• The Lost Art of Midnight Launches
    Jun 19 2026

    Enjoying the show? Support it here.

    Standing outside a store at midnight shouldn't be memorable.

    And yet, for millions of people, it was.

    Before digital downloads, launch day was an event. Whether it was a new console, a highly anticipated game, a blockbuster movie, or a must-have album, midnight launches transformed ordinary purchases into shared experiences.

    In Episode 5 of Artifacts, Danny Brown explores why people still look back fondly on late-night queues, countdowns, and the excitement of being surrounded by complete strangers who cared about the exact same thing.

    From gaming launches and movie premieres to the psychology of anticipation, this episode examines what we gained through convenience, and what we may have lost when everything became instantly available.

    Because sometimes the objects fade.

    But the feeling doesn’t.

    Mentioned in this episode:

    • Matt Cundill: Voiceover Artist | Podcast & Radio Personality

    Get involved

    If you enjoy Artifacts, you can support it with either a one-off tip, or become a monthly Archivist.

    No commitment - just a simple way to say thanks. Show your support here.

    If you enjoy the show, I'd love for you to leave a rating or review on your favourite podcast app!

    And please let your friends and other podcasters know they can listen for free on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, their preferred podcast app, or online at Artifacts Podcast.

    Products I Use for Artifacts

    Note: these may contain affiliate links, so I get a small percentage of any product you buy when using my link.

    My equipment:

    • RODE NT1-A large diaphragm condenser mic
    • Rodecaster Pro II audio production studio
    • Sony MDR-7506 Studio Monitor Headphones
    • Elgato Wave Mic Arm Low Profile

    Recommended resources:

    • Captivate.fm podcast hosting, distribution, analytics, and monetization
    • Hindenburg Pro recording and editing
    • Auphonic mastering tool for audio post production

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    5 mins
  • Why We Miss AIM Away Messages
    Jun 12 2026

    Enjoying the show? Support it here.

    Before status updates, before social media profiles, and before we carried the internet in our pockets, there were away messages.

    A few lines of text attached to a screen name.

    And somehow, they mattered.

    In Episode 4 of Artifacts, Danny Brown explores how AIM away messages became one of the earliest forms of online self-expression. From song lyrics and inside jokes to cryptic messages aimed at one specific person, away messages gave people a small but meaningful way to tell the world who they were.

    But this isn't really a story about instant messaging.

    It's a story about identity, connection, and a version of the internet that felt smaller, slower, and more personal.

    Why do people still remember away messages decades later?

    And what do they reveal about the way we communicated before algorithms, influencers, and personal brands became part of everyday life?

    Because sometimes the objects fade.

    But the feeling doesn’t.

    Get involved

    If you enjoy Artifacts, you can support it with either a one-off tip, or become a monthly Archivist.

    No commitment - just a simple way to say thanks. Show your support here.

    If you enjoy the show, I'd love for you to leave a rating or review on your favourite podcast app!

    And please let your friends and other podcasters know they can listen for free on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, their preferred podcast app, or online at Artifacts Podcast.

    Products I Use for Artifacts

    Note: these may contain affiliate links, so I get a small percentage of any product you buy when using my link.

    My equipment:

    • RODE NT1-A large diaphragm condenser mic
    • Rodecaster Pro II audio production studio
    • Sony MDR-7506 Studio Monitor Headphones
    • Elgato Wave Mic Arm Low Profile

    Recommended resources:

    • Captivate.fm podcast hosting, distribution, analytics, and monetization
    • Hindenburg Pro recording and editing
    • Auphonic mastering tool for audio post production

    Show More Show Less
    5 mins
  • The Strange Emotional Power of Burned CDs
    Jun 5 2026

    Enjoying the show? Support it here.

    Before streaming playlists, there were burned CDs.

    Carefully curated collections of songs, handwritten track lists, homemade cover art, and hours spent deciding exactly what came next.

    In Episode 3 of Artifacts, Danny Brown explores why burned CDs became so much more than a way to listen to music. They were expressions of identity, creativity, friendship, and sometimes even love.

