Nick Carter 48 11 07 (365) The Case Of The Forgetful Killer
When the curtain rises on this November evening in 1948, Nick Carter finds himself tangled in one of radio's most deliciously perplexing puzzles: a killer with a convenient memory gap. As our master detective arrives at a Manhattan penthouse, he discovers a body cooling on the Persian rug and a suspect who swears they can't remember a thing—not the argument, not the weapon, not even why they were there. Was it murder, madness, or murder masquerading as madness? Through the hiss and crackle of live broadcast, listeners will experience the full dramatic weight of Carter's investigation: the tense interrogations, the clever deductions, the atmospheric New York nights where danger lurks around every corner and nowhere is quite as it seems.
Nick Carter, Master Detective had inherited the mantle of a character born in dime novels decades earlier, but this Mutual Radio version—which captivated audiences throughout the 1940s and 1950s—transformed the detective into something fresh and contemporary. Each episode crackled with the energy of live performance, featuring the finest character actors available, haunting sound effects that made listeners grip their armrests, and that unmistakable Mutual network polish. The show thrived during radio's golden age precisely because it understood that a great mystery wasn't about elaborate solutions—it was about the human drama underneath, the psychological cat-and-mouse games that kept a Depression and post-war audience on the edge of their seats.
Step into that shadowy world where a sharp mind and sharper instincts were the only tools needed to separate guilt from innocence. Tune in and let Nick Carter remind you why radio mystery was once America's favorite escape.