Quiet Please 470615 002 Ive Been Looking For You
# Quiet Please: "I've Been Looking For You"
Settle into your favorite chair, dim the lights, and prepare for a journey into the unsettling unknown. In this chilling installment of *Quiet Please*, a seemingly ordinary encounter becomes something far more sinister as a mysterious stranger appears with an impossible claim: "I've been looking for you." What begins as a casual meeting in shadow-draped corridors transforms into a psychological thriller where listeners cannot distinguish between coincidence, fate, and something altogether more terrifying. The sound design—creaking floorboards, whispered conversations filtered through static, and an ominous musical score that tightens around each scene—creates an atmosphere so tangible you'll find yourself holding your breath. This is the brilliance of *Quiet Please*: it doesn't rely on monsters or gunshots, but rather the delicious dread of the everyday rendered extraordinary.
*Quiet Please* represented something revolutionary in 1947's radio landscape. Created by Wyllis Cooper, the master of atmospheric horror, the show eschewed the action-adventure formulas dominating the airwaves, instead offering sophisticated listeners something genuinely unsettling—tales that lingered long after the final notes of the closing theme. Broadcasting during radio's golden age on the Mutual and ABC networks, the program proved that intimate, psychologically-driven drama could captivate millions. Each episode was a self-contained nightmare, often exploring themes of paranoia, the supernatural, and the fragility of human sanity.
Don't miss this masterclass in auditory suspense. "I've Been Looking For You" exemplifies why *Quiet Please* earned its devoted following and remains a haunting testament to radio's unmatched power to terrify through suggestion and sound alone. Tune in, but remember—the best scares are the ones you imagine yourself.