Ytjd 1953 07 14 171 The Shayne Bombing Matter
# The Shayne Bombing Matter
Picture this: a bomb's ticking in the dark, and insurance investigator Johnny Dollar has exactly forty-eight hours to unravel who planted it—and why. In this July 1953 episode, "The Shayne Bombing Matter," our quick-witted protagonist finds himself tangled in a web of sabotage, corporate intrigue, and deadly secrets that could blow his case—and his life—to smithereens. The episode crackles with the kind of danger that made radio listeners clutch their armrests: shadowy figures in hotel corridors, coded warnings delivered in whispers, and the constant sense that the next conversation could be someone's last. John Lund's distinctive, rapid-fire delivery captures Johnny's sharp mind working overtime as he navigates lies stacked upon lies, following a trail of evidence that leads from insurance fraud into something far more sinister. The sound design drops you straight into post-war Manhattan's underbelly, where a single bomber could derail corporate empires and leave innocent people in ruins.
*Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar* was CBS radio's answer to the pulp detective tradition, but with an insurance angle that gave it a genuinely fresh twist. Rather than solving murders for glory, Johnny chased claims and exposed fraud for cold, hard cash—five dollars a day, plus expenses, as the show's famous tagline promised. During the early 1950s, when television was just beginning its takeover, radio dramas like this one remained appointment listening for millions of Americans, and John Lund's portrayal of the tireless investigator became iconic among fans of the genre.
Tune in to experience the tension, the mystery, and the consummate professionalism of one of radio's greatest detectives. *Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar* reminds us why the Golden Age of radio was truly golden.