Month: February 2021

EP3375: Crime Photographer: The Mysterious Lodger

Stats Cotsworth

An elderly landlady reports that her lodgers was found murdered in a locked room.

Original Air Date: March 6, 1947

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Video Theater 197: Here’s Flash Casey

Flash Casey (Eric Linden) graduates college and gets a drop at a newspaper, but wants to help the kindly editor of the pictoral magazine.

Original Release; January 7, 1938

Who’s Listening to Our Podcast?

Who’s listen to the Great Detectives of Old Time Radio? Tens of thousands of people all over the world interact with the content we create one way or another. I know that there are hundreds of thousands of unique listens and tens of thousands of views of old time radio programs and public domain films and movies on the YouTube channel.

I have a few tools that give me a general view of what audience is listening to my podcast or watching my YouTube channel and in this article, we’re going to talk about a general picture of who is in my audience.

Geography:

For all of our feeds, more than four out of five of our overall listeners (82%) are from the U.S. The biggest source for foreign listens is Canada (11%) followed by the U.K. (2.4%) and Australia (1.5%). In terms of cities, Chicago (1.16%) is the only city in the world that makes up more than 1% of our downloads. Other cities in our top 10 include six U.S. cities: Los Angeles, Seattle, Portland, Minneapolis, Houston, and Phoenix. Also included are three Canadian Cities: Calgary, Toronto (Home of the Red Panda), and Vancouver. About 92.5% come from somewhere else.

Some individual feeds have a different national breakdown. For example, our feed for just Yours Truly Johnny Dollar episodes is 89% American. Philip Marlowe has the same 89% American total with 29% of listeners to the Philip Marlowe feed coming from territory Marlowe would know well, Los Angeles and Santa Monica. Listeners to the Nero Wolfe feed are 86% American, but there’s no concentration of listeners in New York City.

On the other hand, only 76% of listeners to our Sherlock Holmes feed are Americans, with 7% of our listeners coming from the U.K. Our Poirot feed has the highest number of foreign listeners, with more than 45% of listeners from outside the U.S. In addition, on that feed, there are more listeners from the U.K. (13%), Australia (6%), and Ireland (5%), than Canada (3%). The most Canadian feed is our Jeff Regan feed where nearly one in three (32%) of listeners hail from Canada.

Age and Gender:

The best information we have on audience demographics is from the voluntary listener survey.

Spotify does provide some information for age and gender of who listens to the podcast on their service. T hat’s only representative of those who use Spotify. Still, the information from Spotify is close to what the listener survey showed. The audience for Great Detectives is a little less than 2/3 male and trends older. According to Spotify, listeners who enjoy my podcast like Rolling Stones, the Beatles, Frank Sinatra, David Bowie, and Taylor Swift.

The individual show feeds are mostly similar, but a couple were different. 81% of the listeners to the Amazing World of Radio on Spotify were 35 or younger and only slightly more male than female. The Old Time Radio Superman Show also has a strong under 35 contingent with 39% of listeners being under 35, but also men outnumber 7:1 in the listenership category.

How People Listen

When I started podcasting, Apple made up between 80-90% of my podcast downloads. Apple still accounts for more than 70% of my downloads, but there are a lot of competitors, with no clear second place finisher. For our show, there are 11 different services that account for 1% or more of our downloads. The most popular of these is Tune-in. Tune-in amounts to nearly 4% of our downloads. Stitcher is about half a percentage point.

When Are You Watching:

The YouTube channel stats are less detailed. In the topline demographics, the audience on YouTube tends to be older than the podcast audience and slightly more male than the podcast audience. The same top four countries on the podcast (U.S., Canada, U.K., and Australia) are also on YouTube.

The most interesting, irrelevant information provided by YouTube is when people watch my videos. Early in the morning daily is a period of between 2 and 7 hours when few of you are on. Viewer interest grows throughout the day leading to a two hour prime time between 8 and 10 PM MT according to YouTube, “Very many of your viewers are on.” That is except on Thursday, when it’s only between 8 and 9 PM. Also, Thursday is the day where between 1 and 8 A.M., few of my subscribers are on. This suggests people who watch the Great Detectives on YouTube may not be fans of Thursday.

This has been an interesting exercise. I’m glad for all of you, wherever and whenever you are, and however you choose to experience our content.

EP3374: Suspense: End of the Road

A model turns to the assistant district attorney for help in dealing with an abusive husband.

Original Air Date: January 31, 1960

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EP3373: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Neel Breer Matter

Edmond O'Brien
Johnny travels to a small town when a Doctor raises doubts about the cause of a death of a young man who supposedly died of a heart attack.

Original Air Date: July 18, 1951

When making your travel plans, remember http://johnnydollarair.com

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EP3372: Mystery is My Hobby: Stephanie Brent Murdered


Barton Drake receives a call from a model telling him she was dying at 8:32:15.

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EP3371: Man Called X: The Mekong River Dam

Herbert Marshall
Ken Thurston travels to Cambodia to prevent the sabotage of a major dam project.

