Ytjd 1950 04 18 045 The Story Of The Ten O Eight (unedited Drama Portions)
# The Story of the Ten O Eight
When insurance investigator Johnny Dollar steps off the train in the dead of night, he carries with him nothing but a sharp eye for deception and a expense account that burns almost as hot as the case that's about to consume him. "The Story of the Ten O Eight" drops listeners directly into the shadowy world of post-war intrigue, where a mysterious locomotive number becomes the key to unraveling a tangled web of theft, desperation, and betrayal. The unedited drama portions preserve the raw, unpolished urgency of live radio performance—you'll hear the true pulse of CBS's golden age, complete with authentic sound effects, the shuffle of scripts, and Edmond O'Brien's distinctive baritone cutting through the darkness like a searchlight. This is noir stripped down to its essentials: dialogue sharp as broken glass, atmosphere thick enough to cut with a knife, and a mystery that unfolds with the inexorable momentum of a diesel engine at full throttle.
Airing in April 1950, "Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar" represented something revolutionary in radio drama—a hard-boiled investigator show that treated its audience like adults, dispensing with moralizing to focus instead on the gritty, morally ambiguous cases that filled a working man's day. O'Brien's portrayal revolutionized the insurance investigator archetype, making Johnny Dollar every bit as compelling as the famous gumshoes of pulp fiction, while the show's meticulous attention to procedural detail gave it a documentary-like authenticity that kept listeners coming back week after week.
Step into the shadows with Johnny Dollar. Tune in to "The Story of the Ten O Eight" and experience radio drama at its finest—where every word counts, every sound effect resonates with purpose, and the truth lies hidden somewhere between the lies.