Lgdi 49 06 06 (143) Death In Blue Jeans
# Death In Blue Jeans
When a dead girl in work clothes turns up in a fancy hotel lobby, George Valentine finds himself tangled in a case that doesn't add up. She's got calloused hands and a factory worker's pay stub, yet someone's gone to considerable trouble to silence her permanently. As our hero digs deeper into the seedier corners of the city, he discovers a web of industrial espionage, wartime black market dealings, and a killer who's willing to murder to keep their secrets buried. The tension crackles through every scene—from the smoky interrogation room where George corners a nervous witness, to the rain-soaked warehouse where the real truth finally emerges. You'll hear the careful footsteps of danger, the desperate voices of desperate people, and the sharp crack of a revolver that changes everything.
*Let George Do It* stood apart from the crowded field of detective shows because it refused to treat working people as mere background scenery. In 1949, when this episode aired, America was reassessing itself after the war, and stories like this one explored the friction between social classes and postwar anxieties with genuine sophistication. Bob Bailey's George Valentine wasn't just a cardboard gumshoe—he was a thinking man's detective who asked uncomfortable questions, and the show's writers matched his intelligence with scripts that rewarded close listening. The Mutual network's superior sound design made every detail matter: the shuffle of papers, the hum of fluorescent lights, the weight of authentic Los Angeles locations brought to vivid life through ingenious radio craft.
Don't miss "Death In Blue Jeans"—a perfectly constructed mystery that proves radio detective fiction could be as intelligent and emotionally resonant as anything on the silver screen. Tune in and let George do it.