Archipelago – Details, episodes & analysis
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Archipelago
Archipelago Audio
Frequency: 1 episode/103d. Total Eps: 26

An English-language podcast about arts, culture, and ideas in Denmark — Scandinavia's smallest (mostly) island nation.
Season 4 — six new stories about people living a life less ordinary — begins on 3 July 2025.
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Apple Podcasts
🇬🇧 Great Britain - placesAndTravel
23/04/2026#94🇩🇪 Germany - placesAndTravel
05/04/2026#97🇬🇧 Great Britain - placesAndTravel
07/12/2025#92🇬🇧 Great Britain - placesAndTravel
23/09/2025#88🇬🇧 Great Britain - placesAndTravel
22/07/2025#89🇬🇧 Great Britain - placesAndTravel
22/06/2025#69🇨🇦 Canada - placesAndTravel
17/06/2025#80
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See allScore global : 78%
Publication history
Monthly episode publishing history over the past years.
Introducing 'Dad Mode Activated'
dimanche 23 février 2025 • Duration 01:53
From the producer and host of Archipelago, Dad Mode Activated explores the reality of becoming a father after the age of 40.
With episodes released every fortnight, the podcast features conversations with late-blooming dads who are rewriting the playbook of modern parenthood.
Expect real-life stories, honest advice and the occasional laugh about the unexpected perks of being dads who remember the ‘80s.
To find out more, visit https://dadmodeactivated.co/
This Amarkaner Life: Marianne's Swords
Season 3 · Episode 6
vendredi 30 décembre 2022 • Duration 16:54
“Opening Champagne with a sword is more fun. You can feel it in your stomach.”
So says Marianne Sass Petersen — a bookkeeper from Amager whose life changed when she attended a Champagne sabering competition at Tivoli.
Dedicating herself to the art of opening Champagne bottles with swords, she went on to win the Danish championship — and launch a successful business teaching sabering.
In the final episode of the season, we visit Marianne's house in Amager to find out why she loves sabering, what it entails, and how it could change your life, too.
For good measure, there's a pair of improbable references to hip-hop, as well (neither of them to Liquid Swords, alas).
Further information
Champagne Sabling
Squares and Triangles
Scenery
Blixen En Pointe
Season 2 · Episode 3
samedi 9 novembre 2019 • Duration 23:24
“Those who wish to relive their lives, never lived them in the first place.”
The words of Karen Blixen — the acclaimed Danish writer whose life story is the basis of a brand-new ballet created exclusively for the Royal Danish Theatre in Copenhagen.
Blixen sketches the writer's life story from her childhood years in Denmark through her unhappy marriage to her half-cousin Bror Blixen, her years running a coffee plantation in Kenya—where she embarked on a doomed love affair with Denys Finch Hatton—and the final years of her life, back home in Denmark, when she found global fame at last.
To discover how to tell the life story of one of Denmark’s best-known writers through that most expressionistic yet wordless form of storytelling — ballet — we speak to three of the people behind Blixen: dancer and choreographer Gregory Dean; principal dancer Kizzy Matiakis, who plays Blixen; and costume and set designer Jon Morrell.
Memory Palace
Season 2 · Episode 2
dimanche 22 septembre 2019 • Duration 25:56
Meik Wiking is one of the world’s leading happiness experts.
The founder of the Happiness Research Institute, he’s also the author of two New York Times bestsellers — The Little Book of Hygge and The Little Book of Lykke — which have been translated into more than 35 languages and sold over a million copies worldwide.
Little wonder, then, that he's been dubbed “probably the world’s happiest man”.
But when Meik turned 40, he realised that, statistically speaking, as a Danish man, he’d lived half his life.
Which got him thinking: how many of the 14,610 days he’d lived could he remember?
So he decided to start researching memories, culminating in his latest book — The Art of Making Memories, a lighthearted but thought-provoking series of tips about how to create and remember happy memories.
We discuss the book with Meik and discover why Andy Warhol changed his perfume every three months, why we should take more photos of our cereal boxes, and how to memorise the order of a deck of card in just minutes.
Further reading:
Happiness Research Institute
https://www.happinessresearchinstitute.com/
The Art of Making Memories, Penguin Random House
https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/311273/the-art-of-making-memories/9780241376058.html
The music used in Archipelago is produced by two Copenhagen-based artists:
Squares and Triangles
https://squaresandtriangles.bandcamp.com/
Scenery
https://scenerymusic.bandcamp.com/
Pieces of Aidt
Season 2 · Episode 1
jeudi 22 août 2019 • Duration 26:21
We kick off season two of Archipelago with a very special guest indeed.
Naja Marie Aidt has been described as “one of the most intelligent writers of the contemporary literary world” and as “one of the compassionate voices in fiction”.
Born in Greenland and raised in Copenhagen, she’s the author of ten poetry collections and three short-story collections — including Baboon, which won the Nordic countries’ most prestigious literary award, the Nordic Council's Literature Prize, as well as the Danish Critics Prize for Literature.
Domestic plaudits have led to international acclaim, too.
Baboon was published in English-speaking markets in 2014, and Naja’s debut novel, Rock Paper Scissors, in 2015.
But both books are likely to be eclipsed by Naja’s latest book in translation.
It’s a work of non-fiction called When Death Takes Something From You Give It Back — a cryptic and, as it turns out, deeply personal title that only hints at the tragedy the book describes.
Believe me when I say it’s one of the most remarkable books you’ll ever read.
I was thrilled when Naja found time in her busy schedule at the Aarhus Literature Festival this summer to discuss it with me.
