Lgdi 51 06 11 (248) Sucker Stunt
# Let George Do It – "Sucker Stunt"
The rain hammers against the pavement outside George Valentine's office as a desperate client stumbles through the door with a tale that smells fishier than the docks at low tide. Someone's running a con, and George—ever the sucker for a sob story—finds himself caught between a dame with secrets, a scheme that goes deeper than it appears, and the kind of trouble that bullets solve faster than brains. In this June 1951 episode, the line between mark and mastermind blurs dangerously as our quick-witted investigator navigates a web of deception where the stakes keep climbing and nobody's quite who they claim to be. Expect the sharp banter, the ominous musical cues, and that signature breathless pacing that made listeners hang on every word.
*Let George Do It* thrived during radio's golden age as one of the medium's most refreshingly irreverent detective shows. Unlike the brooding solemnity of some noir contemporaries, this Mutual Network series—which ran from 1946 to 1954—paired gritty casework with wry humor and genuine humanity. Bob Bailey's George Valentine wasn't a superman detective; he was a resourceful, imperfect investigator who talked his way out of jams as often as he solved them. The show captured the post-war urban landscape with authentic detail while maintaining a vitality that kept audiences tuning in week after week, making it one of the most beloved detective programs of its era.
If you haven't experienced the crackling energy of *Let George Do It*, now's your chance to step into that rain-soaked world of 1940s mystery and deception. "Sucker Stunt" exemplifies why this show earned its devoted following—skilled writing, spirited performance, and the kind of entertainment that simply doesn't exist anymore. Tune in and discover why listeners couldn't wait for the next case.