attempts to mend fences remind us that laughter truly is the best medicine.