Let George Do It 1950 07 03 (199) The Scream Of The Eagle
# The Scream of the Eagle
On a sweltering July evening in 1950, George Valentine finds himself caught between a murdered industrialist, a missing ledger, and a voice that chills the blood—the unmistakable, piercing cry of an eagle that echoes through the shadowed corridors of a lakeside estate. Our quick-witted protagonist must navigate a web of blackmail, family secrets, and genuine menace as the stakes escalate with each breathless scene. Is the eagle merely a harbinger of doom, or something far more sinister? With danger lurking in every shadow and time running short, George discovers that solving this case may require him to become as ruthless as the predators circling his every move.
*Let George Do It* thrived during the golden age of radio detective fiction, a period when millions of Americans gathered around their sets to escape the anxieties of the early Cold War era. Starring Bob Bailey as the affable but sharp George Valentine, the show distinguished itself through snappy dialogue, genuine humor layered beneath the noir atmosphere, and a protagonist who felt more like a resourceful friend than a hard-boiled caricature. By 1950, the series had become a fixture on the Mutual network, beloved for its balance of mystery and character-driven storytelling at a time when radio drama was reaching its artistic peak.
"The Scream of the Eagle" exemplifies everything that made *Let George Do It* essential listening—a perfectly calibrated mystery that combines atmospheric dread with the clever banter that kept listeners coming back week after week. Whether you're a longtime devotee of classic radio or discovering George Valentine for the first time, this episode captures the very essence of what made the medium magical.