Let George Do It 1950 02 06 (178) The Old Style
# Let George Do It: The Old Style
When George Valentine picks up the telephone that fateful February evening in 1950, he finds himself drawn into a case that reeks of old money, older grudges, and the kind of secrets that simmer beneath the surface of respectable society. *The Old Style* crackles with the tension of a man who thought his past was buried, only to discover that some ghosts refuse to stay dead. As Valentine's smooth, measured voice guides us through the shadowy streets and mahogany-paneled offices of Chicago, we're treated to a masterclass in noir atmosphere—the distant wail of a siren, the clink of ice in a glass, the ominous pause before a confession. This episode exemplifies what made the show an absolute jewel of detective radio: the ability to make listeners feel the weight of moral ambiguity pressing down from all sides, even through the safety of a living room speaker.
*Let George Do It*, which aired throughout the late 1940s and into the 1950s, represented radio's golden age of the private eye drama—a time when the medium could create entire worlds through sound alone. Bob Bailey's portrayal of George Valentine struck the perfect balance between hard-boiled cynicism and genuine human decency, making him one of radio's most beloved detectives. The show thrived during an era when millions of Americans gathered around their sets for evening entertainment, before television began its slow conquest of the airwaves. *The Old Style* demonstrates why listeners remained so devoted: it's pure storytelling craft, unadorned by visual distraction, relying entirely on script, performance, and sound design to entrance its audience.
Don't miss this opportunity to experience radio as it was meant to be heard—as a window into another world, another time, another way of understanding the human condition. Tune in to *Let George Do It* and let yourself be transported.