Let George Do It 1951 09 24 (263) Framed For Hanging
# Let George Do It: Framed For Hanging
Picture this: a man walks into George Valentine's office with desperation etched across his face, carrying a secret that could get him hanged. It's a September night in 1951, and this week's episode, "Framed For Hanging," plunges listeners into the darkest corners of the criminal underworld where one wrong move means a noose around your neck. George Valentine—that quick-witted, street-smart private investigator with a conscience—finds himself tangled in a web of false evidence, double-crosses, and corrupt cops who seem determined to see an innocent man swing. As the clock ticks toward the condemned man's execution date, George must navigate a maze of lies and danger, his trademark wisecracks barely masking the genuine peril that surrounds him. The writing crackles with tension, and announcer Bob Emerald's narration pulls you deep into the murky shadows where truth becomes as elusive as a shadow at midnight.
What made *Let George Do It* essential listening during the early 1950s was its perfect calibration of hard-boiled detective storytelling with surprising humanity. Unlike some noir programs that wallowed in cynicism, this Mutual network fixture—starring the inimitable Bob Bailey as Valentine—balanced gritty realism with genuine emotional stakes. Bailey's delivery was rapid-fire yet nuanced, capturing a detective who could trade barbs with killers while genuinely caring about justice. By 1951, the show had earned its place in radio's pantheon, beloved by audiences seeking thrills without sacrificing character.
Don't miss your chance to experience classic detective radio at its finest. Tune in to "Framed For Hanging" and discover why *Let George Do It* remained a fixture in American homes for nearly a decade—where the cases were complex, the danger was real, and George always delivered results.