Lgdi 50 11 20 (219) Cause For Thanksgiving
# Let George Do It: Cause For Thanksgiving
When George Valentine arrives at his cluttered office on that crisp November evening, expecting nothing more than a quiet night before Thanksgiving, a desperate phone call shatters the silence—and what unfolds is a twisting tale of family secrets, buried resentment, and a murder that threatens to poison the holiday season. As our intrepid private detective digs deeper into the case, each clue leads him further from simple answers into a dark maze of lies where gratitude masks greed and tradition conceals treachery. The fog-thick streets of the city become George's hunting ground as he navigates between suspicious relatives and shadowy suspects, where every conversation crackles with barely suppressed tension. You'll hear the distinctive snap of George's lighter, the ambient hum of a late-night diner, and the ominous underscore that warns us something deadly lurks beneath the surface of an ordinary American family.
*Let George Do It* thrived during radio's golden age by pairing the hard-boiled detective genre with the immediacy of live performance—every pause, every inflection mattered. Unlike the bigger-budget shows of its era, *George Do It* relied on tight storytelling and character-driven drama, making it a favorite among listeners who appreciated intelligence over spectacle. This November 1950 episode epitomizes that strength, using the Thanksgiving setting not as mere window dressing but as ironic counterpoint to the greed and violence that George must expose. The show's popularity on the Mutual Network proved that audiences craved authentic detective work divorced from the supernatural or melodramatic excess that plagued lesser programs.
Settle into your favorite chair, dim the lights, and let the crackling transmission transport you back to post-war America, where danger lurks even in the season of gratitude. This is radio drama at its finest.