Plan For Survival : About
This show is no longer airing. You can access archives online.
"Maybe you, maybe me. Death and destruction ... Panic in the streets ..." Not a program for pre-bedtime listening, these recordings examine the impossibility of sufficiently preparing for nuclear winter.
With maddeningly calm Orwellian moderators, the Plan for Survival series (1950-1951) goes beyond the usual "duck and cover" advisement and into the details of an A-bomb attack, fallout shelters, the Soviet threat, first aid, radiation sickness, and food and water supplies following a nuclear attack. Guests include civilians recounting their survival experiences in wartime, like the missile blitzes in England.
Transcribed for the Civil Defense Network, which "linked virtually every radio station in New York State and operates entirely by air. It can function even if regular radio lines are destroyed." Bill Leonard hosts with expert panelists, and most programs consist of a balance of alarmist speculation and civil information for New York State in general and New York City in particular. Intended to be a public service announcement for a new nuclear age, the record of these programs now serves to quell hypochondriac fears of suffocating due to sinus congestion or mistaking acid reflux for a heart attack; it's clear -- death comes from above.