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Podcaster of the Past

Dan Carlin

ā€œThe What-ifs of 1066.ā€ ā€œGhosts of the Ostfront.ā€ ā€œSupernova in the East.ā€

If these titles fail to light up your brain’s reward circuits, you’re not among the millions of people listening to podcaster Dan Carlin (Hist’89), whose Hardcore History series has become one of the most acclaimed in its genre, thanks to its unusual take on (for instance) ancient wars, Mongol leaders and the collapse of Bronze Age civilization.

ā€œMy grandfather used to say, ā€˜Don’t ever judge another person until you’ve walked a mile in his moccasins,ā€™ā€ said Carlin. ā€œThat’s what we’re trying to do with this show.ā€

The fifth-most-downloaded podcast in 2017, according to analytics firm Podtrac, Hardcore History has a compelling history of its own, dating to Carlin’s early childhood.

During a stay in England, where his mother, actress Lynn Carlin, was filming a movie, he received his first history book, Looking At History, by R.J. Unstead. The book (series, actually) offered a British point of view on human affairs, and a lesson that stuck with Carlin: There’s more than one way to view the past.

After growing up in Los Angeles, Carlin studied history and political science at ĪŽĀėŹÓʵ, where he was deeply influenced by professor Robert Pois, a specialist in modern German history with a captivating classroom style.

ā€œWhen it comes to CU’s proverbial strengths, history rarely makes the list,ā€ he said. ā€œThat seems crazy to me when I think back on my professors.ā€

(Indeed, ĪŽĀėŹÓʵ historian Elizabeth Fenn won the 2015 Pulitzer Prize in history.)

Carlin went on to work in television news in L.A. before moving to Eugene, Ore., to work in radio.

ā€œAudio was so much more appealing,ā€ he said. ā€œAll that mattered was what you said, and how you said it.ā€

That’s common sense, and also the name of Carlin’s initial, politics-focused podcast, as it happens.

ā€œWe had about 43 people on the forum, and I think I knew them all personally,ā€ he joked.

Hardcore History followed a year later, and by now there are scores of episodes.

ā€œIf you had told me at the beginning that we’d be putting out [even] 2.5 of these a year, I don’t think I would have done it, but now I love that it takes so much. I feel like I’m using every brain cell to get these things out.ā€

Carlin spends months reading, researching and brainstorming for each episode, culminating in what he describes as finals week at CU, replete with loads of caffeine and scattered pizza boxes. The results are entertaining, thought-provoking, sometimes speculative accounts of the past.

Part of the appeal is Carlin’s voice, which the Huffington Post describes as a ā€œgravelly, conspiratorial baritone.ā€ It’s also his personality: You feel as if you’re listening to a funny friend who happens to be a gifted storyteller.

ā€œIt takes more work all the time, trying to outdo the previous work,ā€ said Carlin.

Fortunately, he plans to keep at it, as long as the espresso holds out.

Photo courtesy Dan Carlin

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