Thursday, February 12, 2026

Radio Recap: Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar

"Another transcribed adventure of the man with the action-packed expense account, America's fabulous freelance insurance investigator: Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar!"

Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar was a detective series that ran over CBS from February 11, 1949 until September 30, 1962. It was one of the very last old-time radio shows, ceasing its broadcast run on the same night CBS cancelled Suspense. The role of Johnny Dollar was played by Charles Russell (1949-1950), Edmond O'Brien (1950-1952), John Lund (1952-1954), Bob Bailey (1955-1960; also known for Let George Do It), Bob Readick (1960-1961) and Mandel Kramer (1961-1962). However, it should be stated up front that of them all, Bob Bailey not only had the longest-run, but today, his episodes continue to be the most thoroughly circulated among all episodes of Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar; to many fans, Bob Bailey is Johnny Dollar.

In every iteration, Johnny Dollar was an insurance investigator working out of Hartford, Connecticut, who would be sent by insurance companies to investigate their clients' insurance claims. This would involve an element of mystery and usually some danger as Johnny would inevitably find someone trying to steal or destroy an insured item, kill an insured person, or commit insurance fraud. The stories were narrated by Johnny as he indicated the various expenses he incurred on his account. In the early years, he sometimes traveled to investigate clients in exotic locales in Europe, Asia or the Caribbean; but usually, he was stateside. Initially, his tagline "yours truly" came with an implied question mark and his employers would complain about how he'd pad his expense account; that was dropped in time as Johnny became increasingly virtuous; by the time of Bob Bailey, his integrity was unassailable.

An audition program from December 7, 1948 still exists but although the script would turn up on the eventual series, the production is quite different from the eventual series; it was produced by Anton M. Leader (Words at War, Murder at Midnight, Suspense) and starred Dick Powell (who was in between Rogue's Gallery and Richard Diamond, Private Detective at the time)! It's even more surreal hearing Bob Bailey as the bad guy in the 2nd version of the pilot (which was Charles Russell's audition)! Leader didn't stick around past the original pilot, with Richard Sanville producing the series in its early days.

Richard Diamond seemed to haunt the series at times; in "Murder Ain't Minor" (August 7, 1949), Dollar quipped to his client, "There's any number of good licensed private detectives that you could have gone to: Philip Marlowe, Sam Spade and Richard Diamond-- and he would not only have solved your case he would also sing you a song; why did you come to me?" In a final, strange connection, a script from Richard Diamond, Private Detective was recycled with Johnny Dollar as "The Shayne Bombing Matter" (July 14, 1953)!

The series was sustained by CBS for most of its run but Wrigley's served as their sponsor from 1950-1954.

Early episodes had very typical titles but as of "The Abel Tackett Matter" (May 2, 1950) the series set itself apart from others by using "Matter" in the title of every episode. At times in the John Lund era the show would play like a police procedural; "The Dameron Matter" (April 21, 1953) for example, featured Johnny working alongside the police to solve a crime connected to his insurance company.

Music in early episodes was by Leith Stevens, who was also scoring Escape at the time - and indeed, the two shows had very similar organ music then. Wilbur Hatch took over the music when it shifted away from the organ to orchestral; music was mostly canned by 1955 but the series did at least have its own unique music bridges and themes (unlike NBC where every dramatic show used the same music library).

Bob Bailey's initial tenure on the series saw a switch from the half-hour format to a 15-minute Monday-Friday format in 1955. In this era, Johnny would usually solve a single case over 5 days (but some cases ran into 2 weeks). The serialized Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar is probably the most-beloved version of the series (it was my introduction to the program) and these days some fans have edited them into uninterrupted dramas that run about 1 hour each. But this format change only lasted for a year before reverting to the half-hour version.

The Bob Bailey years also included the one time Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar featured a guest star - Vincent Price, who portrayed himself as Johnny's client in "The Price of Fame Matter" (February 2, 1958). It's a fun episode for us Vincent Price fans. On the completion of Bailey's fifth year as Johnny Dollar the program celebrated with "The Five Down Matter" (September 25, 1960), with appearances by most of Johnny's supporting characters.

Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar didn't have a supporting cast in the way most detective programs did. There were all sorts of recurring characters but they didn't appear in every episode; in the Bailey years, Johnny had a girlfriend, Betty Lewis (Virginia Gregg, who previously starred opposite Bailey on Let George Do It), but she only appeared when it suited the plot. Similarly, Johnny had all sorts of insurance company representatives who would send him on his assignments, such as Pat McCracken (usually played by Lawrence Dobkin), but as Johnny was a freelancer he took his assignments from a variety of different companies. There were recurring clients as well, such as the wealthy eccentric Alvin Cartwright (Howard McNear).

