Lights Out: Nobody Died (1939) | Crime Irony Horror Radio
NBC Radio, 1939. Lights Out was the show that proved radio could terrify. This is “Nobody Died” — classic horror from the golden age of broadcast.
NBC Radio, 1939. Lights Out was the show that proved radio could terrify. This is “Nobody Died” — classic horror from the golden age of broadcast.
NBC Radio, 1942. Lights Out was the show that proved radio could terrify. This is “Come To The Bank” — classic horror from the golden age of broadcast.
NBC Radio, 1943. Lights Out was the show that proved radio could terrify. This is “The Fast One” — classic horror from the golden age of broadcast.
The sentence has been carried out. But the story is not over. Lights Out presents a horror of final punishment and its aftermath — the execution completed with the state’s full authority and the unexpected consequences that arrive afterward. Originally broadcast April 27, 1943. Justice that produces horror is horror with institutional backing. This recording…
NBC Radio, 1942. Lights Out was the show that proved radio could terrify. This is “Scoop” — classic horror from the golden age of broadcast.
NBC Radio, 1943. Lights Out was the show that proved radio could terrify. This is “Money Money Money” — classic horror from the golden age of broadcast.
One word. One act. One point of no return. Lights Out strips horror down to its most elemental — the single act of killing — and examines the psychological machinery that makes ordinary people capable of it. Originally broadcast April 20, 1943. Arch Oboler at wartime at his most uncompromising. This is not about monsters….
NBC Radio, 1937. Lights Out was the show that proved radio could terrify. This is “State Executioner” — classic horror from the golden age of broadcast.