Lgdi 49 11 21 (167) Sweet Poison
# Sweet Poison
In the fog-choked streets of post-war Chicago, George Valentine stumbles into a case that reeks of betrayal and murder most calculated. A society dame with diamonds in her hair and poison in her veins has turned up dead in her penthouse, and the police are stumped. But George smells something rotten beneath the gilt and perfume—something that leads him through speakeasies and back alleys, past frightened witnesses and cool-handed killers who'd rather see him in a pine box than talking to the cops. This episode crackles with the paranoia and moral ambiguity that made the detective noir boom, featuring some of the sharpest banter and hairpin plot turns the show ever delivered. You'll hear the rain hammering against windows, the sharp crack of a revolver in the dark, and George's world-weary voice cutting through the chaos like a blade.
Let George Do It was the Mutual network's answer to radio's most insatiable appetite for crime drama, and by the late 1940s it had become the gold standard of American detective fiction. Created by radio icon Olan Soule—who also voiced the implacable George—the show captured something essential about post-war America: the cynicism, the shadows beneath suburban prosperity, the sense that danger lurked behind every manicured facade. The writing was sharp, the production design meticulous, and the supporting cast superb, making each episode feel less like entertainment and more like eavesdropping on real danger. Sweet Poison exemplifies the show at its peak, showcasing the formula that kept millions tuned in through the early 1950s.
Step into George's world and let the mystery pull you under. Click play, dim the lights, and rediscover why detective noir still haunts the American imagination.