Let George Do It Mutual · 1949

Let George Do It 1949 08 29 (155) End Of Summer

· GHOST OF RADIO ·
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# Let George Do It: End of Summer (1949)

As summer's sticky grip releases the city and the first hints of autumn creep into the air, private investigator George Valentine finds himself tangled in a case that's far more complicated than a simple missing person's job. When a wealthy businessman's daughter vanishes without a trace during a lakeside vacation, George must navigate a web of family secrets, jealous lovers, and dangerous strangers who all seem to benefit from her disappearance. The August heat shimmers on the pavement as our hero stalks through shadowed corridors and dimly lit hotel lobbies, his fedora pulled low, cigarette smoke curling through dimly lit rooms where every conversation crackles with menace. Before the summer ends, someone will pay—but George isn't entirely sure it'll be the guilty party.

By 1949, *Let George Do It* had become a cornerstone of detective radio drama, standing shoulder-to-shoulder with *The Shadow* and *The Thin Man* in the public's imagination. Bob Bailey's George Valentine—capable, clever, and perpetually unlucky in love—brought a refreshing everyman quality to the hard-boiled genre. The show thrived on tight scripts, ingenious sound design, and Bailey's effortless chemistry with guest stars, making the Mutual network broadcast an appointment for millions of listeners tuning in each week.

This particular episode captures the show at its peak, blending classic noir atmosphere with the character development that made audiences care about George's struggles. Whether you're a devoted fan revisiting an old favorite or discovering the golden age of radio detective fiction for the first time, "End of Summer" delivers all the intrigue, danger, and dark humor that made this series unforgettable. Dim the lights, turn up the volume, and let George do it—you won't want to miss what happens before Labor Day.