Lgdi 49 12 05 (169) Too Near The Sky
# Too Near The Sky
The night is cold and starless as George Valentine steps into the penthouse offices of Consolidated Aviation, where a test pilot has vanished without a trace—and with him, the blueprints for a revolutionary aircraft engine. What begins as a routine missing persons case quickly spirals into a web of industrial espionage, wartime intrigue, and desperate men willing to kill to control the skies. As George digs deeper into the shadowy world of aeronautical secrets, he discovers that some people will stop at nothing to reach the top—and that getting too close to the truth might mean falling from a very great height. With each clue, the tension mounts: a mysterious woman with dangerous connections, a disgraced engineer seeking redemption, and the ticking clock of national security interests bearing down on our hero.
*Let George Do It* stands as a masterwork of radio noir, and this episode exemplifies exactly why the show captivated millions of listeners throughout the late 1940s. Built on smart writing, sophisticated plotting, and Bob Bailey's magnetic performance as the resourceful private investigator, the series captured the postwar American obsession with espionage and technical innovation—anxieties that felt all too real in an era of atomic ambitions and Cold War paranoia. The show's snappy dialogue and breakneck pacing made it appointment listening, a thrilling escape from everyday life delivered directly into the comfort of American living rooms.
Don your fedora and tune in to "Too Near The Sky" to experience the golden age of radio detective fiction at its finest. This is first-rate entertainment that rewards careful listening—a masterclass in suspense, mystery, and the kinds of stories that made radio the dominant medium of its era.