Premium Only Content
Dimension X 1950 (ep22) The Roads Must Roll
Dimension X was an NBC radio program broadcast mostly on an unsponsored, sustaining basis from April 8, 1950, to September 29, 1951. The first 13 episodes were broadcast live, and the remainder were prerecorded. Fred Wiehe and Edward King were the directors, and Norman Rose was heard as both announcer and narrator, opening the show with: "Adventures in time and space... told [or transcribed] in future tense..." For two months, beginning on July 7, 1950, the series was sponsored by Wheaties.
Overview
Preceded by Mutual's 2000 Plus (1950–52), Dimension X was not the first adult science fiction series on radio, but the acquisition of previously published stories immediately gave it a strong standing with the science fiction community, as did the choice of established writers within the genre: Isaac Asimov, Robert Bloch, Ray Bradbury, Fredric Brown, Robert A. Heinlein, Murray Leinster, H. Beam Piper, Frank M. Robinson, Clifford D. Simak, William Tenn, Jack Vance, Kurt Vonnegut, Jack Williamson and Donald A. Wollheim. Ernest Kinoy and George Lefferts adapted most of the stories and also provided original scripts.
In Science Fiction Television (2004), M. Keith Booker wrote:
It was not until the 1950s that science fiction radio really hit its stride, even as science fiction was beginning to appear on television as well. Radio programs such as Mutual's 2000 Plus and NBC's Dimension X were anthology series that offered a variety of exciting tales of future technology, with a special focus on space exploration (including alien invasion), though both series also often reflected contemporary anxieties about the dangers of technology.
The series opened with "The Outer Limit," Ernest Kinoy's adaptation of Graham Doar's short story from The Saturday Evening Post (December 24, 1949) about alien contact. A week later (April 15, 1950), the program presented Jack Williamson's most famous story, "With Folded Hands," first published in the July 1947 issue of Astounding Science Fiction.
With a five-month hiatus from January 1951 to June 1951, the series spanned 17 months. All 50 episodes of the series survived and can be heard today. Later, NBC's X Minus One (1955–58) utilized many of the same actors and scripts.
-
12:14
DeVory Darkins
10 hours ago $23.12 earnedBill Maher TRUTH BOMB Triggers HEATED Argument on The View
75.6K89 -
31:58
The Officer Tatum
7 hours agoThe View LASHES OUT On Morning Joe For MEETING WITH Trump
51.1K79 -
1:37:46
Kim Iversen
13 hours agoJoe Biden’s Post-Election Revenge: WW3 | Democrats Tremble Over Matt Gaetz and RFK Jr, Form “Shadow Cabinet"
124K133 -
1:47:09
Fresh and Fit
12 hours agoGuy Crashes Car Working Uber?! Money Monday Call In Show!
85.2K11 -
1:48:50
Glenn Greenwald
13 hours agoDC Attacks Trump's Most Disruptive Picks; Biden Authorizes Massive Escalation With Russia; Joe & Mika Meet With "Hitler" | SYSTEM UPDATE #367
173K234 -
1:44:34
Tucker Carlson
12 hours agoTucker Carlson and Russ Vought Break Down DOGE and All of Trump’s Cabinet Picks So Far
218K315 -
1:42:47
Flyover Conservatives
1 day agoBO POLNY | The Best and Worst Times Are Coming – Are You Ready? | FOC Show
63.9K24 -
51:12
BIG NEM
15 hours agoWelcome to Our Uncensored Show: Trump, Simulation Theory & the Albanian Mob - EP1
69.4K17 -
2:05:14
Robert Gouveia
14 hours agoFBI Criminals Get LAWYERS; STOP Counting ILLEGAL Votes; Time to Disbar Tish James
86.3K114 -
1:00:30
The StoneZONE with Roger Stone
12 hours agoAre We Heading For World War III? General Michael Flynn Joins The StoneZONE w/ Roger Stone
60.4K14