Let George Do It 1950 11 06 (217) A Visit From Merlin
# Let George Do It: A Visit From Merlin (November 6, 1950)
When the office door creaks open on this rain-soaked November evening, George Valentine expects another routine case—but instead finds himself face to face with a man claiming to possess genuine magical powers. As the mysterious visitor spins a tale of enchantment and danger, George must navigate the murky territory between con artistry and the genuinely inexplicable. The sharp banter that audiences adored crackles with an edge of supernatural unease, while the noir atmosphere thickens with each revelation. Is this client a charlatan with an elaborate scheme, or has George stumbled onto something that defies rational explanation? The tension builds as our unflappable private detective, armed with nothing but his wits and skepticism, must determine where the truth lies in a story that seems to belong more to myth than to the gritty streets he usually walks.
*Let George Do It* thrived on precisely this kind of narrative ingenuity—taking the familiar detective formula and twisting it with unexpected elements that kept listeners guessing. By 1950, the show had established itself as one of the Mutual network's most reliable draws, with Bob Bailey's portrayal of the wisecracking, resourceful George Valentine becoming an institution in American radio. The series excelled at balancing comedy with genuine menace, never letting the tongue-in-cheek humor undermine the real stakes of each investigation. Episodes like "A Visit From Merlin" showcase why the show maintained such devoted listeners throughout its nine-year run.
Tune in to experience a masterclass in radio drama where anything seems possible and nothing is quite what it seems.