Dragnet the 50's radio show


(4.6 estrellas; 113 reseñas)

Dragnet is a classic Old Time Radio detective series that captivated audiences in the 1950s. With a total of 298 episodes, it follows the dedicated work of police officers as they solve crimes and bring justice to the streets.

This iconic show is known for its realistic portrayal of police work and its memorable characters. Tune in to experience the thrilling stories and the suspenseful atmosphere that made Dragnet a staple of radio entertainment.


This recording is part of the Old Time Radio collection.

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Capítulos

Homicide 28:42
The Werewolf 29:23
Homicide 28:50
Helen Corday 29:14
Red Light Bandit 29:19
City Hall Bombing 29:15
Big Missing 29:08
Benny Trounsel 29:55
Homicide 28:51
Sixteen Jewel Thieves 29:52
Police Academy 29:19
Myra the Redhead 30:03
Eric Kelby 29:19
Sullivan Kidnapping - The Wolf 29:17
James Vickers 29:33
Brick-Bat Slayer 29:23
Tom Laval 29:00
Second Hand Killer 29:00
Mother-In-Law Murder 28:59
Spring Street Gang 29:09
Jade Thumb Rings 30:02
Garbage Chute 29:01
Twenty-Two Rifle for Christmas 29:11
Roseland Murder 30:44
Big Escape 29:42
Big Man Part 1 29:48
Big Man Part 2 29:14
Claude Jimmerson Child Killer 27:51
Big Girl 29:16
Big Grifter 30:51
Big Kill 29:01
Big Thank You 30:47
Big Boys 30:04
Big Gangster Part 1 30:53
Big Gangster Part 2 29:11
Big Book 28:59
Big Watch 30:51
Big Trial 30:50
Big Job 30:06
Big Badge 29:45
Big Knife 29:37
Big Pug 30:10
Big Key 29:40
Big Fake 30:28
Big Smart Guy 30:15
Big Press 29:20
Big Mink 29:04
Big Grab 29:12
Big Frame 29:53
Big Bomb 29:36
Big Gent Part 1 29:17
Big Gent Part 2 30:06
Big Dare 29:39
Big Actor 31:09
Big Youngster 29:35
Big Chance 29:15
Big Check 29:19
Big Poisen 29:21
Big Make 29:03
Big Pair 28:36
Big Death 28:35
Big 38 29:57
Big Quack 29:52
Big Grandma 30:08
Big Meet 28:05
Big Church 29:58
Big Mother 30:32
Big Parrot 29:41
Big Betty 23:37
Big Car 29:16
Big Picture 29:10
Big Break 29:26
Twenty-Two Rifle for Christmas 28:46
Big Holdup 30:03
Big Jump 29:39
Big Dance 29:04
Big Tomato 28:50
Big Children 29:03
Big Cast 28:55
Big Couple 29:19
Big Partner 26:40
Big New Years 26:20
Big Ben 26:05
Big Friend 29:16
Big Threat 29:28
Big Speech 30:40
Big Saint 30:17
Big Casing 29:20
Big Blast 28:46
Big Mailman 29:15
Big Bindle 30:25
Big Imposter 30:18
Big Building 29:34
Big Run 28:52
Big Cliff 26:32
Big Love 29:50
Big Set-Up 29:49
Big Sophomore 26:26
Big Late Script 29:37
Big Screen 29:25
Big Winchester 28:37
Big In-Laws 28:23
Big Crazy 29:23
Big Seventeen 27:51
Big Waiter 29:53
Big Sour 29:59
Big September Man 28:28
Big Shoplift 29:45
Big Lease 30:08
Big Hit and Run Killer 26:01
Big Bungalow 30:02
Big Hands 30:03
Big Affair 29:58
Big Canaries 29:58
Big Overtime 29:44
Twenty-Two Rifle for Christmas 29:28
Big Sorrow 29:40
Big Red Part 1 29:16
Big Red Part 2 29:19
Big Juvenile Division 29:40
Big Court 29:58
Big Almost No-Show 30:00
