Let George Do It 1948 08 30 (103) A Minor Case Of Murder
# Let George Do It: A Minor Case of Murder
Picture yourself in the summer of 1948, tuning your radio dial to find George Valentine already knee-deep in trouble. A corpse, a case that seems almost too small to matter—but in the world of private detective George Valentine, no case is ever truly minor when murder's involved. This August episode crackles with the tension of a man trying to unravel a seemingly straightforward killing that keeps twisting back on itself, each clue more elusive than the last. You'll hear the sharp dialogue, the sultry saxophone undertones, the sound effects that place you squarely in the shadowy corners of a big city where deals go wrong and bodies pile up. As the plot thickens through thirty perfectly-paced minutes, you'll find yourself as lost in George's investigation as he is, wondering which suspect is lying and what the real motive could possibly be.
*Let George Do It* arrived at radio's golden age precisely when the medium craved hard-boiled sophistication and psychological complexity. Running from 1946 to 1954 on the Mutual network, the show distinguished itself through snappy writing and a protagonist who wasn't invincible—George Valentine bumbled, struggled, and sometimes got beaten before he got his man. By 1948, the show had found its perfect rhythm, blending genuine mystery plotting with noir atmosphere and a wry humor that made even the darkest moments bearable. This particular episode exemplifies everything the show did best: a mystery worthy of Chandler or Hammett, but delivered through the intimate medium of radio where sound alone had to conjure an entire criminal underworld.
Settle in with your dial set right, dim the lights if you can, and let George do what he does best. Some cases may be minor, but the thrills they deliver are anything but.