Original Air Date: August 8, 1948

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EP3370: The Fat Man: Murder Makes a Statue (AU)

A young woman comes to Brad for urgent help, faints, and then wake ups with amnesia.
Original Air Date: December 16, 1954
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EP3369: Crime Photographer: The Twenty Minute Alibi

Stats Cotsworth

A man calls his insurance company to insure his soon-to-be expired life insurance policy is in effect. A shot goes off and the man is found dead. Captain Logan suspects suicide, but Casey insists its murder.
Original Air Date: February 20, 1947

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TV Series Review: The No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency

In 2008 Alexander McCall Smith’s book series The No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency came to television with a pilot movie produced by the BBC in cooperation with HBO.

The series follows Mma Precious Ramotswe (Jill Scott) as a woman who starts the first female-led private detective agency in Botswana. She hires young secretary Grace Makutsi (Aniki Noni Rose) and wins the affections of local JLB Matekoni (Lucian Msamati.)

The series premiered with a feature length telefilm that tracked closely with the first book in the series in 2008 and in 2009 followed up with a six episode series.

The acting is solid and the characters mostly work. The series was shot on location in Botswana with unique and beautiful cinematography and gives it the sort of authenticity that a series like this needs to work.

The writing on the show was mixed and some of this goes back to the original novels. After the first novel, the books became cozy. There were less serious crimes or no crimes in whatever investigations were going on.

Potential problems and challenges would be raised for our heroine and friends, but they would be resolved sometimes with little to no action by any character in the book. They’d thought about it, worried a little, went on with their life, and the problem went away on its own. That may occur in life, but it doesn’t make for particularly gripping drama.

Doing a straight adaptation of the books would never work on television, so what we get are a mix of stories based on incidents in various books that were changed as well as original story ideas, and even an element or two to make the series more politically correct, as well as reflecting the reality of then-modern Day Botswana.

This had mixed effects. Some of their changes worked well. They did a good job with how they developed the relationship with Mma Ramostwe and JLB Matekoni. The first book contains both of Matekoni’s proposals, the first which Mma Ramotswe refuses and the second which she encourages and accepts. One change the pilot film made was that she does become engaged to him by the end of the film. The series explores both reasons why she’s reluctant and also his feelings.

Msamati’s performance as JLB Matekone helps the production stay true to who he was in the book. Matekone would never go up and have a big conversation with someone else about his feelings, but he still feels deeply. Msamati’s facial expressions and body language can convey that a situation is killing him on the inside without saying a word.

In the books, Matekoni comes down with depression for medical reasons that are irrational. This was intended to illustrate how depression can often come into play in people’s lives. Here, the storyline of him needing to leave unexpectedly is used to better dramatic effect as he’s trying to sort out his relationship with Mma Ramotswe.

I also thought that in the later episodes, they did a good job giving Mma Ramotswe personal stuff to work through. In the books, a male detective establishes a competing agency, the Satisfaction Guaranteed Detective Agency and at another point, her abusive ex-husband comes to town. In the first instance, the detective is a potential problem that is easily foiled, never becomes a threat to her agency, and leaves town after one book. In the books, she also meets her abusive ex-husband with no real problems. In the TV show though, the competing detective isn’t so easily dispatched and is kind of menacing. The ex-husband returns and poses a huge challenge to Mma Ramotswe and brings her to a point of crisis. The finale of the season is very good for that reason.

While the series is on target with its character development. Some of the plot ideas don’t work. It’s not necessarily that the writers didn’t have good ideas but that they didn’t have a good idea for this show. For example, they take a story from the book but have the denouement end in a way that’s absolutely absurd. It was funny, but not in a way that fit the tone of the show. In another episode, a solution of a case was changed from a simple domestic problem to actual attempted murder so that Ma Ramotswe could gather all the suspects around the table like Hercule Poirot and tell what happened. That doesn’t fit her, plus while the writers made that big change to the plot, they didn’t make enough little changes to set the situation up or to change the consequences or to provide any foundation for why the consequences didn’t change. It really was a mess.

There were also a few cases where elements were added and changes to make the show a little more edgy or a little more cynical than in the book, but with little rhyme or reason. Perhaps, it’s one of the hazards of having HBO in on the production, but to me it didn’t work.

Overall, despite a few wrinkles in its execution of its mystery plots, the series is a solid adaptation of the story of the novels. If you’re a fan of the novels, it’s worth watching. If you’re not a fan of the novels, it’s worth seeing for the characters and location work. But if you’re looking for a truly great mystery series, you may want to look elsewhere.

Rating: 3.5 out of 5

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EP3368: Suspense: The Thimble

The Assistant District Attorney investigates the death of a famous painter at the request of her mentally ill daughter.
Original Air Date: November 22, 1959

Become one of our monthly patreon supporters at patreon.greatdetectives.net

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EP3367: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Fairway Matter

Edmond O'Brien
Johnny investigates the fatal bombing of an airplane.
Original Air Date: July 11, 1951
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EP3366: Mystery is My Hobby: Radio Comedians Duel

Inspector Danton is tipped off that a radio comedian is going to be murdered.

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Video Theater 196: Code 3: The Benson Case

A woman accused of murder learns a female sheriff’s deputy is undercover as a prisoner. But who is the undercover woman?

Original Air Date: December 24, 1957 Season 1, Episode 39

EP3365: Man Called X: Siam Tin Deposits

Herbert Marshall
Mr. X goes to Bangkok to search for the location of a large deposit of tin…and a murderer.
Original Air Date: June 6, 1948
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