Quiet Please 480426 047 13 And 8
# Quiet Please: "13 and 8"
As the clock strikes midnight and your radio crackles to life, you're drawn into a world where mathematics becomes madness. In this chilling installment of *Quiet Please*, the familiar comfort of numbers unravels into something far more sinister. A man becomes obsessed with two seemingly innocent figures—thirteen and eight—numbers that appear everywhere, controlling his thoughts, dictating his actions, pulling him inexorably toward a fate he cannot escape. The soundscape is masterfully crafted: ticking clocks that seem to count down to something terrible, whispered voices that might be real or imagined, and an ever-present sense of dread that tightens with each passing moment. What begins as curiosity transforms into psychological torment, and listeners will find themselves trapped alongside our protagonist in a prison built entirely from fear and superstition.
*Quiet Please*, which aired from 1947 to 1949, represented the final golden age of radio horror, arriving just as television threatened to steal the medium's audience. Hosted by Ernest Chappell with his trademark calm, almost conversational delivery, the show proved that radio's true power lay not in what it showed, but in what it made listeners *imagine*. Unlike the action-packed serials and comedy programs that dominated the airwaves, *Quiet Please* offered something more intellectually unsettling—psychological horror rooted in everyday anxieties. This particular episode exemplifies the show's genius for transforming the mundane into the uncanny.
Settle into your favorite chair, turn down the lights, and prepare yourself for twenty-five minutes of pure atmospheric dread. *Quiet Please* demands your full attention and rewards it with some of the finest horror radio ever produced. Don't miss "13 and 8"—a masterclass in how to terrify an audience with nothing but voices, sound effects, and the infinite depths of human paranoia.