Let George Do It 1949 02 07 (126) One Against A City
# Let George Do It - One Against A City (February 7, 1949)
In the fog-choked streets of a nameless metropolis, private investigator George Valentine finds himself cornered by forces far larger than any one man should face alone. When a routine case spirals into something altogether darker—a conspiracy that reaches from the dockside speakeasies to the mahogany-paneled offices of city hall—George discovers he's stumbled onto something powerful people would kill to keep buried. With nothing but his wits, his .38, and an unwavering moral compass, he must navigate a labyrinth of crooked cops, hired muscle, and cold-blooded killers. Listen as the city itself becomes the enemy, as shadowy figures close in from every direction, and as our hero realizes that sometimes doing the right thing means standing utterly alone against the machinery of corruption. The tension crackles through every scene; danger lurks in every shadow.
*Let George Do It* thrived during the golden age of noir radio, when Americans were hungry for tales of hard-boiled justice in a morally complicated post-war world. Bob Bailey's portrayal of George Valentine became iconic—a man of principle in a crooked world, resourceful yet vulnerable, tough yet capable of genuine compassion. This 1949 episode exemplifies the show's greatest strengths: intelligent writing, masterful sound design, and performances that made listeners feel the weight of George's desperate circumstances. The series became a staple of Mutual Broadcasting's lineup, competing admirably with the era's most celebrated detective programs.
Turn down the lights, settle into your chair, and prepare yourself for fifty-two minutes of suspense. When George Valentine walks into "One Against A City," listeners discovered why this show became legendary. Tune in and discover what it meant to stand alone against impossible odds.