Author: Yours Truly Johnny Blogger

Listener Support

Welcome to our biannual listener support campaign. It will run from August 19-September 9th.

We face many expenses here on the Great Detectives of Old Time Radio to keep the show going with $60 a month in hosting and $300 a year in malware protection.

You can contribute in one of two ways. Either: 1) You can send us a donation by Paypal or 2) If you would rather mail in a donation, email me and I’ll be happy to provide an address.

 

All year round, listeners get access to our premium site with donations of $7.00 or more. In addition, we’ve added a small selection of year-round thank are available if you email me requesting it. (Limit: One gift in addition to the premium site per donation)

$20 level:

A copy of any Adam Graham Kindle book including:

All I Needed to Know I Learned from Columbo (available for all devies)
What Made the Golden Age Shine
An Ounce of Prevention (my first detective story)
Tales of the Dim Knight
Fly Another Day
Powerhouse Hard Pressed

At the $50 level:

  • Two original Michael Shayne Dell pocket paperbacks books originally written between 1951-62. These editions were published between 1957-65. (U.S. and Canada Only.) (Note: only 2 two packs left.)

At the $100 level:

  • Your Choice of Volume  1Volume 2, or Volume 3 of John C Abbott’s Johnny Dollar series. At the $250 level, we’ll send all 3 books.

All Year Financial Support for the Great Detectives of Old Time Radio

  • When planning your travel, go to our Priceline affiliate http://johnnydollarair.com. If you find a great deal and book through there part of your purchase goes to support the program at no additional cost to you.
  • Purchase the App at either the Itunes Store or in the Amazon Android Store.
  • Check out our Amazon widget on the lefthand side of the page with many books and movies I’ve reviewed that I think you’ll find enjoyable.
  • I’ve written a couple ebooks relevant to the site including, All I Needed to Know I Learned from Columbo  and What Made the Golden Age Shine. Please read them and if you enjoy them, review them.  Both are available for the Kindle. All I Needed to Know I Learned from Columbo is available for the Nook, Ipad, and Kobo, as well as an Audible Audiobook.
  • Every week we post one or two articles. They can be book reviews, old time radio program reviews, or something about vintage radio, television or movies. Subscribe to the article feed for the Kindle.
  • I also have a host of other books (mostly fiction) available on Amazon or as Audiobooks.
  • I’ve owned a Roku for years and it’s a great little device that can allow to stream from Netflix, Amazon, MLB.TV, Pandorra, and countless other places right to your TV. You can even listen to Great Detective through the blubrry app. If you buy it through this link, a portion goes to support the show.

Totally Free Ways to Support the Show:

  • If you like the show, rate it on Itunes. While reviews are appreciated, you can rate a show without reviewing it.
  • Become one of our friends on Facebook at http://facebook.com/radiodetectives
  • Follow us on Twitter @radiodetectives
  • Let your friends know about the show. You can send them a direct link to the home page or share on Itunes. Also if you’re following us on Twitter, you can retweet episodes or on Facebook, you can share the episodes from our page right on to your own wall.
  • Link to us on your Blog Roll. (Let me know by email so I can link back to you.


Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Hannibal Murphy Matter (EP0475)

Edmond O'Brien

Johnny goes to Jamaica to investigate the death of an insured, only to find the police have already declared the death a murder.

Original Air Date: November 3, 1951

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Sherlock Holmes: Death in the North Sea (EP0474)

Tom Conway

The widow of a murdered older man hires Holmes to prove her love (and the dead man’s business partner) innocent of his killing.

Original Air Date: June 16, 1947

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Let George Do It: The Chair of Humanities (EP0473)

Bob Bailey

The wife of a prominent college professor asks for George’s help, but when he calls, she denies that she needs it. Then the professor himself asks George to stop him from being murdered.

Original Air Date: May 1, 1950

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Rogue’s Gallery: The Message (EP0472)

Dick Powell

A man on death row gives Rogue an esoteric message that’s supposed to lead to missing diamonds and a $15,000 reward.

Original Air Date: April 11, 1946

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Barrie Craig: Song of Death (EP0471)

William Gargan

Barrie saves a woman from drowning and finds himself in the midst of a lawsuit over a popular song where some party is willing to use violence in pursuit of the cause.

