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  1. Sep 27, 2023 · The phrase “like gangbusters” has become a popular idiom in the English language, often used to describe something that is happening or proceeding with great intensity, force, or success. It originated from the radio program “Gang Busters,” which aired from 1936 to 1957 and featured dramatized stories of law enforcement battling ...

  2. Gangbusters. Gang Busters, one of the earliest crime shows on radio, was created by actor-producer Phillips Lord. Deemed as the only radio program that featured authentic police cases, it debuted on NBC Radio on July 27, 1935, under the title G-Men and Lord himself as the narrator. He was later replaced by Colonel Norman Schwarzkopf, the New ...

  3. A “Gang Busters” premium. The long-running, renowned radio series that gave birth to the expression “coming on like gangbusters” was the brainchild of veteran radio producer, writer and actor Phillips H. Lord. His hard-hitting, cops-and-robbers saga, born 1935, was a distinct departure, not only for the listening public, but also for ...

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  4. Gang Busters, one of the earliest crime shows on radio, was created by actor-producer Phillips Lord. Deemed as the only radio program that featured authentic police cases, it debuted on NBC Radio on July 27, 1935, under the title G-Men and Lord himself as the narrator. He was later replaced by Colonel Norman Schwarzkopf, the New Jersey Police ...

  5. It is an Americanism dating from the late 1930s. The expression derives from the popular American radio series Gangbusters, which first went on air in 1935. Gangbusters were crime fighters and the radio series had a very striking sound intro consisting of police whistles, sirens, running feet, gunshots and machine gun fire. Within a very short ...

  6. Gangbusters. (1935-1957) Gang Busters was an American dramatic radio program heralded as "the only national program that brings you authentic police case histories." It premiered as G-Men, sponsored by Chevrolet, on July 20, 1935. After the title was changed to Gang Busters January 15, 1936, the show had a 21-year run through November 20, 1957.

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  8. Sep 10, 2023 · Martin, who lives in San Diego, California, shares some of his favorite surfing slang, including A-frame, boosting, and gnar.He’s curious about the use of gangbusters in filmmaker Bruce Brown’s surfing classic The Endless Summer 2 to describe huge waves.

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