Lgdi [hsg Synd.#009] The Anthill [500515]
# The Anthill
When George Valentine answers a seemingly routine call about a missing person, he walks straight into a nest of corporate corruption that stings far deeper than anyone bargained for. In "The Anthill," our intrepid private detective finds himself entangled in the shadowy operations of a manufacturing concern where workers toil in obscurity while executives feast above. The episode crackles with the kind of gritty tension that made *Let George Do It* a fixture in American living rooms—narrow escapes down industrial corridors, the sharp crack of gunfire echoing off factory walls, and George's wry, world-weary narration guiding us through a labyrinth of lies. As he peels back layer after layer of the operation, listeners will find themselves holding their breath, wondering whether our hero can expose the truth before the organization buries him with it.
*Let George Do It* arrived on the Mutual network as post-war America grappled with questions about labor, power, and morality in an expanding industrial age. The show's genius lay in its formula: each week, ordinary people with ordinary problems would call George Valentine, and what began as a simple favor inevitably spiraled into genuine danger. Bob Bailey's dry, naturalistic delivery as George set the show apart from more theatrical detective programs, making him feel like a neighbor who could handle trouble rather than a pulp hero. The series captured that particular American moment when cynicism about institutional corruption was becoming fashionable, when listeners wanted their detectives smart and their mysteries genuinely murky.
Tune in to "The Anthill" and experience why *Let George Do It* remained a beloved staple for nearly a decade. His case awaits.