The Porcupine Presents ...
A classic psychological thriller from the golden age of radio — plus commentary and trivia after the show. Murder at Midnight – “Nightmare” (1946) Step back into the darker corners of the golden age of radio with Murder at Midnight, a short-lived but daring suspense series that traded heroes and detectives for isolation, guilt, and interior collapse. In this 1946 episode, “Nightmare,” the listener is drawn inside a fractured consciousness where memory, fear, and reality bleed together — and certainty becomes the first casualty. Rather than solving a mystery, the episode watches the mind itself become unstable. The terror here is not an external threat, but the growing suspicion that the truth is already known — distorted, repressed, and waiting to surface. After the broadcast, stay tuned for bonus commentary and behind-the-scenes trivia — including the show’s place among lesser-known radio thrillers, its focus on psychological breakdown over procedural logic, and how postwar American anxieties about memory, guilt, and trauma shaped stories like this one. Originally aired: 1946Approx. runtime: 33 minutes
138 episodes
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