Dragnet vol. 1 - $2 per CD - Old Time Radio Shows on OTR MP3 and Audio CDs from http://otrland.com
Dragnet vol. 1

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Just the facts ma'me.... DRAGNET! The story you are about to hear is true - only the names have been changed to protect the innocent.

Dragnet, syndicated as Badge 714, is a long-running radio and television crime drama about the cases of a dedicated Los Angeles police detective, Sergeant Joe Friday, and his partners. The show takes its name from an actual police term, a "dragnet", meaning a system of coordinated measures for apprehending criminals or suspects.

Dragnet debuted inauspiciously. The first several months were bumpy, as Webb and company worked out the program's format and eventually became comfortable with their characters (Friday was originally portrayed as more brash and forceful than his later usually relaxed demeanor). Gradually, Friday's deadpan, fast-talking persona emerged, described by John Dunning as "a cop's cop, tough but not hard, conservative but caring." (Dunning, 210) Friday's first partner was Sergeant Ben Romero, portrayed by Barton Yarborough, a longtime radio actor. Raymond Burr was on board to play Captain Ed Backstrand. When Dragnet hit its stride, it became one of radio's top-rated shows.

Webb insisted on realism in every aspect of the show. The dialogue was clipped, understated and sparse, influenced by the hardboiled school of crime fiction. Scripts were fast moving but didn’t seem rushed. Every aspect of police work was chronicled, step by step: From patrols and paperwork, to crime scene investigation, lab work and questioning witnesses or suspects. The detectives’ personal lives were mentioned but rarely took center stage. (Friday was a bachelor who lived with his mother; Romero was an ever-fretful husband and father.) "Underplaying is still acting", Webb told Time. "We try to make it as real as a guy pouring a cup of coffee.” (Dunning, 209) Los Angeles police chiefs C.B. Horrall, William A. Worton and (later) William H. Parker were credited as consultants, and many police officers were fans.


<b>"Just the facts, ma'am"</b>
While "Just the facts, ma'am" has come to be known as Dragnet's catchphrase, it was never actually uttered by Joe Friday; the closest he came were, "All we want are the facts, ma'am" and "All we know are the facts, ma'am". "Just the facts, ma'am" comes from the Stan Freberg parody St. George and the Dragonet.

Webb was a stickler for accurate details, and Dragnet used many authentic touches, such as the LAPD's actual radio call sign (KMA367), and the names of many real department officials, such as Ray Pinker and Lee Jones of the crime lab or Chief of Detectives Thad Brown.

Two announcers were used. Episodes began with announcer George Fenneman intoning the series opening ("The story you are about to hear is true; only the names have been changed to protect the innocent.") and Hal Gibney describing the basic premise of the episode. "Big Saint" (April 26, 1951) for example, begins with, "You're a Detective Sergeant, you're assigned to auto theft detail. A well organized ring of car thieves begins operations in your city. It's one of the most puzzling cases you've ever encountered. Your job: break it."

The story then usually began with footsteps and a door closing, followed by Joe Friday intoning something like: "Tuesday, February 12. It was cold in Los Angeles. We were working the day watch out of robbery division. My partner's Ben Romero. The boss is Ed Backstrand, chief of detectives. My name's Friday."

Friday offered voice-over narration throughout the episodes, noting the time, date and place of every scene as he and his partners went through their day investigating the crime. The events related in a given episode might occur in a few hours, or might span a few months. At least one episode unfolded in real time: in "City Hall Bombing" (July 21, 1949), Friday and Romero had less than 30 minutes to stop a man who was threatening to destroy the City Hall with a bomb.

At the end of the episode, announcer Hal Gibney would relate the fate of the suspect. They were usually tried by a court "in and for the City and County of Los Angeles, convicted of a crime and sent to "the State Penitentiary, San Quentin California" or "examined by psychiatrists appointed by the court", judged mentally incompetent and "commented to a state mental hospital for an indefinite period". Murderers were often "executed in the manner prescribed by law" or "executed in the lethal gas chamber at the State Penitentiary, San Quentin California". Occasionally, police pursued the wrong suspect, and criminals sometimes avoided justice or escaped, at least on the radio version of Dragnet. In 1950, Time quoted Webb: "We don’t even try to prove that crime doesn’t pay ... sometimes it does" (Dunning, 210)

Specialized terminology was mentioned in every episode but was rarely explained. Webb trusted the audience to determine the meanings of words or terms by their context, and furthermore, Dragnet tried to avoid the kinds of awkward, lengthy exposition that people would not actually use in daily speech. Several specialized terms (such as "A.P.B." for "All Points Bulletin" and "M.O." for "Modus Operandi") were rarely used in popular culture before Dragnet introduced them to everyday America.