Further reading:
“When Death Takes Something From You Give It Back” official page, Quercus
Naja Marie Aidt's back catalogue
The music used in Archipelago is produced by two local artists:
Squares and Triangles
https://squaresandtriangles.bandcamp.com/
Scenery
The Porn Supremacy
Season 1 · Episode 6
jeudi 20 juin 2019 • Duration 44:35
We end season one with a bang — on the little known Danish island of Pornø.
To mark half a century since Denmark became the first country to legalise visual pornography, we take a deep dive into arty porn and pornographic art.
Up first, we meet Rasmus Steenbakken, the curator of a major new group exhibition at the ARoS art museum in Aarhus which looks at cultural creativity, freedom of expression and art in the age of pornography.
Then we talk to Anne Sofie Steen Sverdrup of Copenhagen-based porn production company Bedside Productions. She wants society to take porn more seriously as a cultural product — and even went in front of the camera to show how it should be done.
Further reading:
“Art & Porn”, ARoS
https://en.aros.dk/exhibitions_/2019/art-porn/
Bedside Productions
http://www.bedside-productions.com/
The music used in Archipelago is produced by two local artists:
Squares and Triangles
https://squaresandtriangles.bandcamp.com/
Scenery
Mad World
Season 1 · Episode 5
mercredi 5 juin 2019 • Duration 42:44
Once a foodie wasteland, Copenhagen is today a major gastronomic destination.
It is, of course, the epicentre of New Nordic cuisine — the culinary movement that championed hyper-local, seasonal ingredients and elevated foraging and fermentation to art forms.
But it’s also a global food city — one where savvy diners can find everything from Surinamese peanut soup to Ethiopian injera, Vietnamese banh mi to Cantonese dim sum.
Even the local government has gone gourmet. There are honey bees on the roof of one town hall, a gin distillery in the basement of another.
In this episode, we take a snapshot of the Copenhagen food scene — and discuss how it’s changed, why that matters, and where it could be going next.
Up first is American journalist Lisa Abend, who writes about current affairs, culture and food for the New York Times, the Washington Post, and Time magazine, among others.
Then we meet Nick Curtin, Andrew Valenzuela, and Camilla Hansen — the co-founders of Alouette, which was awarded a Michelin star within a year of opening in a former envelope factory in Islands Brygge.
Finally, we discuss the intersection of food and theatre with Rasmus Munk, the head chef and founder of soon-to-be-relaunched restaurant Alchemist, and its dramaturge Louise Knudsen.
Further reading:
Lisa Abend on “The Food Circus”
Alouette
http://www.restaurantalouette.dk/
Alchemist
http://restaurant-alchemist.dk/
The music used in Archipelago is produced by two local artists:
Squares and Triangles
https://squaresandtriangles.bandcamp.com/
Scenery
Chair Necessities
Season 1 · Episode 4
mercredi 22 mai 2019 • Duration 40:46
We try to solve one of the greatest mysteries of all time.
Why are the Danish so crazy about chairs? Why are there so many Danish chairs? And does the world really need any more of them?
Ahead of 3 Days of Design — Denmark’s biggest annual design event — we meet a trio of design devotees and discuss the past, present and future of Danish design.
Up first is Christian Holmsted Olesen, the head of exhibitions and collections at the Danish Design Museum and the author of The Danish Chair: An International Affair.
Then we hear from Jeni Porter, the editor of Ark Journal, a brand-new Copenhagen-based magazine about architecture, design and art.
Finally, we talk to Henrik Lorensen, the founder of TAKT, a new Danish company that wants to rethink the way we design, build and sell furniture.
Further reading:
Danish Design Museum’s permanent exhibition, The Danish Chair: An International Affair
https://designmuseum.dk/en/exhibition/the-danish-chair-an-international-affair/
Ark Journal
Takt
The music used in Archipelago is produced by two local artists:
Squares and Triangles
https://squaresandtriangles.bandcamp.com/
Scenery
Born To Be Wild
Season 1 · Episode 3
mercredi 8 mai 2019 • Duration 34:23
CPH:DOX is one of the world’s largest documentary film festivals — and a highlight of Copenhagen’s cultural calendar.
In this episode we talk to the directors of two films that were screened in competition at the 2019 festival. Two very similar — and yet very different — documentaries about children growing up in Copenhagen today.
Phie Ambo’s REDISCOVERY is a beautifully shot film about the 10 weeks that almost 50 children from the Green Free School in Amager spent building camps on an overgrown patch of land after they were tasked with establishing a new society there.
Olivia Chamby-Rus’s WOLFLAND is a deeply personal slice of life from the perspective of children and teenagers living on or near Blågårds Plads, a square in the northern Copenhagen district of Nørrebro.
Further reading:
REDISCOVERY (Trailer)
WOLFLAND (Trailer)
The music used in Archipelago is produced by two local artists:
Squares and Triangles
https://squaresandtriangles.bandcamp.com/
Scenery
Booze and Bouquets
Season 1 · Episode 2
mardi 7 mai 2019 • Duration 35:07
Episode two is about two Danish companies that have developed creative ways to employ people who often struggle to pick up work.
First we meet People Like Us — a brewing company run by people who have been diagnosed with autism and social anxiety, and war veterans with PTSD.
Then we meet Bike & Bloom, a florist that hires and trains people who are among the most invisible members of any society or labour market — refugee women.
Further reading:
People Like Us
Bike & Bloom
The music used in Archipelago is produced by two local artists:
Squares and Triangles
https://squaresandtriangles.bandcamp.com/
Scenery









