My Friend Irma 1949 03 14 (092) Al Wants To Move To Nebraska
Picture this: it's a crisp spring evening in 1949, and you're settling in with your radio as Jane and Irma's world turns delightfully upside down. Al, that lovable schemer and would-be entrepreneur, has gotten it into his head that fortune awaits in the wide-open plains of Nebraska. What follows is a rollicking journey through Al's increasingly harebrained schemes to convince Jane that abandoning New York for the heartland is the opportunity of a lifetime. Irma, of course, has her own take on the matter—delivered with her signature ditzy charm and malapropisms that leave listeners howling with laughter. The tension between ambition and loyalty, between dreams of reinvention and the comfort of urban life, crackles through every scene, all wrapped in the quicksilver timing of expert radio comedy.
My Friend Irma was more than just a show; it was a cultural phenomenon that captured post-war American anxieties about restlessness and reinvention during an era of unprecedented economic change. Originally born from a newspaper advice column, the program became CBS's crown jewel, spawning two feature films and launching Marie Wilson into stardom as the inimitable Irma. In 1949, as America grappled with boom-time prosperity and the lingering wanderlust of returning servicemen, stories like "Al Wants To Move to Nebraska" resonated deeply—the show's genius lay in transforming everyday uncertainties into comedic gold.
Don't miss this sparkling gem of Golden Age radio. Tune in for thirty minutes of pure escape and laughter, where quick wit and impeccable ensemble timing transport you back to an America that dreamed in bright primary colors. This is radio comedy at its finest.