Lgdi 48 08 02 (099) The Money Maker
# Let George Do It – The Money Maker
When George Valentine picks up that ringing telephone on a humid August evening, he has no idea he's about to stumble into a counterfeit operation that reaches into the shadowy corners of the city's underworld. *The Money Maker* crackles with the kind of danger that can't be heard but only felt—the whisper of forged bills changing hands in darkened alleys, the calculated menace of men who've built empires on deception. As our hero digs deeper into the case, the line between legitimate business and criminal enterprise blurs dangerously. Listeners will be drawn into a labyrinth of false identities and double-crosses where every clue could be a trap, and George's quick wits are his only reliable currency. The closing moments promise a revelation that will leave you gasping.
*Let George Do It* thrived during radio's golden age by embracing a formula that worked: take one resourceful, good-hearted private investigator and let him loose in stories ripped from tomorrow's headlines. Airing on the Mutual network from 1946 through 1954, the show captured post-war America's fascination with crime and redemption, with ordinary men standing against corruption. Bob Bailey's portrayal of George Valentine became iconic—a man who solved mysteries not through violence or deception, but through integrity and determination. These episodes remain remarkable documents of 1940s sensibilities and storytelling craft.
If you've never experienced the thrill of a genuine radio detective story, or if you're a longtime fan of George Valentine's cases, *The Money Maker* is essential listening. Settle in, dim the lights, and let the sound effects and dialogue transport you back to an era when mystery unfolded through words alone—and the human imagination filled in all the shadows.