Original Air Date: December 26, 1951

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Original Air Date: December 12, 1951

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Book Review: The Red Box

The Red Box was the fourth of the Nero Wolfe novels and begins somewhat abruptly in the middle of the initial interview with Wolfe’s client. With a desperate need for a client, Archie connives with a potential client to get Wolfe to leave his house to travel down to a fashion firm several blocks away to interview witnesses in the poisoning death of a model who ate a candy from a box of chocolate and diet.  The client presents Wolfe with a letter from fellow orchid growers citing his participation in Orchid and urging him to undertake the case in the name of decency.

The client, Lew Frost wants Wolfe solve the murder and get his cousin Helen (who he is in love with) to quit her modeling job, as she is a wealthy heiress who is set to inherit a $2 million estate.

Despite his hating every moment, Wolfe uncovers one valuable clue in the course of his trip, in his interview with Ms. Frost and uncovers who the poison was really intended for. On confronting the target of the poison in his office on 35th street, Wolfe is shocked to learn that the man has made him the executor of his estate. He also wanted Wolfe to undertake a case for him, and an important to element of this was to be found in a red box, but before he could reveal the location of the box, he dies. Though, thanks to the will he remains a client.

As Archie says, this case is one client after another. Lew Frost dismisses Wolfe, but his cousin Helen hires Wolfe to find the poisoner, so Wolfe has yet another client.

The book contains a number of interesting features. The best may be Wolfe’s relationship with Helen Frost. It begins on a very rocky basis, but Wolfe ultimately wins her confidence and Helen matures throughout the book. It’s an interesting note that Wolfe seems to have an interesting effect on many spoiled children by treating them like adults. This is as compared to Helen’s friends and family who dote on her like she’s a child incapable of making her own decisions.

Also, my one big criticism of The Rubber Band was that Cramer was almost subservient to Wolfe. The Red Box thankfully has none of that as Cramer develops quite nicely and seems to be set in his cynicism and impatience with Wolfe’s games.

The story goes along quite nicely until the end when the book hits two big problems.

First, is a third murder, which was incredible. Stout’s fell into the mystery writer’s  trap of creating a murder scenario that is too clever to be practical. This murder involved carrying a volatile liquid in a purse or briefcase to a funeral, sneaking into the parking ar, getting into the murder victim’s car, and pouring this liquid into a teacup and then precariously positioning  the tea cup so that the victim will bump it and spill it on himself. The liquid by the way is so toxic that even casual exposure will send you to the hospital.  Rather than commending the plan for its ingenuity, Wolfe ought to have condemned its pure silliness that depended on dumb luck.

The second problem was the ending. While Wolfe used phony evidence to gain confessions or murder’s self-destructions several times, this particular book seemed to me to have the cheapest use of this trick I’ve yet encountered. And Wolfe’s actions hardly seem to work for his client’s emotional well-being. The main reason for Wolfe’s trick appeared to save the time and expense of finding the last missing necessary piece of the puzzle by substituting a phony.

However weak the end, I still enjoyed the book, with the Wolfe-Helen Frost relationship and the development of Inspector Cramer. While the book is probably the weakest of the first four installments of Nero Wolfe, I’ll give the book:
Rating: Satisfactory

You can find all the Nero Wolfe books in Kindle, Audiobook, and book form on our Nero Wolfe page.

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Audio Drama Review: Perry Mason and The Case of the Lucky Legs

Colonial Theatre released the third of its Perry Mason Audio dramas, “The Case of the Lucky Legs.”  Like with the first two, this is an audio drama based on the original Perry Mason novels of the 1930s, but produced in the 21st Century.

Perry Mason is retained initially to take legal action against a beauty contest promoter who cheated small town businessmen and a local young woman by promising her stardom as winner of a Lucky Legs contest and then leaving her high and dry in Hollywood. When Perry goes to have a discussion with the con man, he finds the man murdered.

Perry finds himself dodging the police until he can find the truth, questioning the witnesses, not even sure who is client is as the man who gave a retainer for $5000 to file the lawsuit keeps changing who Perry is supposed to represent.