While most radio shows used one or two sound effects experts, Dragnet needed five; a script clocking in at just under 30 minutes could require up to 300 separate effects. Accuracy was underlined: The exact number of footsteps from one room to another at Los Angeles police headquarters were imitated, and when a telephone rang at Friday's desk, the listener heard the same ring as the telephones in Los Angeles police headquarters. A single minute of ".22 Rifle for Christmas" is a representative example of the evocative sound effects featured on "Dragnet". While Friday and others investigate bloodstains in a suburban backyard, the listener hears a series of overlapping effects: a squeaking gate hinge, footsteps, a technician scraping blood into a paper envelope, the glassy chime of chemical vials, bird calls and a dog barking in the distance.

Scripts tackled a number of topics, ranging from the thrilling (murders, missing persons and armed robbery) to the mundane (check fraud and shoplifting), yet "Dragnet" made them all interesting due to fast-moving plots and behind-the-scenes realism. In "The Garbage Chute" (15 December 1949), they even had a locked room mystery.

Though rather tame by modern standards, Dragnet—especially on the radio—handled controversial subjects such as sex crimes and drug addiction with unprecedented and even startling realism. In one such example, Dragnet broke one of the unspoken (and still rarely broached) taboos of popular entertainment in the episode ".22 Rifle for Christmas" which aired December 21, 1950. The episode followed the search for young Stevie Morheim, only to discover he’d been accidentally killed while playing with a rifle that belonged to a friend; his friend told Friday that Stevie was running while holding the rifle when he tripped and fell, causing the gun to discharge, fatally wounding Morheim.

NBC received thousands of complaint letters, including a formal protest by the National Rifle Association. Webb forwarded many of the letters to police chief Parker who promised "ten more shows illustrating the folly of giving rifles to children." (Dunning, 211) Another episode dealt with high school girls who, rather than finding Hollywood stardom, fall in with fraudulent talent scouts and end up in pornography and prostitution.

The tone was usually serious, but there were moments of comic relief: Romero was something of a hypochondriac and often seemed henpecked; though Friday dated women, he usually dodged those who tried to set him up with marriage-minded dates.

Due in part to Webb's fondness for radio drama, Dragnet persisted on radio until 1957 as one of the last old time radio shows to give way to television's increasing popularity. In fact, the TV show would prove to be effectively a visual version of the radio show, as the style was virtually the same. The TV show could be listened to without watching it, with no loss of understanding of the storyline.



