Suspense 461010 214 A Plane Case Of Murder (128 44) 28649 30m13s
# A Plane Case of Murder
Picture this: the cabin lights flicker as a commercial airliner cuts through the night sky, thirty thousand feet above the sleeping world below. Among the passengers sits a murderer—and someone knows it. In *A Plane Case of Murder*, the intimate confines of a transatlantic flight become a pressure cooker of suspicion and dread, where paranoia spreads as quickly as whispered accusations through the narrow aisles. With nowhere to run and nowhere to hide, every passenger becomes both potential victim and suspect. The steady drone of the engines provides an almost hypnotic backdrop as tensions mount, alibis crumble, and the truth—deadly and unavoidable—hurtles toward its terrible revelation. CBS's *Suspense* specialized in transforming ordinary situations into chambers of terror, and this episode proves why the show became America's most trusted purveyor of nighttime chills.
For two decades, *Suspense* commanded the airwaves on CBS, becoming the gold standard of dramatic radio thriller programming. Premiering in 1942, the show's rotating cast of Hollywood's finest actors and innovative sound design created a reputation so formidable that the opening tagline—"Submitted for your approval: stories of the unusual and unexpected"—became synonymous with quality fright. The show's genius lay in its accessibility; these weren't distant Gothic horrors but everyday scenarios twisted into nightmares by circumstance and human nature. Episodes like *A Plane Case of Murder* showcased the format at its peak, proving that you didn't need monsters or supernatural forces to terrify an audience—just confined spaces, secrets, and the knowledge that one person among you is capable of murder.
Tune in now and experience the golden age of radio drama, when a simple flight became a floating coffin and every shadow held a secret. *Suspense* awaits—and it promises you won't sleep soundly afterward.