Lgdi 46 11 29 (011) The Investment
# The Investment
Picture this: a November evening in 1946, the kind where rain hammers against your window and the streets outside are slick with danger. George Valentine, the private investigator with a wisecrack for every corpse, finds himself tangled in a web of financial schemes and desperate men in "The Investment." When a wealthy businessman walks through his door with a proposition that smells fishier than the docks at midnight, George knows he's about to earn every penny of his fee—assuming he lives long enough to collect it. The case spirals from boardrooms to back alleys, where every handshake could be a setup and every investment might just be an investment in your own demise. Bob Bailey's smooth, world-weary delivery anchors you firmly in George's shoes as the mystery deepens, the stakes rise, and the line between helper and victim blurs dangerously.
*Let George Do It* arrived on the Mutual network just as post-war America was learning to live with noir sensibilities on the radio. While the nation celebrated victory and prosperity, shows like this one channeled the anxieties lurking beneath the surface—corruption in high places, the seductive lure of easy money, the notion that civilization's veneer was tissue-thin. Bailey's portrayal of George Valentine became the template for dozens of hardboiled radio detectives who followed, a man operating in moral gray areas where justice was messier than the law allowed. The show's lean, punchy scripts and atmospheric sound design made it a favorite among audiences who craved sophistication with their suspense.
So dim the lights, settle into that comfortable chair, and let George handle this one. *Let George Do It*—where trouble finds its match, and some cases refuse to stay closed.