Lgdi 50 10 30 (216) Sedan From The City (hsg)
# Sedan From The City
When a mysterious automobile rolls into town with nothing but trouble in its trunk, George Valentine finds himself caught between a desperate woman's plea and a web of deceit that stretches from the quiet countryside back to the shadowy streets of the city. In "Sedan From The City," you'll hear the unmistakable squeal of tires on gravel, the nervous tremor in a woman's voice, and the steady, methodical reasoning of radio's most resourceful troubleshooter as he unravels a case where nobody—not the police, not the locals, not even George himself—can quite predict where the truth lies. The atmosphere crackles with that distinctive 1940s noir tension: dim streetlights filtered through cigarette smoke, the weight of secrets pressing down on small-town innocence, and the constant threat of violence lurking just beneath polite conversation.
*Let George Do It* stands as one of Mutual Broadcasting's most enduring achievements, a show that proved the detective serial could thrive without a single recurring sidekick or fantastical element—just a smart man, a quick mind, and whatever case fate lands on his doorstep. Bob Bailey's portrayal of George Valentine became iconic for its naturalistic delivery and genuine vulnerability, transforming what might have been a standard hard-boiled hero into something more human and therefore more compelling. The show's success lay in its willingness to ground each mystery in recognizable human motivation rather than exotic villainy, a formula that kept audiences tuning in religiously from 1946 through 1954.
Slip on your headphones and step back into an era when a sedan from the city meant danger, when every stranger carried secrets, and when one man's determination to help could mean the difference between justice and ruin. *Let George Do It*—because sometimes the most dangerous mysteries are the ones closest to home.