Let George Do It 1946 11 29 (011) Fifty Shares Of Mazooma Limited
# Let George Do It: "Fifty Shares of Mazooma Limited"
As George Valentine lights another cigarette in his cramped Chicago office, a desperate woman slips through his door with a problem that smells worse than the November rain outside—fifty shares of Mazooma Limited, a company nobody's ever heard of, and a murder that somebody very much wants to stay buried. This November 1946 episode crackles with the kind of desperation only post-war noir can deliver: blackmail, corporate secrets, and a corpse that raises more questions than answers. Listen as Valentine navigates the murky underworld where legitimate business fronts hide genuine evil, where a dame's tears might be real or calculated, and where a few pieces of stock could get you killed. The tension mounts with every clue, every false lead, building toward a revelation that will leave you wondering who to trust—because in George Valentine's world, everybody's got an angle.
*Let George Do It* arrived on the Mutual Broadcasting System just as America was learning to process the moral complexities of the post-war era, and this show became essential listening for millions who craved smart, snappy detective fiction. Bob Bailey's portrayal of George Valentine embodied the everyman detective archetype—no superpowers, just wits, guts, and a talent for asking the right questions at exactly the wrong moments. The show's sharp writing and breakneck pacing made it a perfect fifteen-minute escape for audiences hungry for urban intrigue and mystery.
Tune in for "Fifty Shares of Mazooma Limited" and rediscover why *Let George Do It* captured the imagination of a nation still learning how to live in the atomic age. This is noir as it was meant to be heard—immediate, intimate, and absolutely gripping.