    From Napster downloads and LimeWire mishaps to the emotional labour of creating the perfect mix, this episode looks at how music discovery used to feel slower, more personal, and more meaningful.

    Why do people still remember burned CDs so fondly decades later?

    And what happens when convenience replaces effort?

    Because sometimes the objects fade.

    But the feeling doesn’t.

    Get involved

    If you enjoy Artifacts, you can support it with either a one-off tip, or become a monthly Archivist.

    No commitment - just a simple way to say thanks. Show your support here.

    If you enjoy the show, I'd love for you to leave a rating or review on your favourite podcast app!

    And please let your friends and other podcasters know they can listen for free on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, their preferred podcast app, or online at Artifacts Podcast.

    Products I Use for Artifacts

    Note: these may contain affiliate links, so I get a small percentage of any product you buy when using my link.

    My equipment:

    • RODE NT1-A large diaphragm condenser mic
    • Rodecaster Pro II audio production studio
    • Sony MDR-7506 Studio Monitor Headphones
    • Elgato Wave Mic Arm Low Profile

    Recommended resources:

    • Captivate.fm podcast hosting, distribution, analytics, and monetization
    • Hindenburg Pro recording and editing
    • Auphonic mastering tool for audio post production

    Show More Show Less
    5 mins
  • Why Old Internet Forums Felt More Human
    May 29 2026

    Enjoying the show? Support it here.

    Before social media feeds, algorithms, and endless scrolling, the internet felt different.

    Smaller.

    Messier.

    More personal.

    In Episode 2 of Artifacts, Danny Brown explores the strange emotional connection people still have to old internet forums - from recognizable usernames and chaotic communities to forum signatures, inside jokes, and the feeling of belonging to tiny digital neighbourhoods.

    Why did these spaces feel so human?

    And what did we lose when the internet became optimized for performance, visibility, and engagement instead of connection?

    From niche communities and message boards to the emotional texture of the early web, this episode explores why people still miss an internet that was slower, weirder, and more personal.

    Because sometimes the objects fade.

    But the feeling doesn’t.

    Get involved

    If you enjoy Artifacts, you can support it with either a one-off tip, or become a monthly Archivist.

    No commitment - just a simple way to say thanks. Show your support here.

    If you enjoy the show, I'd love for you to leave a rating or review on your favourite podcast app!

    And please let your friends and other podcasters know they can listen for free on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, their preferred podcast app, or online at Artifacts Podcast.

    Products I Use for Artifacts

    Note: these may contain affiliate links, so I get a small percentage of any product you buy when using my link.

    My equipment:

    • RODE NT1-A large diaphragm condenser mic
    • Rodecaster Pro II audio production studio
    • Sony MDR-7506 Studio Monitor Headphones
    • Elgato Wave Mic Arm Low Profile

    Recommended resources:

    • Captivate.fm podcast hosting, distribution, analytics, and monetization
    • Hindenburg Pro recording and editing
    • Auphonic mastering tool for audio post production

    Show More Show Less
    6 mins
  • The Dreamcast Wasn’t Supposed to Matter This Much
    May 29 2026

    Enjoying the show? Support it here.

    The Dreamcast failed. At least, that’s the official version of the story.

    Released on 9/9/99, Sega’s final console lasted only a few short years before disappearing from store shelves forever. But decades later, people still talk about the Dreamcast with a kind of emotional reverence usually reserved for much bigger success stories.

    So why does it still matter so much?

    In the first episode of Artifacts, Danny Brown explores how the Dreamcast became more than just a game console - it became a symbol of optimism, experimentation, creativity, and a version of the future that never fully arrived.

    From Jet Set Radio and Crazy Taxi to online gaming over dial-up and the strange emotional power of failed technology, this episode explores why some artifacts stay with us long after they disappear.

    Because sometimes the objects fade.

    But the feeling doesn’t.

    Get involved

    If you enjoy Artifacts, you can support it with either a one-off tip, or become a monthly Archivist.

    No commitment - just a simple way to say thanks. Show your support here.

    If you enjoy the show, I'd love for you to leave a rating or review on your favourite podcast app!

