Lgdi [hsg Synd.#010] Touched By An Angel
# Let George Do It: "Touched By An Angel"
When George Valentine answers a desperate phone call from a woman claiming she's been visited by a celestial messenger, he finds himself tangled in a case far more sinister than divine intervention. What begins as a curious detour into the supernatural quickly unravels into blackmail, murder, and a conspiracy that reaches into the highest echelons of the city. With only his wits, his .38, and the crackle of late-night telephone lines to guide him, George must separate heavenly truth from earthly deception before another victim falls. The fog rolls thick through this episode—thick with menace, thick with doubt—as our protagonist navigates dimly lit hotel corridors and smoky back rooms where saints and sinners are impossible to tell apart. You'll hear every footstep, every nervous breath, every revelation that pulls the case further into shadow.
*Let George Do It* remains one of radio's most enduring detective serials, and this 1946 episode exemplifies why. Airing during the golden age of the mystery drama, when millions of Americans gathered around their sets each week, the show captured the post-war noir sensibility perfectly—a world grown cynical, where trust was currency and danger lurked behind polite conversation. Bob Bailey's portrayal of George Valentine became iconic, a working-class hero for the everyman listener, while the show's tight scripts and atmospheric sound design set the standard for detective radio that competitors struggled to match. The Mutual Network's investment in quality production made each episode feel like a miniature film noir unfolding in your living room.
Settle into your chair, dim the lights, and let the familiar theme song transport you to a world of shadows and secrets. "Touched By An Angel" awaits—a reminder of why radio once held the nation spellbound.