Lgdi 46 11 08 (008) The Robber
# Let George Do It - "The Robber"
Picture this: the rain hammering against the windows of a dimly lit office as George Valentine, that quick-talking private investigator with a conscience and a gun in his desk drawer, finds himself neck-deep in a case that's far more complicated than it first appears. In "The Robber," our hero stumbles onto what seems like a straightforward heist, but nothing is ever straightforward in the world of George Valentine. As the plot thickens with double-crosses and dangerous secrets, you'll hear the signature sharp dialogue crackle through your speaker, punctuated by the moody orchestral stings that set pulses racing. The tension builds methodically—a hallmark of *Let George Do It*—until listeners are left breathless, wondering who's pulling the strings and whether our protagonist will live to collect his fee.
What made this 1946 episode special was its place in the golden age of radio detective fiction, a time when *Let George Do It* had become a staple of the Mutual Network's evening lineup. Bob Bailey's portrayal of George Valentine became iconic precisely because he brought an everyman quality to the hard-boiled detective archetype; George wasn't a superhero, just a resourceful, honest operator trying to make a living in a corrupt world. By 1946, seven years into the show's successful run, the writers had perfected their craft, delivering stories that balanced noir atmosphere with genuine character development and the kind of witty repartee that kept families gathered around the radio set week after week.
So tune in and let George handle it. You'll understand why millions of Americans made this appointment radio, settling in after dinner to follow George Valentine's latest dangerous adventure into the underworld.