Lgdi 48 10 18 (110) Death Wears A Gay Sports Jacket
# Death Wears A Gay Sports Jacket
When George Valentine receives a mysterious phone call in the dead of night, he knows his evening is about to take a dark turn. A body has been discovered in a fashionable downtown hotel—a man dressed to the nines in a garish sports jacket, his pockets emptied and his secrets scattered like spent shell casings. As George arrives at the scene, the rain hammers against the windows while hotel staff whisper nervously in the corridors. The detective must navigate a labyrinth of suspects: the nervous bellhop with something to hide, the elegant woman in the penthouse who knew the victim far too well, and the hotel manager desperate to keep scandal from the front pages. With each witness interrogation, the case grows more twisted, the motives more sinister. The sports jacket becomes an obsession—why would a murderer leave behind such a distinctive garment? As the clock ticks toward dawn, George realizes he's hunting not just a killer, but someone operating within the city's most exclusive circles, someone for whom wealth and social standing matter more than a human life.
*Let George Do It* captivated millions of listeners throughout the late 1940s and early 1950s with its gritty realism and sophisticated banter. Unlike the exaggerated heroics of some contemporaries, this Mutual Broadcasting program grounded its mysteries in the authentic atmosphere of post-war America—a world of cynical cops, morally ambiguous witnesses, and a private detective trying to navigate the murky space between law and justice. Episode 110 exemplifies the show's mastery of mood and misdirection, combining sharp dialogue with the atmospheric sound design that made radio drama an art form.
Don't miss this quintessential noir mystery. Tune in to *Let George Do It* and experience the golden age of radio detective work.