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Podcast: Play in new window | Download
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It’s Christmas and George gets a letter from a new client-a department store Santa Claus that wants him to solve the mystery of a missing electric train. But when Brooksie disappears, the case takes a more serious turn.
Original Air Date: December 19, 1949
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You’re not going to make any more headway than a hummingbird in a wind tunnel.
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Dan receives a book of poems in Box 13 that takes him back to a fire he covered ten years ago when working for the Star-Times.
Original Air Date: March 3, 1948
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Johnny Dollar is sent to protect an actresses legs as part of a publicity policy. He arrives to find her murdered and him the prime suspect.
Original Air Date: April 15, 1949
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Sherlock Holmes’ brother Mycroft calls on Holmes to help find stolen top secret papers relating to submarine plans.
Original Air Date: November 6, 1939
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Picture from Basil Rathbone.net
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George is hired by a bird watcher who thinks he spotted a man pushing another off the roof.
Original Air Date: April 19, 1948
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Quotes:
“Your men couldn’t follow a moose through a revolving door.”-Novak to Hellman
“You got a funny feeling that he didn’t walk into the night, that he was big enough to wrap it around his shoulders and take it with him.”
“Somebody had used to her badly, like a dictionary in a stupid family.”
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Dan Holiday goes to a park and find himself taking care of a young child who seems to be confused about who her mother is.
Original Air Date: February 25, 1948
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I’m not endorsing Comic Web’s CD Set. Never have bought from them, but I have to love the first line of their copy for their Johnny Dollar CD set:
Expense Account: item one: 1 CD full of Johnny Dollar episodes: $4.50 Expense Account: item two: a full set of Johnny Dollar radio episodes: $17.50
Yours Truly,
Johnny Blogger
(AKA: Adam Graham)
With most Radio Detective shows, it’s pretty straightforward in deciding to play them: Yes or No. However, when some shows, the answer is “Yes” and “No.”
Just like with Pat Novak for Hire, I’ve said “Yes” to the Jack Webb episodes and “No” to the Ben Morris episodes, there are a couple other shows where I’m giving a Split decision.
Philo Vance: Philo Vance was originally conceived in post World War I era as a somewhat arrogant elitist detective by S.S. Dine. And the first two radio series featuring Vance had him portrayed as the know it all, arrogant detective.
The most popular series in ciruclation toned down the arrogance. However, to my listening, there wasn’t much left. Jackson Beck’s portrayal of Vance was somewhat flat. However, a flat detective could be okay if the mysteries were mentally engaging. Unfortunately, the mysteries were all too simple for my tastes. Which made the latter Philo Vance episodes particularly insulting to the police. It was one thing to have to call in a private investigator on a hard-to-solve murder case. It’s a bit of fantasy. However, if the case wasn’t really all that difficult to begin with, it’s kind of insulting.
Of course, this is a matter of taste, but for me doing 2 years of Philo Vance as portrayed by Jackson Beck seems more like a sentence for a minor crime.
However the early to mid-1940s Vance is more like it. Slightly more arrogant, but the mysteries are better too. So, I end up with a “yes” to John Emery and Jose Ferrer version of Philo Vance, but a “no” to the Jackson Beck Version.
Mr. and Mrs. North: I love the episodes of Mr. and Mrs. North featuring Joseph Conklin and Alice Frost. The show had wonderful chemistry between the two leads, a good dose of comedy mixed in, and some pretty fun mysteries, with Pam North more likely to solve the case than her husband Jerry.
However, the show changed actors in 1953-54 to feature TV’s Mr. and Mrs. North, Richard Denning and Barbara Britton. I’ve tried, but I can’t enjoy these episodes. Pretty much all of the lighness that made the 1943-54 series a success is gone as Denning and Britton try to put on a serious crime drama. It just doesn’t work. The chemistry isn’t there, and again the mysteries aren’t that clever.
So I say yes to Mr. and Mrs. North with Conklin-Frost and No to Mr. and Mrs. North with Denning-Britton.
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Johnny Dollar heads to London in search of a rare stolen painting.
Original Air Date: April 1, 1949
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Sherlock Holmes (played by Orson Welles) seeks to reclaim letters being used as blackmail and foil the plans of Professor Moriarity.
Original Air Date: September 25, 1938
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George Valentine is hired to reconcile two brothers, but when the dead body of a local gambling kingpen is found in the missing brother’s apartment, the mission takes on a new sense of urgency, as George must find the brother before the dead kingpin’s gang does.
Original Air Date: April 12, 1948
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After being hired to pay off a beautiful woman’s brother’s gambling debt, Novak finds himself next to a dead body with Inspector Hellman on the way up.
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Quotes:
“I’ve run across better people in sewers.”
“You can’t add a pair of zeroes without crib notes.”-Novak to Hellman.
“Stop posing. You couldn’t follow an elephant across a basketball court.”-Novak to Hellman.
(Picture Courtesy: Digital Deli.)
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