Quiet Please 490102 081 The Time Of The Big Snow
# The Time Of The Big Snow
As winter winds howl through your radio speaker, *Quiet Please* invites you into a world buried beneath an endless blanket of snow. In this chilling episode, a small community becomes utterly isolated when the great winter storm descends—and with isolation comes the kind of terror that no howling blizzard can explain. What begins as a tale of survival against the elements transforms into something far more sinister, something that prowls through the drifts when darkness falls. The production's trademark sound design—crackling ice, muffled footsteps, the eerie silence that follows—creates an atmosphere so immersive you'll feel the cold seeping through your living room walls. As the snow piles higher and supplies run lower, the real question emerges: what else is out there in the white void? The answer will chill you far more than any winter could.
*Quiet Please* stands as one of radio's most underrated gems, a show that understood that the most terrifying horrors are often those lurking just beyond what we can see. Broadcast during the golden age of radio drama between 1947 and 1949, the series eschewed the sensational sound effects of its competitors, instead favoring psychological dread and atmospheric subtlety. Host and creator Everett H. Rosenthal crafted narratives that trusted the listener's imagination—that most powerful of all special effects. In an era dominated by detective stories and family comedies, *Quiet Please* offered something genuinely unsettling, stories that lingered long after the final fade-out.
Tune in to "The Time Of The Big Snow" and discover why listeners still speak in hushed tones about *Quiet Please* nearly seventy-five years later. Turn off the lights, adjust your dial, and prepare yourself—but first, remember the show's solemn warning: *Quiet Please*.