The recording is quite a bit shorter than the previous Perry Mason stories that Colonial Theater had done and the length worked for this story. It really created a very tight and well-paced mystery. The plot is full of twists and surprises. At one point, Perry even hires another detective agency to spy on Paul Drake’s operative who are working for the man who paid him.

If there is one criticism I had for the production, it was that role of the winner of the Lucky Legs contest had a voice that didn’t fit the part. She sounded more like 14 rather than 21.  Still, that’s a minor flaw in a brilliant production. I can hardly wait for Colonial’s next installment.

Note: If you are an Audible Member, the digital download of this production is only $2.95 which is a fantastic price for this great production.

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 Stars

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Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Tolhurst Theft Matter (EP0470)

Edmond O'Brien

Johnny receives an anonymous clue to the location of $50,000 stolen from a furrier. The source’s condition: don’t tell the police.

Original Air Date: October 27, 1951

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Sherlock Holmes: Murder in the Locked Room (EP0469)

Tom Conway

A mystery writer comes up with an idea for a locked room mystery while drunk, but forgets the solution. He goes to Holmes and tricks him into providing the solution. He then winds up dead.

Original Air Date: June 9, 1947

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Let George Do It: Death Begins at 45 (EP0468)

Bob Bailey

A frustrated writer calls for George’s help as he’s finally closing in a big news story involving a notorious gangster hanging out in a rich neighborhood.

Original Air Date: April 24, 1950

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Rogue’s Gallery: The Triangle Murder Case (EP0467)

Dick Powell

A newspaper publisher has the dope on a dishonest attorney and is murdered.

Original Air Date: February 21, 1946

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Barrie Craig: Ghost of a Chance (EP0466)

William Gargan

Barrie Craig is hired by an insurance company that suspects it was defrauded when it paid off on an insurance policy for a man who was supposedly hit by a subway train.

Original Air Date: December 19, 1951

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Poirot Return Looks Likely

David Suchet was honored with the Commander Order of the British Empire and expressed some hope that Poirot would return to ITV to adapt the final five Poirot books in the Autumn of next year. He said that while it wasn’t official, “the green light is blinking.”

Four novels and one play remain that have not been adapted for television by ITV:

The Big Four
Dead Man’s Folly
Elephant Can Remember
Black Coffee
Curtain

There also remains an entire short story collection (“The Labors of Hercules”) as well as one of Poirot’s Early Cases that wasn’t adapted during the original one hour serials but the ship has probably saled on those. In the meanwhile, it’s good to here Suchet bullish about more episode of Poirot. Hopefully, I’ll be fairly well caught up by the time the new ones are released.

We Still Love Lucy

Well, sometimes special days in the life or Golden Age figures pass me by. Such was the case with today’s anniversary of the birth of one of the world’s great comediennes, Lucille Ball.

Google paid tribute to Lucy with a doodle honoring Lucy’s landmark ratings hit with then-husband Desi Arnez, which ran from 1951-57 and left the air the number one sitcom on television.

The show’s popularity continues to endure. It still airs on local television in Los Angeles and reruns continue on cable 53 years after leaving. Lucy’s zaniness, her facial expressions, and her strong on-screen chemistry with Arnez make the show a huge win that brings a smile to most people’s faces.

The greatness of Lucille Ball is shown in the fact that the 1950s had a lot of great comedies on the air: The Life of Riley, Burns and Allen, Jack Benny, Jimmy Durante, Abbott and Costello, and several other very good servicable comedies. Yet, only I Love Lucy and the Honeymooners really seem to endure in the popular imagination.

There’s a certain charm about these shows that makes them connect with listeners across time. With all the changes from 1951-Present, Lucy has remained a constant that is enjoyed by fans of all ages, which is a truly remarkable achievement.

IMDB has 86 episodes online for your viewing pleasure. 

However, Lucy did have roots on radio. Prior to coming to television, she starred with Richard Denning (Michael Shayne, and Mr. and Mrs. North)  in My Favorite Husband, a domestic comedy. The writers recycled and reworked several My Favorite Husband  scripts for I Love Lucy. So, this gives a great opportunity to here the first draft of some of these fine comedic episodes.

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