    And please let your friends and other podcasters know they can listen for free on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, their preferred podcast app, or online at Artifacts Podcast.

    Products I Use for Artifacts

    Note: these may contain affiliate links, so I get a small percentage of any product you buy when using my link.

    My equipment:

    • RODE NT1-A large diaphragm condenser mic
    • Rodecaster Pro II audio production studio
    • Sony MDR-7506 Studio Monitor Headphones
    • Elgato Wave Mic Arm Low Profile

    Recommended resources:

    • Captivate.fm podcast hosting, distribution, analytics, and monetization
    • Hindenburg Pro recording and editing
    • Auphonic mastering tool for audio post production

    Show More Show Less
    7 mins
  • Artifacts - Season 1 Trailer
    May 21 2026

    Season One of Artifacts explores the emotional history of the internet generation. Not just the technology itself, but the feelings attached to it.

    The optimism. The weirdness. The creativity.

    The sense that the internet once felt smaller.

    More personal. More human.

    This season:

    • the Dreamcast becomes a lost future
    • old forums become digital neighbourhoods
    • burned CDs become emotional time capsules
    • and forgotten corners of the internet remind us what online spaces used to feel like before everything became content

    This is Artifacts Season One: Lost Futures.

    New episodes weekly.

    Get involved

    If you enjoy Artifacts, you can support it with either a one-off tip, or become a monthly Archivist.

    No commitment - just a simple way to say thanks. Show your support here.

    If you enjoy the show, I'd love for you to leave a rating or review on your favourite podcast app!

    And please let your friends and other podcasters know they can listen for free on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, their preferred podcast app, or online at Artifacts Podcast.

    Products I Use for Artifacts

    Note: these may contain affiliate links, so I get a small percentage of any product you buy when using my link.

    My equipment:

    • RODE NT1-A large diaphragm condenser mic
    • Rodecaster Pro II audio production studio
    • Sony MDR-7506 Studio Monitor Headphones
    • Elgato Wave Mic Arm Low Profile

    Recommended resources:

    • Captivate.fm podcast hosting, distribution, analytics, and monetization
    • Hindenburg Pro recording and editing
    • Auphonic mastering tool for audio post production

    Show More Show Less
    2 mins
  • Artifacts — Official Trailer
    May 13 2026

    Remember Winamp skins? Burned CDs? AIM away messages? The Dreamcast? Those weird little corners of the internet that somehow felt more human than everything online today?

    Maybe we don’t actually miss the technology. Maybe we miss how it made us feel.

    Artifacts is a podcast about forgotten platforms, dead gadgets, old internet culture, creative communities, and the strange emotional connection we still have to them.

    But this isn’t just nostalgia. It’s about why these things mattered.

    Why people still defend the Zune.

    Why some gamers are still obsessed with the Dreamcast.

    Why old forums felt more personal than social media.

    Why podcasting used to feel smaller… and maybe more exciting.

    Every episode starts with an artifact. And then follows the story underneath it. The people. The feeling. The moment in time. And what it says about who we are now.

    Because sometimes the objects fade. But the feeling doesn't.

    I’m Danny Brown.

    And this is Artifacts.

    Get involved

    If you enjoy Artifacts, you can support it with either a one-off tip, or become a monthly Archivist.

    No commitment - just a simple way to say thanks. Show your support here.

    If you enjoy the show, I'd love for you to leave a rating or review on your favourite podcast app!

    And please let your friends and other podcasters know they can listen for free on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, their preferred podcast app, or online at Artifacts Podcast.

    Products I Use for Artifacts

    Note: these may contain affiliate links, so I get a small percentage of any product you buy when using my link.

    My equipment:

    • RODE NT1-A large diaphragm condenser mic
    • Rodecaster Pro II audio production studio
    • Sony MDR-7506 Studio Monitor Headphones
    • Elgato Wave Mic Arm Low Profile

    Recommended resources:

    • Captivate.fm podcast hosting, distribution, analytics, and monetization
    • Hindenburg Pro recording and editing
    • Auphonic mastering tool for audio post production

    Show More Show Less
    1 min