Quiet Please 490320 092 The Smell Of High Wines
# The Smell Of High Wines
When you switch on your radio dial this evening, prepare yourself for an encounter with something far more sinister than any ghost or goblin—prepare yourself for the terrible consequences of human greed and obsession. In "The Smell of High Wines," the producers of *Quiet Please* have crafted a tale of a man whose desperate scheme to steal a fortune in rare spirits becomes his undoing in ways both deliciously ironic and deeply unsettling. The episode crackles with mounting dread as our protagonist discovers that some scents, once detected, can never be escaped—and some debts cannot be paid with currency alone. Host Everett Clark's languid narration will guide you through a fog of moral decay and supernatural reckoning, while the sound effects team works their uncanny magic, transforming an ordinary wine cellar into a maze of inescapable consequence.
*Quiet Please* stands apart in the golden age of radio drama precisely because it eschews the sensational monsters and mad scientists that populated the airwaves of the late 1940s. Instead, creator Wyllis Cooper and his successor Paul Rhymer crafted intimate psychological horrors—stories where the real terror blooms not in the shadows, but in the human heart. Broadcast live from Chicago during 1947-1949, these fifteen-minute episodes became legendary among aficionados for their sophisticated writing, atmospheric sound design, and willingness to explore the darker corners of human nature. "The Smell of High Wines" exemplifies this approach, using sensory detail as a weapon against comfort and reason.
Tune in tonight and discover why *Quiet Please* earned its devoted following—where the most terrifying broadcasts were always those that made listeners question their own choices, their own hungers, and what prices they might pay for satisfaction in the dark.