Lgdi 50 04 17 (188) Mixup In La Cruza
# Let George Do It: "Mixup in La Cruza"
When George Valentine arrives in the dusty border town of La Cruza, he expects a simple case—but nothing is ever simple south of the Rio Grande. A stolen shipment, a murdered informant, and a dame with a dangerous secret pull our intrepid detective into a maze of corruption and double-crosses where every shadow conceals a threat and every handshake might be his last. Bob Bailey's world-weary delivery crackles through the static as George navigates the labyrinthine streets of this lawless outpost, where American dollars and Mexican banditos clash in a powder keg of intrigue. The music swells with ominous brass; gunshots echo in the night. In La Cruza, a man's word is worthless and his life even cheaper. George has faced worse odds, but as he peels back layer after layer of deception, he begins to suspect the real culprit is far closer than he imagined—and far more dangerous.
*Let George Do It* stands as one of radio's most enduring detective dramas, and this 1950 episode exemplifies why. Airing on the Mutual Broadcasting System during the golden age of noir, the show balanced hard-boiled wisecracks with genuine menace, grounding its far-flung adventures in a world that felt lived-in and perilous. Bob Bailey's George Valentine became an American icon—a detective for the common man, thrown into extraordinary circumstances with nothing but his wits and his gumption. These episodic adventures tapped into post-war anxieties about corruption, betrayal, and the fragile line between justice and revenge.
Don't miss this nail-biting installment. Tune in and let George do it—what he does best is survive the impossible.