Big Honeymoon 27:33
Big Phone Call 26:00
Big Producer 29:38
Big Plant 29:46
Big Evans 29:29
Big Fire 29:47
Big Border 29:49
Big Rose 29:20
Big Streetcar 29:04
Big Show 29:25
Big Bunco 29:38
Big Elevator 29:11
Big Safe 29:24
Big Gamble 29:43
Big Mail 29:41
Big Shakedown 29:26
Big Fourth 58:45
Big Whiff 36:26
Big Donation 29:20
Big Roll 30:09
Big Trio 29:03
Big Hate 26:10
Big Signet 29:36
Big Impression 28:58
Big Drive 28:53
Big Paper 28:57
Big Test 28:48
Big Ray 28:47
Big Bull 29:17
Big Shot 28:57
Big Brain 25:10
Big Jolt 23:41
Big Lie 29:27
Big Pill 30:09
Big Number 29:02
Big Light 29:21
Big Dive 24:30
Big Walk 29:19
Big Guilt 29:07
Big Shirt 29:11
Big Mole 30:13
Big Eavesdrop 25:29
Twenty-Two Rifle for Christmas 26:41
Big Mask Part 1 29:47
Big Mask Part 2 28:16
Big Small 28:05
Big String 22:49
Big Lay-Out 29:46
Big Strip 25:09
Big Press 28:42
Big Tooth 29:26
Big Smoke 26:09
Big Want 25:24
Big Laugh 29:02
Big Impossible 29:51
Big Informant 29:52
Big Dream 29:53
Big Chet 29:35
Big Compulsion 25:52
Big Rip 24:40
Big Scrapbook 29:45
Big Carney 29:59
Big Joke 30:00
Big False Move 29:47
Big Gun Part 1 30:57
Big Gun Part 2 28:55
Big Will 29:20
Big Lilly 30:15
Big Revolt 29:12
Big Ham 28:11
Big Bop 25:44
Big Lift 24:13
Big Cab 27:05
Big Slip 26:43
Big Try 29:18
Big Little Mother 28:42
Big Plea 25:22
Big Paint 29:03
Big Fraud 28:39
Big Rain 29:09
Big Kid 25:10
Big Flight 25:47
Big Present 26:00
Big Odd 25:37
Big Pick 25:37
Big Brink 25:10
Big Little Jesus 27:33
Big Steal 25:34
Big Listen 25:09
Big Switch 25:37
Big Bill 25:33
Big Bid 25:58
Big Filth 26:03
Big Broad 26:20
Big Sucker 26:01
Big Pipe 25:43
Big TV 25:35
Big Cup 25:52
Big Rod 25:40
Big Mustache 25:46
Big Confession 25:56
Big Saw 26:08
Big Note 25:59
Big Net 25:46
Big Lift 25:02
Big Stop 26:01
Big Look 25:32
Big Help 26:10
Big Watch 26:14
Big Cowboy 24:47
Big Student 25:09
Big Cat 25:29
Big Chick 26:01
Big Search 25:48
Big Rescue 25:22
Big Heel 25:34
Big Match 25:59
Big Stand 25:30
Big Wish 25:12
Big Cad 25:31
Big Shock 25:07
Big Office 24:53
Big Trunk 25:02
Big Cut 25:11
Big Try 26:06
Big Bible 26:04
Big Handsome Bandit 25:56
Big Tar Baby 26:20
Big Manikin 25:09
Big Key 26:13
Big Locker 24:30
Big Coins 25:58
Big Dog 25:53
Big Switch 25:46
Big Gone 25:58
Big Dig 25:51
Big Lens 26:20
Big Little Jesus 26:42
Big Underground 26:09
Big Mug 26:25
Big Complex 24:46
Big Token 26:20
Big Bounce 25:14
Big Bird 25:07
Big Gap 25:27
Big Hat 25:06
Big Slug 24:42
Big Set-Up 25:45
Big Father 24:31
Big Set 25:58
Big Talk 25:02
Big Death 27:40
Big No Tooth 23:56
Big Tie 24:47
Big Deal 24:26
Big Child 25:22
Big Momma 25:19
Big Revision 26:01
Big Squealer 25:52
Big Siege 26:15
Big Sisters 25:22
Big Limp 24:43
Big Fall Guy 28:57
Big Grab 25:31
Big Convertible 25:01
Big Rush 25:01
Big Genius 25:24
Big Bobo 25:39
Big Housemaid 25:40
Big Sheet 24:52
Big Missus 25:56
Big Beer 24:59
Big Blonde 24:44
Big Fellow 24:09
Big Daughter 25:06
Big Close 25:59

