Lgdi 48 07 05 (095) Murder Me Twice [aka The Man Who Was Murdered Twice]
# Let George Do It - Murder Me Twice
Picture this: a rain-slicked Chicago street corner at midnight, where a corpse wearing two different murder methods tells a story that shouldn't be possible. George Valentine, the quick-witted private investigator with a nose for trouble and a gift for gab, stumbles onto a case that defies the very laws of death itself. In "Murder Me Twice," George must untangle a murder so elaborate, so twisted in its conception, that it seems designed specifically to drive an honest gumshoe insane. Was it suicide dressed as murder? Murder dressed as suicide? Or something far more diabolical? With each clue, the walls close tighter around our hero, and the clock ticks toward a revelation that will shake even George's unflappable confidence. The Mutual broadcast engineers deliver every sinister shadow and desperate whisper with crystalline clarity—hear the *click* of a lighter, the *crack* of a revolver, the desperate breathing of a man running out of time and answers.
"Let George Do It" stands as a masterpiece of the detective serial format, running strong from 1946 through 1954 when Americans couldn't get enough of hard-boiled mystery and fast-talking protagonists. This particular episode exemplifies what made the show essential listening: a plot twisted enough to keep listeners genuinely confused until the final reveal, dialogue snappier than a two-bit crook's excuse, and an atmosphere so thick with menace you could cut it with a knife. Bob Bailey's performance as George Valentine became iconic precisely because he made the impossible seem plausible, and the impossible *entertaining*.
Settle in with the lights low and let this 1948 broadcast transport you back to the golden age of radio mystery. "Murder Me Twice" awaits—if you dare to discover who really pulled the trigger.