Ytjd 1961 04 09 733 The Captain's Table Matter
# The Captain's Table Matter
Picture this: the fog-thick streets of San Francisco's waterfront, where maritime men nurse their secrets as carefully as their whiskeys. When Johnny Dollar answers a call about a missing captain and a shadowy insurance claim, he finds himself entangled in a web of dock-side intrigue where everyone has something to hide and everyone's story changes depending on who's asking. Robert Readick's weathered voice cuts through the atmospheric din of foghorns and creaking ships as our intrepid investigator navigates from seedy taverns to captain's quarters, uncovering lies wrapped in nautical jargon and maritime tradition. This isn't a simple case of missing persons—it's a tangle of loyalty, greed, and the kind of secrets that only surface when a man vanishes into the vast indifference of the sea.
By 1961, *Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar* had become the last great detective series on network radio, adapting with remarkable sophistication to an audience increasingly lured away by television. What made the show endure was precisely this: the ability to create entire worlds through sound and dialogue alone, to make listeners feel the salt spray and hear the creak of a ship's hull without ever showing a single image. Readick brought a naturalism to the role that distinguished it from the more theatrical performances of radio's golden age, delivering his case reports and wry observations with the world-weary authenticity of a man who'd truly seen it all. In an era when radio was supposed to be dying, *Johnny Dollar* proved the medium still had remarkable power.
Don't miss this voyage into San Francisco's criminal underbelly. Tune in as Johnny Dollar takes on "The Captain's Table Matter" and discovers that some cases run deeper than the deepest ocean trenches.