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Night Watch, Volume 2 - 10 hours [Audio CDs] #RA123
Night Watch, Volume 2
 

10 hours - Audio CD Set


Our Price: $39.98


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Description
 
Night Watch
Volume 2

 
If you’re a fan of modern day television, it will come as no surprise to you that the reality shows are very popular. Whether you cast your votes for the latest “American Idol,” Dancing with the Stars, or spend your free time hooting at this week’s collection of shirtless, shiftless, beer-swilling lowlife on “Cops”, you know that - for better or worse - reality shows are here to stay.
 
You may, however, be surprised to find that the notion of network reality programming is really nothing new -- in fact, the concept actually dates back as far as 1954, when “Night Watch” debuted on CBS Radio.
 
Beginning on April 5, 1954 and running for about a year, “Night Watch” was the first program to bring “live” and authentic police drama to the air. A fascinating combination of “Dragnet” and “Cops” with just a hint of “This is Your FBI” thrown in for public service purposes, each week official police recorder Donn Reed accompanied Officer Ron Perkins on the night watch in Culver City, California. Traveling in an unmarked car through the nighttime streets, Reed used a heavy battery-powered reel-to-reel tape recorder, complete with a microphone cleverly concealed inside the casing of a flashlight, to accompany Perkins and his fellow officers on real police calls. These were authentic, unscripted, and unrehearsed adventures, with no actors, no expectations, and nothing planned in advance. At the end of each show, Police Chief W. N. Hildebrand would give listeners the updates on what happened to the citizens involved in each incident and encourage the public to aid the police in doing their work.
 
Heard today, “Night Watch” remains a vivid and frequently riveting example of just how innovative radio could be when used creatively. Were it being produced today, the producers of “Night Watch” would be using tiny and almost weightless digital recorders and editing software -- but, in 1954, tape recording (not to mention tape editing) was still in its infancy, with Reed forced to lug sixty-plus pounds of technology to every crime scene and change tape reels on a regular basis. Likewise, what would be considered acceptable dialogue for a network broadcast was far more restricted in 1954 than we’d find on TV today, so the tape editing (accomplished with little more than a razor blade and a splicing block) had to be extensive and extremely selective, while still retaining the basic content and flavor of the incident and the chronology of the developing story. Given all of the limitations of 1950s technology, plus the unpredictable nature of the criminal events that were the basis for the series, the audio quality of the broadcasts and engrossing nature of the events being covered remain truly surprising -- and truly great radio.
 
But make no mistake: even though more than sixty years has passed since “Night Watch” first aired, the series is definitely not suitable for family listening. The individual incidents recorded range from an investigation of two small children left in a cold parked car while their parents spend hours drinking in a local tavern to the often harrowing attempts by police to save the life of a man slashed almost to death with a razor. Reed’s quiet ongoing narration of the cases as they develop makes for a real-life version of the kind of flat no-nonsense narration that made Jack Webb’s “Dragnet” so memorable -- and it makes the shows even more gripping to hear today.
 
The twenty broadcasts contained in this collection have been taken from the highest quality source recordings known to exist for this series - in fact, these newly restored broadcasts have the best audio quality of any “Night Watch” programs ever released. We know that these unique, unusual, and rare documentary shows will make an excellent and welcome addition to your radio show library.
 
Stalker & Peacemaker
Thursday, October 14, 1954 - CBS, sustaining
 
Seeing the Light & Bridge Jumper
Thursday, October 21, 1954 - CBS, sustaining
 
Psycho Ward & No Physical Evidence
Thursday, October 28, 1954 - CBS, sustaining
 
Missing Child
Thursday, November 11, 1954 - CBS, sustaining
 
Child Neglect & Knife Assault
Thursday, November 18, 1954 - CBS, sustaining
 
Family Quarrel & Safe Burglars
Thursday, November 25, 1954 - CBS, sustaining
 
Rolling Pin & Luger
Thursday, December 2, 1954 - CBS, sustaining
 
Traffic Accident & Fight in Front of a Bar
Thursday, December 16, 1954 - CBS, sustaining
 
Holdup
Thursday, December 23, 1954 - CBS, sustaining
 
Tossing Beer Cans
Thursday, December 30, 1954 - CBS, sustaining
 
Attempt at Suicide
Thursday, January 13, 1955 - CBS, sustaining
 
Hit and Run & Juvenile
Thursday, January 20, 1955 - CBS, sustaining
 
Iron Lung & Lie Detector
Thursday, January 27, 1955 - CBS, sustaining
 
C.A.R.E. & Robbery Investigation
Thursday, February 3, 1955 - CBS, sustaining
 
Ma and Pa Heinz & Chase
Thursday, February 10, 1955 - CBS, sustaining
 
Narcotics Pusher
Thursday, February 17, 1955 - CBS, sustaining
 
Woman With a Black Eye
Thursday, February 24, 1955 - CBS, sustaining
 
Flash Pictures & Baby Assaulted
Thursday, March 10, 1955 - CBS, sustaining
 
Cat in Washer & Black Eye
Thursday, March 24, 1955 - CBS, sustaining
 
Mr. Peepers
Thursday, March 31, 1955 - CBS, sustaining

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