Lgdi [hsg Synd.#022] Sucker Stunt [510611]
# Let George Do It: "Sucker Stunt"
Picture this: it's a rain-slicked night in the city, and George Valentine—the man who'll take any job for twenty-five bucks—finds himself tangled up in a scheme that's equal parts con and catastrophe. When a desperate client walks through his office door with a proposition that sounds too good to be true, George's street-smart instincts should be screaming. But in "Sucker Stunt," our resourceful private investigator discovers he's been played for a patsy, caught between desperate crooks and darker forces than he bargained for. What unfolds is a taut game of wits and survival, where every shadowy corner holds danger and George must talk his way out of a setup designed by someone far more cunning than your average two-bit grifter. The tension crackles through the airwaves as George races against time to turn the tables before the real sucker stunt—aimed at him—springs shut.
*Let George Do It* became an institution of American radio precisely because it captured the post-war public's appetite for quick-witted, action-packed mystery. Airing on the Mutual network throughout the late 1940s and early 1950s, the show's formula was delightfully simple yet endlessly entertaining: everyman detective George Valentine, voiced with perfect tired-but-determined charm, taking cases that would make most private eyes hang up their fedoras. The scripts crackled with snappy dialogue and genuine peril, building entire worlds of intrigue in thirty minutes.
If you've never experienced the world of *Let George Do It*, "Sucker Stunt" is an ideal entry point—a masterclass in noir storytelling told at breakneck speed. Tune in and discover why millions of listeners made this show an appointment each week, and why it remains essential listening for any devotee of classic radio's golden age.