Texas Rangers 1950 10 29 17 Soft Touch
Picture this: A dusty Texas town where a con man with a silver tongue and a con woman with a dangerous secret have set their sights on bilking the local bank manager out of his life savings. When a desperate widow nearly falls into their trap, the Texas Rangers are called in to unravel a web of lies, false identities, and dangerous double-crosses. In "Soft Touch," listeners will experience the crackling tension of a confidence scheme spiraling dangerously out of control, complete with snappy dialogue, tense confrontations, and the steady determination of seasoned lawmen who've seen every trick in the book. The sound design transports you straight into smoky offices and shadowy street corners, where nothing—and no one—is quite what they seem.
Tales of the Texas Rangers occupied a unique place in the golden age of radio drama. While the western genre dominated the airwaves, this NBC series distinguished itself by focusing on authentic cases drawn from actual Texas Rangers records, lending it a documentary-like credibility that audiences craved in an era hungry for truth behind the legend. The show's 1950-1952 run featured crisp writing and performances that treated lawmen as intelligent investigators rather than quick-draw caricatures. Episodes like "Soft Touch" exemplified why the series earned respect from critics and devotion from listeners—it understood that the real drama of law enforcement lay in patience, psychology, and the cat-and-mouse games between cunning criminals and the men determined to stop them.
Don't miss this gripping tale of deception and justice. Tune in now and discover why Tales of the Texas Rangers remains a touchstone of classic radio drama, where every case carries the weight of history and the thrill of danger.