Tuesday, 4 February 2014
Scandinavia, Scandimania; Sweden
Scandinavia, Andrew Mellor, New Statesman
Nordic TV (New Statesman)
This is one I might want to watch
It comes recommended (apart from the elk-hunting sequence).
"Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall starts his adventure in Sweden, meeting a member of ABBA and going hunting in the woods.
Hugh visits the Ekstedt restaurant in Stockholm, where everything is cooked over a wood-burning fire.
Over 70% of Sweden is covered in forest and the Swedes love to spend time in the outdoors, so Hugh flies north to Umeå, to join an Elk hunt, where he cooks the hunters elk liver for dinner.
In Gothenburg, Hugh sees an IKEA flatpack house being assembled in just one morning and meets a group of stay-at-home dads.
Hugh visits the ABBA museum, where he meets Björn Ulvaeus, one of the men behind the music, who explains the concept of 'lagom', which means 'just enough', and sums up how Swedes approach life.
But is the 'Swedish model' of equality and prosperity at risk? Hugh visits the set of the country's number one sitcom, which mocks the materialistic aspirations of a new breed of wealthy citizens.
And at the end of journey, Hugh visits an end of summer crayfish party in Stockholm's archipelago".
SERIES SYNOPSIS
There's a lot of talk about Scandinavia at the moment and Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall wants to discover what it's all about.
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