The series was produced in Hollywood until 1960, when it moved to New York (costing them Bailey as their lead). It had benefited from CBS' terrific cast of Hollywood radio regulars, including William Conrad, Lawrence Dobkin, Parley Baer, John Dehner, Georgia Ellis, Virginia Gregg, Joseph Kearns, Howard McNear and Raymond Burr. In New York, it drew from the likes of Jackson Beck, Santos Ortega, William Redfield, Raymond Edward Johnson, Luis Van Rooten and Maurice Tarplin -- the same voices heard on Suspense in its own twilight years.

I count myself as a typical Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar fan in that I prefer the Bob Bailey years. The Edmund O'Brien years have some interest, particularly as they have longer stories (the Baily half-hours used lots of commercials), but I don't have much interest in the New York years - I found Mandel Kramer in particular to be an uninteresting Johnny Dollar.

The Old Time Radio Researchers have a YouTube playlist containing 721 episodes of Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar! It includes all the audition recordings and, where the broadcast versions haven't been found uses what are clearly rehearsal versions (particularly in the Edmond O'Brien era).

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Radio Recap: Strange Wills

"Dead men's wills are often strange; we cannot attempt to understand them, or try to find the answers; we can but tell the story."
Strange Wills was a syndicated program from Teleways that was hosted by Warren William. It was apparently aired from June 8-December 7, 1946. The show was produced by Robert Webster Light, directed by Albert Ulrich and featured the music of Del Castillo (of Escape).

Warren William had a long career in films that mostly peaked in the 1930s; I thought he was great in Employees' Entrance. He mostly starred in Warner Bros. films and played a lot of detectives, including Perry Mason, Philo Vance, the Lone Wolf and, uh, the not-Sam Spade in Satan Met a Lady.

Some of the dramas were the story of how an unusual will was written, with the will not entering the drama until the climax. In others, the will's reading would set off the drama as the inciting incident. Frequently, the emphasis of Strange Wills was on romance, only occasionally on mystery or thrills.

The episode "Madman's Diary" (August 17, 1946) features the diary of a scientist who claimed he could send people's minds backwards in time to their past lives; it plays out like an episode of the Mysterious Traveler -- it's nothing like the rest of the show!

Warren William usually portrayed a character in the drama in addition to his role as narrator; the cast included the likes of William Conrad, Lurene Tuttle, Howard Culver and Peggy Webber.

Strange Wills is a bit of odd fare; if you want to experience something well-made but off-the-wall, it might fit the bill.

You can hear the Old Time Radio Researchers' collection of Strange Wills episodes with the YouTube playlist below; it opens with the show's audition and pitch, which features a variety of clips from episodes:

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Radio Recap: Let George Do It

"Personal Notice: Danger's my stock-in-trade. If the job's too tough for you to handle, you've got a job for me, George Valentine. Write full details."

Let George Do It was a half-hour detective show that starred Bob Bailey as George Valentine, who obtained his clients from an ad in the newspaper that emphasized his status as an odd-job man. His sidekick was Claire Brooks ("Brooksie") portrayed by Frances Robinson (later Virginia Gregg). George's frenemy with the police was Lt. Riley (Wally Maher). Let George Do It aired on Mutual for an impressive eight years from October 18, 1946 until September 27, 1954. It's the work Bob Bailey was best-known for prior to assuming the lead on Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar. When he left to take over that series, Olan Soule became George Valentine (we have only a few of his episodes).

In the early days Brooksie was accompanied by her kid brother Sonny (Eddie Firestone Jr.). The tone of the series in the first year was originally broadly comedic; it was only in the second year that Sonny took a hike and the series became more of a traditional detective series. The show's original opening was:

"George Valentine has been out of uniform only a few weeks. Blessed with an abundance of energy and adventuresome spirit and not too much money, he has sunk his last dime in an office, renting a few pieces of furniture and an ad in the classified section of the daily paper, an ad which reads: You have a crime that needs solving? You have a dog that needs walking? You have a wife that needs spanking? Let George do it!"

That "You have a wife that needs spanking?" line was in particular timed for comedic effect. Plots of the first season are very simple, quaint... like an Archie comic book. Listening to the first year, it's amazing that they were given enough rope to retool the series into something a bit more formulaic but also better able to hold up year after year.

Let George Do It featured plenty of familiar radio actors in the supporting roles, including Luis Van Rooten, Paul Frees, Barney Phillips, Betty Lou Gerson, Tony Barrett, Herb Butterfield, Howard McNear, Pedro De Cordoba, Georgia Ellis, Lurene Tuttle, Jeff Chandler and William Conrad.

