Let George Do It 1952 06 16 (301) The Mystic
# Let George Do It – The Mystic (June 16, 1952)
When the lights dim and that unmistakable theme music crackles through your radio speaker, you're about to step into the shadowy world of George Valentine, private investigator. In this week's installment, *The Mystic*, our hard-boiled hero finds himself ensnared in a web of fortune-telling deception, séance room chicanery, and murder most mysterious. A wealthy widow's fortune hangs in the balance as a charlatan medium begins to tighten his supernatural stranglehold on her considerable estate—and George is determined to expose the con before another innocent life is lost. Expect all the trappings of classic noir: the creak of floorboards, the sinister organ music swelling as danger closes in, and those razor-sharp one-liners that made George Valentine radio's most quotable gumshoe. You'll hear the desperation in voices, the snap of danger, and the cold logic of a detective who trusts only what he can prove.
*Let George Do It* represents the golden age of radio detective fiction—that sweet spot in the early 1950s when sponsors still believed in quality storytelling and talented performers could reach millions through the intimate medium of sound. Bob Bailey's portrayal of George Valentine created an unforgettable character who occupied that perfect middle ground between the hard-boiled cynicism of pulp noir and the wit of better-class mystery fiction. The Mutual Network's commitment to the series ensured audiences across America tuned in faithfully for eight seasons to follow George's cases, each one more twisted than the last.
Whether you're a devoted fan of the genre or a newcomer to old-time radio, *The Mystic* offers everything that made this show essential listening: snappy dialogue, a plot that keeps you guessing, and the unmistakable sound of an era when storytelling meant everything. Tune in and discover why George Valentine became a legend.