Let George Do It 1952 08 25 (311) Sabotage
# Let George Do It - Sabotage (August 25, 1952)
Picture this: a moonless night on the industrial waterfront, where fog rolls thick as conspirators' whispers and a saboteur stalks the shadows with murder in mind. When George Valentine—that wisecracking private investigator with a nose for trouble and a ready quip for danger—stumbles into a case of industrial espionage and explosive treachery, all hell breaks loose. In this tense installment, our hero finds himself tangled in a web of corporate greed, foreign agents, and a ticking clock that threatens to blow everything sky-high. Listen as George navigates back alleys and corporate boardrooms alike, his clever tongue and sharper instincts the only weapons standing between sabotage and catastrophe. The stakes have never been higher, and neither has the danger.
By 1952, *Let George Do It* had already cemented itself as the thinking person's detective show—a step above the typical gumshoe fare with sharper dialogue, more sophisticated plots, and Bob Bailey's incomparable ability to make you believe George Valentine was real, sweating through his shirt in real time. The show thrived during the postwar years when America's anxieties about espionage, communism, and industrial security were running hot. This episode, broadcast during the height of the Korean War, taps directly into those contemporary fears while maintaining the show's trademark blend of hard-boiled atmosphere and clever humor. Bailey's rapid-fire delivery and the Mutual network's superior production values create an immersive experience few modern listeners have encountered.
Don't miss this masterclass in radio drama. Tune in as George Valentine puts his life on the line to stop a saboteur before the next explosion rocks the city. *Let George Do It*—where danger is always just one case away.