Another bundle offer - suspense radio
Jan. 24th, 2022 08:12 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
https://bundleofholding.com/presents/SuspenseRadio
Suspense Radio is our second offer (after Hardboiled Radio in March 2021) presenting vintage Old-Time Radio (OTR) crime drama from the Golden Age of Radio, 1939-51. These 40 half-hour episodes, all remastered and re-engineered by publisher Nathan and Evan to sound crisp and new, come from from the popular 1940s and 1950s radio series Suspense, Crime Classics, The Weird Circle, Escape!, Night Beat, and Dangerous Assignment.
We provide each title complete in MP3 audio format. Like all Bundle of Holding titles, these audio files have NO DRM (Digital Restrictions Management), and our customers are entitled to move them freely among all their devices.
Ten percent of your payment (after gateway fees) goes to this Suspense Radio offer's designated charity, the Internet Archive. The Internet Archive is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit library of millions of books, movies, software, music, websites, and more. The Archive is building a digital library of Internet sites and other cultural artifacts, including thousands of OTR episodes.
The total retail value of the 40 radio episodes in this offer is US$117. Customers who pay just US$6.95 get all eleven episodes in our Suspense Radio Sampler (retail value $33) as DRM-free MP3 audio files, including three episodes of Suspense, three of Crime Classics, and five of Night Beat. (Listen to sample episodes right here on this page, in the Sampler entries below.)
Those who pay more than the threshold (average) price, which is set at $17.95 to start, also get our entire Complete Collection with twenty-nine more episodes worth an additional $84, including seven more tales calculated to leave you in Suspense, seven more Crime Classics true-crime dramas, and stories from Escape!, The Weird Circle, and Dangerous Assignment. Tune in today!
I'm not incredibly keen because I can read a lot faster than I listen to the radio, but if you're interested in the era this may be for you. It's pretty good value, although I think all of the episodes are in the public domain in non-remastered versions.