Let George Do It 1952 01 21 (280) A Matter Of Honor
# A Matter of Honor
When the apartment door swings open on a winter evening in 1952, private investigator George Valentine finds himself entangled in a case that cuts deeper than murder—it strikes at the very heart of a man's reputation. A Matter of Honor opens with all the signature trappings of noir that made *Let George Do It* a fixture in American living rooms: the rain-slicked streets of the city, the sharp crack of a gunshot still echoing in George's mind, and a femme fatale whose motives are as murky as the cigarette smoke curling through his office. As George peels back the layers of deception, listeners will discover that sometimes the most dangerous enemy isn't the criminal underworld, but the ghosts of a man's past—and the lengths he'll go to protect it. Bob Bailey's world-weary narration and the masterful sound design transport us into a moral labyrinth where honor becomes currency and truth becomes liability.
*Let George Do It* arrived in America's post-war consciousness at precisely the right moment, when disillusionment and uncertainty hung over the nation like storm clouds. The show's 1946 debut struck a chord with audiences hungry for sophisticated crime drama that didn't talk down to them, and by 1952, it had become one of the Mutual Network's crown jewels. Bailey's portrayal of the everyman detective—tougher than the average citizen but still fundamentally decent—resonated across the country, while the tight scripts and inventive sound effects set the standard for what detective radio drama could be. This particular episode exemplifies the show's maturity in its seventh year, when writers had fully grasped how to balance action, psychology, and genuine moral complexity.
Tune in for *A Matter of Honor* and discover why this episode remains a landmark moment in classic radio storytelling. George Valentine takes on a case that proves detective work is as much about understanding the human heart as it is about cracking alibis.