Lgdi [hsg Synd.#040] Tag You're It [500925]
# Let George Do It - "Tag You're It"
Picture this: a rain-slicked Chicago street corner at midnight, where private investigator George Valentine discovers a corpse with a playing card clutched in its cold fingers. What begins as a simple homicide becomes a twisted game of cat-and-mouse when George realizes the killer is leaving behind a trail of vintage playing cards—each one a cryptic message meant for him alone. As the city's underworld closes in and suspects multiply with each passing hour, George must stay one step ahead of a murderer who seems to know his every move. The tension builds relentlessly in this masterpiece of radio noir, complete with the signature sound design that made *Let George Do It* unmissable listening: the screech of tires, the crack of a .38 revolver, and that distinctive whisper of George's inner monologue that cuts through the darkness like a blade.
*Let George Do It* stands as one of the golden age's most influential detective serials, and this particular syndicated episode exemplifies why. Running from 1946 to 1954, the show pioneered a grittier, more psychologically complex approach to the detective genre than its competitors. With Bob Bailey's perfectly calibrated performance as George Valentine—world-weary yet determined—and scripts that balanced hard-boiled dialogue with genuine emotional stakes, the show captured the paranoia and urban decay of the immediate postwar years. "Tag You're It" showcases the production's mastery of pacing and atmosphere, building dread through silence as effectively as through sound.
Don't miss this unforgettable mystery. Tune in to experience why listeners huddled around their radios couldn't wait for George's next case. Some games are deadly, and in George Valentine's world, the only rule is survival.