Secret Agent K-7 Returns - Single Episodes


(5 stars; 1 review)

SECRET AGENT K-7 RETURNS Before there was James Bond, before The Man Called X , and before Steve Mitchell took on a single Dangerous Assignment , there was Agent K-7. Secret Agent K-7 began on the radio in 1932 and made the leap into movies with Special Agent K-7. The original K-7 radio series is lost, but in 1939, a new transcribed syndicated series launched called, Secret Agent K-7 Returns . Secret Agent K-7 Returns was a series of seventy-eight fifteen minute spy stories. Secret Agent K-7 didn’t take part in most adventures. Rather, he introduced the stories of what other agents did. In early episodes, Secret Agent K-7 offered the stories as cautionary tales as what aggressor powers were doing to undermine piece. K-7’s role in the story was to explain how the preceding story had been a cautionary tale about what spies were doing to undermine world peace. He would also speak out against the dangers that spies posed to peace, and sought to discourage people from becoming involved in espionage with the same fervor as 1980s anti-drug campaigns. In later episodes, K-7 took a more active role, handing out assignments to the three agents who starred in the program and occasionally showing up to help with the capture of a bad guy. Perhaps, my biggest complaint with K-7 is that the voice acting was totally miscast. K-7 was supposed an international man of mystery and intrigue. Yet, the actor sounded more like a kindly high school principal. Beyond K-7, the series featured three secret agents who rotated: B-9, Z, and M with their assistants Rita Drake, Yvonne Durrell, and Patricia Norwood. While different actors played each role, in reality the three pairings were indistinguishable from each other, with each agent and each assistant be about the same. Of course, there was good reason for this: these were fifteen minute programs. There were quite a few fifteen minute self-contained mystery and adventure shows and they survived by cutting all the fluff and providing pure mystery and adventure. The producers did a good job of creating a series of informative and exciting episodes in which K-7’s agents have to break up several plans to undermine world peace including sabotage, blackmail, assassination, border violations, and more. The shows are well-paced and exciting. The lady assistants while staying in the background have several shining in the course of the series that require them to be involved in gun play, fighting, and thinking on their feet. Beyond the entertainment value of the show, it has immense historical interest as well. The show was created against the rise of Hitler and the start of World War II in Europe. The show, like many productions of the time tries to subtly warn America of the danger of Hitler by not naming Germany as the obvious state behind the no good actions, but also having the villain speaking with a German accent. One particularly moving episode had agents dispatched to investigate whether a nation that was beaten in the last war wanted another one. The secret agents spoke to several people who were war weary and wanted peace, but were afraid to speak up. Secret Agent K-7 ’s focus on peace also was reflect of America war-weariness. Americans had lost 100,000 troops in fighting the first World War and wanted little more than peace and trade. Unfortunately, a much longer, harder war was on its way, and wishes for peace wouldn’t stop it. Information for this series synopsis was courtesy of www.greatdetectives.net From the Old Time Radio Researchers Group. See "Notes" Section below for more information on the OTRR.

This recording is part of the Old Time Radio collection.

Chapters

Jay Jostyn 4:21
Border Violations 14:30
Poisonous Gas 14:37
Information Peddler 14:47
Narcotics Peddlers 14:42
Sabotage in Industry 15:01
Fortified Borders 14:45
Blood and Steel Society 14:43
Illegal Use of Radio 14:39
Coast Defense Secrets 14:46
Suicide Ships 14:39
War Supplies 14:35
Revolution 14:54
Military Secrets Leaked 14:47
Undesirable Aliens 14:44
High Speed Bomber 14:34
Master Spy 14:40
Gold Shipments 14:34
Storm Cloud 14:38
Apparent Civil War 14:38
Air Defenses 14:37
Thermite Bombs 14:50
Fleet Movements 14:46
Foodstuffs 14:45
Secret Police 14:44
Aeroplane Order 14:31
Innocent Citizens Used 14:29
Bombing Planes 14:35
Embassy Master Spy 14:29
Shipyards 14:32
Colonial Uprising 14:32
World Crisis 14:31
Government Overthrow 14:35
Refugees 14:29
Fraudulent Passports 14:34
Information for the Premier 14:32
Secrets Leaked 14:40
Code Book Stolen 14:29
Carl Frankenburg aka Known Spy 14:33
Machine Gun Plans aka Inventor Missing 14:37
Wholesale Murder 14:35
Anti-Aircraft Gun 14:27
Agent Z Disappears 14:29
Counterfeiters 14:34
Vapor Gas 14:31
Aeroplane Factory 14:31
Defense Plans 14:33
Ultimatum 14:36
City of Intrigue 14:33
Firing Squad 14:37
Narcotics Smuggled 14:36
Aeroplane Plans 14:38
Delivery of Papers 14:40
Government Overthrow 14:43
Agent Missing 14:43
Military Information Stolen 14:40
Oriental Spy (1) 14:45
Oriental Spy (2) 14:40
Favor Returned 14:37
Foreign Agent 14:41
Letter Box Agent 14:38
Military and Diplomatic Secrets 14:37
Blonde Spy 14:39
Defense Programs 14:39
Spy Returns 14:40
Stolen Maps 14:41
Far East Mission 14:42

Reviews

Missing three episodes


(3 stars)

I found this series to be interesting. Not great, just interesting. It tells of secret agents working "in the modern day" which is over 80 years ago. the stories themselves are interesting, the person who narrates the stories (K7) does not do a great job. He is rather unemotional and not interesting. There are three episodes missing from this collection, and they can be found here: https://www.radioechoes.com/?page=series&genre=OTR-Drama&series=Secret%20Agent%20K7