This Item Contains:
Dragnet 490603 001 Robbery.mp3 Dragnet 490610.mp3
Dragnet 490617.mp3 Dragnet 490624.mp3
Dragnet 490707.mp3 Dragnet 490714.mp3
Dragnet 490721.mp3 Dragnet 490728.mp3
Dragnet 490804.mp3 Dragnet 490811.mp3
Dragnet 490818.mp3 Dragnet 490825.mp3
Dragnet 490901.mp3 Dragnet 490903.mp3
Dragnet 490910.mp3 Dragnet 490917.mp3
Dragnet 490924.mp3 Dragnet 491001.mp3
Dragnet 491006 019 Second Hand Killer.mp3 Dragnet 491117 025 Harry Girard.mp3
Dragnet 491124.mp3 Dragnet 491201.mp3
Dragnet 491208.mp3 Dragnet 491215.mp3
Dragnet 491222.mp3 Dragnet 491229.mp3
Dragnet 500105.mp3 Dragnet 500112.mp3
Dragnet 500119.mp3 Dragnet 500202.mp3
Dragnet 500209.mp3 Dragnet 500223.mp3
Dragnet 500302.mp3 Dragnet 500309.mp3
Dragnet 500316.mp3 Dragnet 500323.mp3
Dragnet 500330.mp3 Dragnet 500406.mp3
Dragnet 500413.mp3 Dragnet 500420.mp3
Dragnet 500427.mp3 Dragnet 500504.mp3
Dragnet 500511.mp3 Dragnet 500518.mp3
Dragnet 500525.mp3 Dragnet 500601.mp3
Dragnet 500608.mp3 Dragnet 500615.mp3
Dragnet 500622.mp3 Dragnet 500629.mp3
Dragnet 500706.mp3 Dragnet 500713.mp3
Dragnet 500720.mp3 Dragnet 500727.mp3
Dragnet 500803.mp3 Dragnet 500810.mp3
Dragnet 500817.mp3 Dragnet 500824.mp3
Dragnet 500831.mp3 Dragnet 500907.mp3
Dragnet 500914.mp3 Dragnet 500921.mp3
Dragnet 500928.mp3 Dragnet 501005.mp3
Dragnet 501012.mp3 Dragnet 501019.mp3
Dragnet 501026.mp3 Dragnet 501102.mp3
Dragnet 501109.mp3 Dragnet 501116.mp3
Dragnet 501123.mp3 Dragnet 501130.mp3
Dragnet 501207.mp3 Dragnet 501214.mp3
Dragnet 501221.mp3 Dragnet 501228 081 Big Family.mp3
Dragnet 510104.mp3 Dragnet 510111.mp3
Dragnet 510118.mp3 Dragnet 510125.mp3
Dragnet 510201.mp3 Dragnet 510208.mp3
Dragnet 510215 088 Big Crime.mp3 Dragnet 510222.mp3
Dragnet 510301 090 Big Partner.mp3 Dragnet 510308 091 Big New Years.mp3
Dragnet 510315 092 Big Ben.mp3 Dragnet 510329 094 Big Lover.mp3
Dragnet 510405.mp3 Dragnet 510412.mp3
Dragnet 510419.mp3 Dragnet 510426.mp3
Dragnet 510503.mp3 Dragnet 510510 100 Big Drills.mp3
Dragnet 510517.mp3 Dragnet 510524.mp3
Dragnet 510531.mp3 Dragnet 510607.mp3
Dragnet 510614.mp3 Dragnet 510621.mp3
Dragnet 510628.mp3 Dragnet 510705.mp3
Dragnet 510712.mp3 Dragnet 510719.mp3
Dragnet 510726.mp3 Dragnet 510809.mp3
Dragnet 510816.mp3 Dragnet 510823.mp3
Dragnet 510830.mp3 Dragnet 510906.mp3
Dragnet 510913.mp3 Dragnet 510920.mp3
Dragnet 510927.mp3 Dragnet 511004 121 Big Want Ad.mp3
Dragnet 511011.mp3 Dragnet 511018 123 Big Story Man.mp3
Dragnet 511025 124 Big Market.mp3 Dragnet 511101.mp3
Dragnet 511108.mp3 Dragnet 511115.mp3
Dragnet 511122.mp3 Dragnet 511129.mp3
Dragnet 511206.mp3 Dragnet 511213.mp3
Dragnet 511220.mp3 Dragnet 511227.mp3
Dragnet 520103.mp3 Dragnet 520110.mp3
Dragnet 520117.mp3 Dragnet 520124.mp3
Dragnet 520131.mp3 Dragnet 520207.mp3
Dragnet 520214.mp3 Dragnet 520221.mp3
Dragnet 520228.mp3 Dragnet 520306.mp3
Dragnet 520313.mp3 Dragnet 520320.mp3
Dragnet 520327.mp3 Dragnet 520403.mp3
Dragnet 520410.mp3 Dragnet 520417.mp3
Dragnet 520424.mp3 Dragnet 520501.mp3
Dragnet 520508.mp3 Dragnet 520515.mp3
Dragnet 520522.mp3 Dragnet 520529.mp3
Dragnet 520605.mp3 Dragnet 520612.mp3
Dragnet 520619 158 Big Jules.mp3 Dragnet 520626.mp3
Dragnet 520703.mp3 Dragnet 520710.mp3
Dragnet 520731.mp3 Dragnet 520807.mp3
Dragnet 520814.mp3 Dragnet 520821.mp3
Dragnet 520828.mp3 Dragnet 520904.mp3
Dragnet 520911 168 Big Tear.mp3 Dragnet 520914.mp3
Dragnet 520921.mp3 Dragnet 520928.mp3
Dragnet 521005.mp3 Dragnet 521012.mp3
Dragnet 521019.mp3 Dragnet 521026.mp3
Dragnet 521102.mp3 Dragnet 521109.mp3
Dragnet 521116.mp3 Dragnet 521123.mp3
Dragnet 521130.mp3 Dragnet 521207.mp3
Dragnet 521214.mp3 Dragnet 521221.mp3
Dragnet 521228.mp3 Dragnet 530104.mp3
Dragnet 530111.mp3 Dragnet 530118.mp3
Dragnet 530125.mp3 Dragnet 530201.mp3
Dragnet 530208.mp3 Dragnet 530215.mp3
Dragnet 530222.mp3 Dragnet 530301.mp3
Dragnet 530308.mp3 Dragnet 530315.mp3
Dragnet 530322.mp3 Dragnet 530329.mp3
Dragnet 530405.mp3 Dragnet 530412.mp3
Dragnet 530419.mp3 Dragnet 530426.mp3



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