I've given grief to some other radio detective shows for how they depicted the hero's gal Friday, so I should note Virginia Gregg's Brooksie was a cut above them; she had the typical unrequited love for the hero (George always seemed to be too busy to focus on his relationship with Brooksie) but she wasn't bitter or manipulative, nor was she a flaky airhead. She took part in George's investigations and accepted risky assignments.

I find Let George Do It to be a decent enough program. I can't say that any episodes really stand out to me, but Bob Bailey's performances hold up well. If you like Bailey on Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar, you probably enjoy Let George Do It too.

The Old Time Radio Researchers have a YouTube playlist of 243 episodes of Let George Do It - the syndicated versions are at the end of the list, some are available in both network and syndicated versions; the syndicated versions have a somewhat irritating mumbling announcer:

Tuesday, January 27, 2026

RIP: Sal Buscema

"Our Pal" Sal Buscema passed away last Saturday, just 2 days shy of his 90th birthday. He was the brother of the legendary comics artist John Buscema and got his start inking his brother. He wound up toiling as a penciler and inker at Marvel Comics from 1969 up to 2011. In his time, he worked on just about every major Marvel property, everything from Rom to Spectacular Spider-Man.

While his brother has earned plenty of accolades for his work, Sal hasn't received too many honours for his work (although I note my colleagues at the Inkwell Awards gave him four awards). Sal's most warmly-received run is probably his work on Defenders in the 1970s, but fans dub it "Steve Gerber's Defenders," not "Gerber and Buscema's."

I think Sal Buscema was seen as a "house style" artist - that is, people thought he imitated other artists (like his brother and Jack Kirby) rather than developing his own style. And yet, his style - especially as seen in Spectacular Spider-Man - is undeniably unique. His collaboration with writer Walter Simonson on Thor saw him shift his style to suit Simonson's own art; his long run on Incredible Hulk included a period with moody inks by Gerry Talaoc; and his Spectacular Spider-Man run included a run of stories where he was inked by Bill Sienkiewicz - it's scarcely recognizable as his old "house style."

When Sal Buscema was chosen as the cover artist for the series of Marvel Legacy handbooks we created in 2006 (he wound up drawing the covers to the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s books) I was honoured to have his art grace our cover as at the time, he was one of the last surviving 1960s Marvel artists, a genuine link to the past, which is what our books were honouring.

Rest in peace, Mr. Buscema.

Friday, January 23, 2026

Coming from Marvel in April: Annihilation Conquest TPB!

I haven't worked for Marvel in over a decade but some of my books - like Annihilation Saga - keep being reprinted. I'm always happy to see it brought back; solicit below:
ANNIHILATION MODERN ERA EPIC COLLECTION: CONQUEST PROLOGUE TPB

Volume #3 in the Annihilation Modern Era Epic Collections

Writer(s): DAN ABNETT, ANDY LANNING, CHRISTOS GAGE, KEITH GIFFEN and MORE
Pencils: MICHAEL PERKINS, MIKE LILLY, TIMOTHY GREEN II and MORE
Cover Artist(s): GABRIELE DELL’OTTO
272 PGS./Rated T+ …$37.99
ISBN: 9781302967116
Trim size: 6-5/8 x 10-3/16

Setting the stage for a sci-fi epic that will rock Marvel’s cosmos!

In the grim aftermath of the Annihilation War, a devastated universe struggles to rebuild. Gripped by fear and paranoia, civilizations have collapsed, and entire worlds are now smoking ruins. What’s next for the battle-weary hero known as Nova? What are Ronan’s plans for the once-mighty Kree Empire? And now that Peter Quill is once again Star-Lord, which cosmic characters will join his ragtag crew to guard the galaxy? Meanwhile, the new Quasar – Phyla-Vell, daughter of Captain Marvel – embarks on an epic journey, but what has happened to her home world? What classic foe of the Avengers is now hunting her? And what is troubling her lover, Moondragon? All the while, a devastating threat looms that threatens conquest – and annihilation!

Collecting ANNIHILATION: CONQUEST PROLOGUE (2007) #1, ANNIHILATION: CONQUEST – QUASAR (2007) #1-4, ANNIHILATION: CONQUEST – STARLORD (2007) #1-4 and ANNIHILATION SAGA (2007).

Thursday, January 22, 2026

Radio Recap: Easy Money

"The National Broadcasting Company presents a new series of programs transcribed to expose the inside secrets of gamblers, racketeers and con men; it's called: Easy Money."
"Easy money? There's no such thing as easy money."
"Mike Trent, famous rackets detective and ex-magician has an exciting story of an Easy Money swindle for you, and here he is, that super-sleuth who makes an honest living out of fraud, Mike Trent."

Easy Money was an NBC program that appears to have aired just one year, from October 3, 1954 to June 5, 1955. The series starred Larry Haines as Mike Trent, the series' protagonist. Bill McCoy was the program's announcer. In the series, Mike Trent would go up against professional criminals and use his knowledge of magic to either solve the manner in which the crimes were performed, or equip himself to bring down the criminals.

