Lgdi 52 01 07 (278) A School Of Sharks
# A School of Sharks
When George Valentine pulls into the murky waterfront district on a rain-slicked January evening, he finds himself tangled in a web of loan sharks and desperate men willing to do anything to survive. A young widow's missing husband, a ledger full of blood money, and whispers of organized crime that run deeper than the harbor itself—this is the kind of case that could get a man killed before breakfast. As saxophone notes drift through the static and George lights another cigarette in the darkness, listeners will be drawn into "A School of Sharks," where every shadow conceals a threat and nobody in this game plays by honest rules. The tension crackles through the airwaves as our protagonist navigates between brutal mobsters and terrified victims, where one wrong word could be his last.
*Let George Do It* arrived during radio's golden twilight, a noir detective series that captured the postwar American paranoia with unflinching authenticity. Bob Bailey's portrayal of George Valentine—wisecracking yet genuinely vulnerable—defined the hard-boiled detective for a generation of listeners huddled around their Philcos. The show's Mutual network distribution ensured it reached America's working families during those crucial years between 1946 and 1954, when listeners craved stories about ordinary men confronting extraordinary corruption in their own backyards. Episodes like this one reveal why the series earned its devoted following: gritty scripts, atmospheric sound design, and performances that made danger feel immediate and real.
Tune in now and discover why *Let George Do It* remains unforgettable—where every case could be the one that changes everything, and where good men sometimes have to get their hands dirty just to survive.