Studio One 47 11 17 Ep29 Young Man Of Manhattan Rehearsal
Step into the bustling newsroom of 1940s Manhattan, where ambition runs as fast as the printing presses and a young reporter's career hangs in the balance. In this Studio One presentation, listeners will experience the crackling tension of a newsroom under deadline pressure, the sharp wit of hardened journalists, and the desperate gamble of a man trying to prove himself in a city that devours the weak. As our protagonist navigates the treacherous waters of metropolitan journalism, romance blooms amid the chaos—but can he afford the distraction? The drama unfolds with the kinetic energy that only live radio can deliver, complete with authentic sound effects: typewriter keys clacking in rapid-fire succession, ringing telephones, the swish of papers, and voices overlapping in the orchestrated pandemonium of a working newsroom. This is journalism as it was lived and imagined in America's golden age.
Studio One exemplified CBS's commitment to sophisticated adult drama during the late 1940s, presenting original teleplays that captured contemporary American life with unusual realism and complexity. Unlike the fantasy and melodrama that dominated much of broadcasting, these episodic dramas tackled urban settings, professional ambitions, and modern moral dilemmas. "Young Man of Manhattan" represents the show's particular interest in the newspaper world—a setting that fascinated radio audiences who relied on dailies and newsreels as their primary news sources. This November 1947 broadcast reminds us that journalism itself was considered thrilling dramatic material, worthy of serious storytelling.
Don't miss this slice of postwar urban drama. Tune in and experience why millions of Americans made Studio One appointment listening, gathering around their sets to witness the struggles and triumphs of characters who could have been their neighbors, their colleagues, or themselves.