Lgdi 51 01 22 (228) Knock On Wood
# Let George Do It: Knock On Wood
The rain hammers against the office window as George Valentine answers a phone call that will pull him into the shadowy underbelly of the city—a case involving a mysterious woman, a superstitious gang boss, and a string of deaths no one dares to connect. "Knock On Wood" crackles with the electric tension that made *Let George Do It* essential listening: a taut fifty minutes of noir atmosphere, snappy dialogue, and genuine peril. As George navigates smoke-filled rooms and dimly lit streets, you'll hear the masterful sound design that was radio's greatest weapon—the distant wail of a siren, the sharp *click* of a revolver's hammer, the ominous creak of a closing door. Bob Bailey's gravel-voiced protagonist is equal parts smart aleck and shrewd operative, and this episode showcases exactly why audiences kept their dials fixed to their receivers when his theme music began to play.
Broadcast during the golden age of detective radio drama, *Let George Do It* occupied a unique position in the medium: it was less cerebral puzzle-box than *The Shadow* or *Mr. Keen,* yet more grounded and contemporary than the pulpy adventures of other networks. The Mutual Broadcasting System, hungry for original programming to compete with NBC and CBS, found gold with this series. Bailey's ability to shift seamlessly between wisecracking humor and genuine menace made George Valentine feel like a man you'd actually want in your corner. By 1946-1954, radio audiences craved post-war realism mixed with escapist thrills, and this show delivered both in equal measure.
Step into George's world and discover why *Let George Do It* remains a benchmark of American radio drama. Tune in now and let the city's dark secrets unfold before you—if you dare.