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Weird Darkness: Paranormal & True Crime Stories

“SUSPENSE!” Multi-Episode Marathon 005 #WeirdDarkness #RetroRadio

Weird Darkness: Paranormal & True Crime Stories

Darren Marlar

History, True Crime, Society & Culture, Documentary

4.64.1K Ratings

🗓️ 24 March 2024

⏱️ 298 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Get full-length pulp audiobooks, pulp eBooks, and old-time radio shows ABSOLUTELY FREE FOR IMMEDIATE DOWNLOAD by emailing WeirdDarkness@RadioArchives.com!
When the dramatic anthology series "Suspense" premiered over CBS Radio on June 17, 1942, it did so as both a summer series and as a sustaining program. The network had no idea how well the series would perform - its only previous showcase was as an hour-long audition on the 1940 series "Forecast" - so running out and getting a sponsor didn’t seem to be important at that particular stage. Besides, in the show’s salad days, the guest stars that did appear were of considerably low wattage.But as "Suspense" grew in popularity and began to attract a more upscale acting clientele anxious to participate in “radio’s outstanding theater of thrills,” finding someone to pick up the weekly tab became a top priority for CBS. Luckily, in December 2, 1943, the series found its 'angel' in the sponsorship of Roma Wines. "Suspense’s" long association with Roma (and co-branded Cresta Blanca) was good for both the series and the company; a bigger budget attracted bigger guest stars and, as the program began to climb in the ratings, the company began to enjoy substantial profits.This fruitful arrangement came to an end on November 20, 1947. Roma had been admittedly seeing other programs behind "Suspense’s" back and the bright array of top Hollywood talent began to dim a bit as many of the stars began to tire of the program. CBS rolled the dice and took one heck of a chance in keeping "Suspense" on the air; the network still felt that the series was popular with audiences and they agreed to sustain the program until another sponsor could be found.How serious was CBS about keeping its prestige show? Beginning January 3, 1948, "Suspense" was moved to Saturday nights and was broadcast from 8:00 to 9:00 PM Eastern Standard Time. That’s right: a full hour of “Suspense.” Hour-long dramatic shows were a gamble at best; many stars tended to shun these programs - a half-hour show was grueling enough to get through - and only a few, "The Lux Radio Theater" being the best example, managed to continue on the air for very long. But Lux had a sponsor all too willing to write checks on a weekly basis...while CBS, without a sponsor to back them up, was still the sole support of "Suspense." What's more, the network learned soon enough that by doubling the show from half-hour to hour-long status, they had to double the pay of the individuals working on the show as well. (Networks, as a rule, cringe at the thought of giving money away.)To jazz up "Suspense," CBS hired actor Robert Montgomery to be the host and occasional performer, figuring that on the weeks when they had to resort to a less-than "A" list of guest stars, at least Montgomery would be around to provide a certain degree of glitter. Montgomery, at it turned out, made appearances in quite a few of the hour-long shows, including both the premiere, “The Black Curtain”, and most notably in “Night Must Fall”, which allowed him to reprise the role he had created in the 1937 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer motion picture of the same name.Many of the hour-long "Suspense" shows were movie adaptations in the "Lux Radio Theater" mold, including “Deadline at Dawn,” “Crossfire” and “Nightmare” -- the last of which was filmed in 1947 as “Fear in the Night”. There were even two productions that, it could be said, acted as previews of coming attractions: the series’ 1948 productions of “In a Lonely Place” and “The House by the River” were brought to the silver screen in 1950. Several of "Suspense’s" celebrated classics were also repeated during the hour-long experiment, having been lengthened to fit the new format. They included such audience favorites as “The Lodger,” “Donovan’s Brain,” and “Love’s Lovely Counterfeit.”"Suspense’s" hour-long experiment closed up shop on May 15, 1948 and, close to two months later, the show moved back to its cozy Thursday night berth in its familiar half-hour form with a new sponsor, Autolite. The show experienced a re-emergence in popularity and, while the merits of the hour-long broadcasts must ultimately be decided upon by the listener, the decision by CBS to keep the series in production certainly seems in retrospect to have been the right call; "Suspense" would continue to be heard on the network for the next fourteen years, closing the curtain for the last time in September 1962.
00:00:00.000 = INTRODUCTION
00:01:54.350 = Fire Burn And Cauldron Bubble (April 06, 1943)
00:31:20.444 = Two Sharp Knives (December 22, 1942)
01:00:31.904 = The Pit And The Pendulum (January 12, 1943)
01:30:01.398 = The Customers Like Murder (March 23, 1943)
02:29:01.530 = Fear Paints a Picture (April 13, 1943)
02:58:26.411 = The Moment of Darkness (April 20, 1943)
03:27:50.753 = The Diary of Saphronia Winters (April 27, 1943)
03:57:19.454 = Death Flies Blind (May 04, 1943)
04:26:46.300 = Mr Markheim, Antique Dealer (May 11, 1943)

SOURCES AND ESSENTIAL WEB LINKS…
This episode is sponsored by http://RadioArchives.com
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Transcript

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0:00.0

Step into the extraordinary with auditory anthology, a podcast series where science fiction short stories come alive.

0:08.0

Narrated by me, your voice of weird darkness, and curated by Keith Conrad, each episode is a journey into imagination

0:15.2

explore cosmic wonders and futuristic tales and dive into a universe of stories

0:20.3

where the impossible is Possible, auditory anthology.

0:24.3

Available at auditory anthology.com and on Apple, Spotify, or your podcast player of choice. The Black Museum. Affiliated stations present, escape.

0:45.0

All of vertices.

0:48.0

In a sanctum,

0:51.0

mis-like, Sanctum, this. Lights out.

0:54.0

Murder.

0:58.0

At Men are.

1:00.0

I see you. Men are. A seal.

1:05.0

Present.

1:10.0

Suspends. Suspends. I am the whistler.

1:18.0

Welcome, weirdos. I'm Darren Marler with another retro radio, old time radio in the dark marathon presented by the

1:24.8

Weird Darkness podcast. In each episode I bring you shows from the Golden Age of

1:29.4

Radio but still in the genre of weird darkness.

1:32.6

I have stories of the macabre and horror, mysteries and crime, and even some dark science fiction.

1:38.8

If you're new here, welcome to the show and be sure to subscribe or follow the podcast so you don't miss future

1:44.6

episodes.

1:45.7

And if you're already a member of this weirdo family, please take a moment and invite someone else

1:50.0

to listen in with you.

1:51.6

Spreading the word about the show helps it to grow.

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