Reseñas

Thoughtful and engaging


(5 estrellas)

I remember watching old re-runs of the Dragnet 1967 TV show with my dad when I was a kid, then recently I watched a few episodes from the original 1950's TV series after finding some cheaply produced DVD versions of a few of them. Then I found these old radio programs on the internet recently. I must say that these are as good as, if not better than, either of the TV series (although the cigarette advertisements are somewhat laughable today). I enjoy listening to these while riding my bicycle or mowing the lawn, they definitely help to pass the time. The action sequences are a bit hard to follow (with canned gunfire soundbytes interspersed with the protagonists' talking to each other, leaving what is actually happening a little ambiguous until the end.) but this is forgivable, since they comprise only a minute portion of the programs. The dry documentary style of the shows is what sets them apart from most police dramas, both past and present. I actually enjoy the fact that an episode will devote a 2 minute sequence to SGT Friday waiting on hold for an operator to transfer his call, or another similar sequence to SGT Friday and Romero talking to each other from the inside of a car trunk where they are awaiting some unsuspecting criminals...this adds to the realism of the shows...a lot of police work is pretty boring stuff; as the son of a cop myself, I realize this very well. Indeed, most of us will admit, even those of us with the most exciting jobs will have a large part of our day that is fairly mundane. The Dragnet shows capture the mundane aspects of life that most dramatizations miss. I think that these shows are a throwback to a different era; although many have criticized our ancestors (and rightly, at times) for such wrongs as racism and ethnocentrism, listening to these shows has shown me the better side of 1940's and 50's U.S. society. The episodes show a keen awareness of the darker side of life (tackling such crimes as pedophilia, pornography production and distribution, serial killings, and cop shootings), yet they deal with these topics in a sensitive and tasteful way that stands in sharp contradistinction to the tasteless dramatizations that one often sees of such crimes on TV today. Criminals and lowlifes are not glorified with quasi-voyeuristic depictions and descriptions of their vile work, as is so often the case today in law enforcement television programs. I think I have learned a lot about 1950's America just by listening to these episodes, because you pick up on the little subtleties that you're not necessarily going to find in a history book (and the subtleties are just as much in what the characters do say as in what they don't say...there were certain things you just didn't talk about back then, because there were rules of polite behavior that were a bit more conservative, and possibly superior in many ways, to what we have now). The show also makes vague occasional references to the social stigmas associated with being a police officer (One can hear the resigned frustration in the voice of SGT Friday, when, at the end of one program, he simply reflects back at her a lady's accusation: "You're right; I wouldn't understand...I'm a cop).

Great radio show, scary commercials


(4 estrellas)

In hindsight it's somewhat difficult to appreciate just how creative, risk-taking and innovative this remarkable radio show really was. The visionary recipe started by bringing together the institutional documentary style of programs like the Westinghouse "Adventures in Research" with the character dimensions and musical score of a radio soap opera. Webb then mixed in gritty elements considered inappropriate at the time, interviewing 'dance hall girls' and having characters say things like "Do you mind if I eat while we talk?" Targeting the voracious crime-drama appetite of post war America and served with a heaping helping of Roosevelt-era social engineering, Webb used mass media to disseminate cautionary tales to encourage good behavior among the masses. Rendered a cliché by the longevity borne by its overwhelming success, Dragnet is a fascinating study of rapid character development; plot pacing and exploiting the time worn adage that truth really is stranger than fiction. Oh goodness! Those Fatima (Pronounced fa-tee'-ma) cigarette commercials. Using lessons from WWII propaganda, interrogation techniques and the new science of the psychology of consumer behavior, Liggett & Myers (L&M) Tobacco Company tried to resuscitate an aging brand from the late 19th century using radio. According to Wikipedia, "Fatima was the sole sponsor of the early years of the Dragnet radio series. The creator and star of Dragnet, Jack Webb, voiced a number of on-air pitches for the brand and appeared in print advertising as well. There was also a short-lived mystery anthology series called Tales of Fatima, hosted by Basil Rathbone. The brand's old-fashioned image caused it to lose market share from the mid-1950s onward, and L&M eventually phased it out by around 1980."

