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The only reason I'd say they aren't is because Dan Carlin doesn't use a fully written script. A lot of history podcasters write out a full script and read it out, basically the same thing as an audiobook. Dan Carlin just has an outline with a bunch of notes and quotes he wants to use. When he records he does it off the top of his head.
I noticed a big difference a few years ago when he released an actual book, The End is Always Near. He recorded an official audiobook of it. You can really tell the difference in his style between the podcast and the audiobook.
Yes, so much. I listened to that book and his writing voice is a lot less natural, almost stilted. I'm so used to his style of highly refined extemporising that hearing him read aloud weirds me out. Dan if you're in danger blink twice! Help is on the way just do whatever they ask!
I'm also so accustomed to his normal podcasting voice that when he does interviews where he's just having a conversation with someone else it really weirds me out. Like, dude, you're not supposed to be talking like a normal person just having a conversation. You're supposed to be describing the most extreme examples of the human condition in poetic terms.
It's really jarring. Especially when someone makes him laugh? It's like hearing Bob Ross shriek. You don't do that.