Larry Haines had an appealing voice; he starred in a lot of episodes of Inner Sanctum Mysteries and I've always found him easy to listen to. Otherwise, the cast was comprised of a lot of familiar NBC voices (many recognizable to listeners of the Adventures of the Falcon).

The use of stage magic to solve crimes makes this show interesting, even with a mere 4 episodes to choose from. I'd be happy to hear more of this show, should they turn up.

The Old Time Radio Researchers Library has 4 episodes of Easy Money, at this link.

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

2025 in Media

A brief look back at the best films, comics and books I encountered in 2025.

Films of 2025: I made it out to the theatre for just 3 new films in 2025: Captain America: Brave New World, Mission: Impossible - Final Reckoning and Superman. I shared some thoughts about Superman here. For me, the latest Mission: Impossible was the best cinematic experience of the year, which would have surprised me years ago since I started out hating the franchise; I've really come around to it (it helps that the films have shown more respect for the TV series over time) and it's a great experience on a big screen. I also went to the theatre for a 100th anniversary re-release of the Phantom of the Opera which featured live organ music (especially composed for the event) and used an edit of the film assembled by the Calgary Cinematheque to more closely resemble the original theatrical release; it was a unique experience and the edit was the best version I've seen of the 1925 film. I also saw the 2025 films Sinners and Fantastic Four: First Steps at home; Sinners was a good time, I enjoyed its take on vampire mythos - though, frankly, the slaughter of the KKK at the climax of the film surpassed any of the previous action scenes.

Other films that I especially enjoyed were the horror film the Mist, the Holocaust drama Denial, the excellent retro action film Godzilla Minus One and the thriller the Falcon and the Snowman.

Comics of 2025: I continued following Stan Sakai's Usagi Yojimbo, which released the mini-series Ten Thousand Plums last year; I reviewed it here. I also reviewed the anthology comic Fantastic Four Fanfare. I'm still reading Larry Hama's G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero and I'm really enjoy Al Ewing's take on Thor, which is heavy on continuity and cosmic horror. I also read Al Ewing and Steve Lieber's Metamorpho, which was good fun. I'm also reading (and yet to finish) the mini-series Death of the Silver Surfer by Greg Pak and Sumit Kumar and Marvel Knights: The World to Come by Christopher Priest and Joe Quesada.

The only other comic book of note that I read in 2025 was Patton Oswalt, Jordan Blum and Scott Hepburn's Minor Threats, which I reviewed here.

Books of 2025: The only 2025 book I read was Future Boy by Michael J. Fox, his personal account of the making of the original Back to the Future film. The most interesting part of Fox's story were his personal memories of what it was like to be a struggling young actor - it was especially striking to hear about when he owned only three shirts.

I read an awful lot of other books in 2025 - the best works of fiction were the Magic Skin by Honore de Balzac, about a man whose life is mystically bound to a piece of leather; the Secret History by Donna Tartt, which I sought out because I saw it favorably compared to Columbo - I wouldn't make the comparison myself but it was an excellent thriller; I read the science fiction novel Existence by David K. Brin; Cornell Woolrich's Waltz into Darkness was an interesting piece about a man who falls in love with a criminal and tries to make their relationship work; The Three Impostors by Arthur Machen was an engaging mystery read; I read A. P. Herbert's the House by the River, which I'd seen in film form and enjoyed; finally, I started reading Stephen R. Lawhead's Pendragon Cycle, starting with Taliesin and Merlin.

Early on, I read Banned Books by Elizabeth Blakemore and sought out many of the titles listed there; many of them were books about Black people's existence. Those I enjoyed the most were Black Boy, Richard Wright's autobiography about how Communists are intolerable people to be around, even when you're a fellow Communist; Maya Angelou's I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings; The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas; and Stamped: Racism, Antiracism and You by Jason Reynolds.

Having become interested in Dr. Seuss' early cartooning work in publications like Judge, I read Brian Jay Jones' biography of Seuss, Becoming Dr. Seuss. I read Tim Roby's Box Office Poison about movie flops. i read Gideon Defoe's An Atlas of Extinct Countries, which focused on the various reasons why certain nations ceased to exist. And I read about the conservatism of science fiction in Jordan S. Carroll's Speculative Whiteness.

I also read a few books about the present state of Christianity in the US, including The Kingdom, the Power and the Glory by Tim Alberta and The Exvangelicals by Sarah McCammon.

I also read a great book about Angola - Jess Auerbach's From Water to Wine, her perspective of what Angola's emerging middle class are like. Although she lived in a different part of Angola than where I lived, I appreciated and understood many of her insights.