Lgdi 49 11 28 (168) No Riders
# Let George Do It: No Riders
The rain hammers against the windows of George Valentine's office as a desperate woman stumbles through the door, her coat torn and her eyes wild with fear. She's been running—from what, she won't say—but the bruises tell their own story. George lights a cigarette and leans back in his chair, listening as she spins a tale of hitchhikers, lonely highways, and a pickup truck that never reached its destination. The clock on the wall ticks ominously. Outside, the city's night life swells and fades. What begins as a simple case of a missing person spirals into something far darker, where every shadow conceals a suspect and every alibi crumbles under George's sharp, no-nonsense interrogation. You'll find yourself gripping the edge of your seat as the investigation unfolds, wondering who—or what—truly happened on that desolate stretch of road.
*Let George Do It* stands as one of the golden age's finest detective programs, and this 1948 episode exemplifies why audiences tuned in faithfully for nine seasons. Bob Bailey's George Valentine became the everyman detective for millions of listeners—not a brilliant eccentric or a society swinger, but a working gumshoe who lived by his wits and integrity. Broadcast live from Hollywood, these stories captured the authentic grit of postwar American noir, exploring the genuine anxieties of the era: displacement, danger lurking in ordinary places, and the thin line between justice and vengeance.
Slip on your headphones and step back into a vanished world where imagination was king and a single voice could transport you to the shadowy underbelly of mid-century America. *No Riders* awaits—a masterclass in suspense that proves radio drama's power to chill, thrill, and utterly captivate. George Valentine is on the case.