Lights Out: We Dug It Up (1943) | Archaeological Horror Radio
NBC Radio, 1943. Lights Out was the show that proved radio could terrify. This is “We Dug It Up” — classic horror from the golden age of broadcast.
NBC Radio, 1943. Lights Out was the show that proved radio could terrify. This is “We Dug It Up” — classic horror from the golden age of broadcast.
NBC Radio, 1943. Lights Out was the show that proved radio could terrify. This is “Oxychloride X” — classic horror from the golden age of broadcast.
NBC Radio, 1943. Lights Out was the show that proved radio could terrify. This is “The Flame” — classic horror from the golden age of broadcast.
NBC Radio, 1943. Lights Out was the show that proved radio could terrify. This is “They Met At Dorset” — classic horror from the golden age of broadcast.
NBC Radio, 1943. Lights Out was the show that proved radio could terrify. This is “The Sea” — classic horror from the golden age of broadcast.
Something in the bloodline has woken up. Lights Out presents an ancestral horror — a story of inheritance not of property but of darkness, a malevolence passed through generations that has finally chosen to manifest in the present. Originally broadcast April 13, 1943. The sins of the fathers are not metaphors. This recording is in…
Someone at NBC is dead. And the killer knows the script. Lights Out commits its most meta act — setting a murder mystery inside a radio production department, among the very people who write the horror that airs every week. Originally broadcast May 11, 1943. When the writers become the victims, the horror has come…
They mocked him for his face. He remembered every one of them. Lights Out presents a horror of appearance and revenge — a man whose physical deformity made him a target for cruelty, and the terrible reckoning he delivers to those responsible. Originally broadcast June 1, 1943. One of Oboler’s most powerful moral horror stories….
There is a word that kills. Lights Out presents a linguistic horror — a story built around the specific, terrifying idea that language itself can be weaponized, that certain arrangements of sound carry consequences beyond their meaning. Originally broadcast September 14, 1943. The most dangerous thing you can do is say the wrong thing to…
NBC Radio, 1943. Lights Out was the show that proved radio could terrify. This is “The Dream” — classic horror from the golden age of broadcast.