Lights Out: The Projective Mr Drogen (1943) | Reality Horror Radio
NBC Radio, 1943. Lights Out was the show that proved radio could terrify. This is “The Projective Mr Drogen” — classic horror from the golden age of broadcast.
NBC Radio, 1943. Lights Out was the show that proved radio could terrify. This is “The Projective Mr Drogen” — 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 Dream” — classic horror from the golden age of broadcast.
The broadcast is live and something has gone terribly wrong inside the feed. Lights Out returns to its self-referential horror about the medium itself — a story set within the machinery of NBC Radio production that reveals the horror hidden inside the most routine broadcast. Originally broadcast April 6, 1943. This recording is in the…
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….
Everything before the act is the horror. Lights Out presents a premeditated murder story told entirely from inside the killer’s mind — the planning, the justifications, the terrible clarity of intention — making the listener complicit in every step toward the inevitable conclusion. Originally broadcast June 15, 1943. This recording is in the Public Domain…
The executioner has pulled the switch again. Lights Out returns to its most psychologically precise horror — the state-sanctioned killer and the haunting that follows the exercise of ultimate authority. Originally broadcast August 17, 1943. The chair leaves marks on both the person who sits in it and the person who operates it. This recording…
NBC Radio, 1937. Lights Out was the show that proved radio could terrify. This is “Until Dead” — classic horror from the golden age of broadcast.
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.