Very important historical interrupted show


(5 estrellas)

If you listen to Episode 182, April 19, 1953, The Big Rip, also listed as episode 200 overall, you will here an announcer interrupting the show at 13 minutes 41 seconds, to say that he had additional names of sick and wounded US GI's that were being released by the North Koreans. If there was ever an emotional moment that even topped this great radio show, this was it. Corporal Vernon C. Warren of St. Louis Missouri Roy M. Jones of Minneapolis, Minnesota PFC David Ludlum of Fort Wayne, Indiana PFC Roy Medina of New York City They were being released to Freedom City.

Timely topics even for today ...


(5 estrellas)

buildings under bomb threats, teenage and adult drug use, pedophiles, sexual abuse ... it seems like things weren't all that different in the late 40s and 50s than it is today. While the machine-gun patter is a comedy cliche today (think about the Mathnet parodies on CTW's Square One TV show), it did allow the show to squeeze in a lot of dialogue and action in a short period of time. Dragnet is one of OTR's best series, and should be included in any collection.

Well done series, esp. the ones with Sgt Romero


(5 estrellas)

The first few seasons of Dragnet were the best with Romero as Friday's partner. The best show I heard was the chilling 'Claude Jimmerson Child Killer', where the cops meet in the house of a neighbor of a missing child to organize a search party and it turns out it's the killer's house, as Sgt Friday somewhat embarrassed, realizes he missed some clues right under his own nose.

Sound of Footsteps


(1 estrella)

Jack Webb must have had some kind of fetish about the sound of footsteps because they are EVERYWHERE on his "Dragnet" radio show, and VERY LOUD! It's bad enough having to listen to that very badly played theme song all the time (also loud, and apparently never played the same way twice, which also seemed very unprofessional). And then those mindless commercials telling us how wonderfully safe these certain cigarettes were, I even think it was cigarettes that killed Jack Webb at a very young age (though he always sounded like an old man, even in the beginning). But I can understand, if you're going to listen to old-time radio you have to take what came with it, and back then that's what they did. I know it's been said he was all about authenticity, if it took 22 steps from one room to another he would use exactly 22 steps on his recordings. It still kind of sounds obsessive but at least I can understand his reasoning. But what I don't get is, every single episode would start out with this series of loud (and phony-sounding) footsteps walking or running somewhere. They sounded like they were trying to mimic the sound of cheap dress shoes detectives might have worn back then, though they also sound too slippery to handle many of times they were involved in chasing crooks, mostly on hard waxed surfaces, they would have fallen on their faces. So what you get on the radio is this constant loud clomping of mens shoes drowning out all the dialog and other sound effects for the show, and to be honest, as listeners, we don't really care. Yes, there should be some indication that people were walking or running when necessary, but it should not ever be the dominant sound effect on this or any other radio or television show. The stories have their own problems but are tolerable, apparently Jack Webb was a massive control freak and it shows in every minute of his shows, for good or for bad, but in the case of the footstep sounds, after a few episodes it literally becomes unbearable and ruins the show, you just can't listen any more. I don't like this old-time radio web site re-design, it's very had to use or find or download anything. Every time I download a simple zip file it says "invalid file," and it's almost impossible to download individual episodes anymore. TV.com did this a few years ago and to this day it's a fairly useless web site because it's so difficult to use or find what you're looking for. So you go to a better web site like TV by the Numbers.

Old Time Radio


(5 estrellas)

Very well done dramatic episodes, tight writing. I thought Jack Webb was a ham (based on watching Dragnet 1967, 1968, and so on; I was a 60s kid), and then I got curious about these episodes on the radio. They are great, and a real eye-opener! We've become so cynical, it's refreshing (and amazing) to think that just a few years before I was born, people had ideals of a much higher kind. People weren't better, mind you; they just had much higher expectations of how to behave. We were much more socially connected, and in the fragmented society of Los Angeles in the early 50s, you can see the fraying edges of what was to come. Listen, learn, and enjoy. A true cold lemonade to the thirsty, time-traveling mind.

Dragnet Radio


(5 estrellas)

Great to have so many episodes, to listen to every day, instead of only once a week, as was the case when the show was first recorded. I never heard them in the UK when they first came out, but remember the TV shows. I like to listen to one episode every night before going to sleep and don't know what I'm going to do when they run out. Maybe start from the beginning again! The shows are well produced and convincing, especially because they use real events.