Lgdi 49 12 19 (171) Follow That Train
# Let George Do It: "Follow That Train"
Picture this: a fog-shrouded railway yard, the rhythmic clacking of wheels on steel rails cutting through the December night, and our man George Valentine standing alone on a darkened platform with nothing but a tip and a hunch. When a mysterious dame walks into his office with tears in her eyes and a story that doesn't quite add up, George knows trouble is boarding the 11:47 express. This episode plunges listeners into the classic noir world where every passenger is a suspect, every whistle blast could signal danger, and a wrong move means riding the rails straight to oblivion. The cramped corridors of a speeding Pullman car become a pressure cooker of secrets, desperate men, and the kind of dame who makes a detective's job either very profitable or very short.
Let George Do It epitomizes the golden age of radio noir, where sound effects were king and imagination did the heavy lifting. Fred Coe's writing crackled with that distinctive late-1940s sensibility—cynical but never cold, dangerous but never gratuitous. Bob Bailey's George Valentine became a beloved fixture in American homes, the kind of resourceful private eye who could talk his way out of a jam and didn't mind bending the rules to find the truth. "Follow That Train" showcases everything that made the series a Mutual network staple: snappy dialogue, genuine suspense, and that unmistakable train-bound claustrophobia that radio did better than any visual medium could.
Don't miss your ticket to ride. Tune in as George Valentine boards the strangest train journey of his career, where murder travels coach and the truth is waiting at the last stop. This is one case that won't derail your evening.