Lgdi 52 01 14 (279) The Bad Little God
# The Bad Little God
When George Valentine answers his phone on a fog-thick Chicago evening, he's pulled into a case that reeks of blackmail, forbidden obsession, and a peculiar little religion born in the shadows of the city's underworld. A desperate woman's voice trembles through the receiver: someone is using the trust of devoted followers to drain their life savings, and when one true believer winds up dead, George knows he's tangled with something far more dangerous than your average con artist. With only his wits, his .38, and his dogged determination to separate the charlatan from the genuinely faithful, George must navigate a labyrinth of late-night spiritual meetings and hidden motives where the line between sin and salvation blurs into noir obscurity.
*Let George Do It* was the thinking listener's detective show—smarter, grittier, and more psychologically complex than its radio contemporaries. Bob Bailey's portrayal of George Valentine became iconic during the show's peak years, capturing that peculiar blend of hard-boiled skepticism and genuine human compassion that made the character resonate with post-war audiences grappling with their own moral uncertainties. This episode, "The Bad Little God," exemplifies the series at its finest, exploring timely questions about manipulation, faith, and exploitation that would feel at home in today's headlines. The Mutual network gave the show considerable creative freedom, allowing scripts to venture into genuinely unsettling psychological territory rarely heard on commercial radio.
Join George Valentine as he descends into the murky world of false prophets and blind devotion. Tune in to *Let George Do It* and discover why this classic detective series earned its devoted following—where every case reminded listeners that truth is always worth the danger.