Pa Sparet - Sasong 23 Avsnitt 2 - 2012-11-30 May 2026

This episode features a duo that needs no introduction to Swedish audiences. On one side of the tracks, we have the ever-charismatic Ingvar Oldsberg —a man whose encyclopedic knowledge of European industrial towns is only matched by his booming laugh. Partnering with him is the walking music lexicon, Niklas Strömstedt . Their chemistry is volatile, loud, and brilliant.

The answer is revealed: .

By [Your Name]

Lundin gets it right. Oldsberg does too. But it’s the bonus point for the bridge connection (Ölandsbron) that seals the deal. The episode ends not with a blowout, but a photo finish—a testament to why Season 23 is often called the "golden era" of competitive calm before the show’s later format changes.

Re-watching Sasong 23 Avsnitt 2 is a nostalgic trip. The graphics are chunky, Luuk’s hair is notably 2012, and the questions focus on rail timetables rather than streaming services. But the soul is intact. This episode captures the pre-"celebrity shouting match" era of På Spåret —when the game was slower, the trains ran on time, and you could actually play along from your couch without a PhD in pop culture. Pa Sparet - Sasong 23 Avsnitt 2 - 2012-11-30

A vintage, cozy, and fiercely intelligent 45 minutes. Essential viewing for anyone who misses the gentle rivalry of early 2010s Swedish television.

The defining moment of the night arrives during the "Bildmix" (Image Mix) round. A cryptic montage of a herring, a red phone booth, and a snow-covered fairground leads to a tense buzzer race. Oldsberg slams the button: “Gävle!” Strömstedt nods furiously. The answer is correct—but it’s the specific location in Gävle that sparks a 45-second debate about the city’s famous Christmas goat. It’s a vintage På Spåret moment: a mix of high culture (geography) and low-stakes absurdity (a straw goat’s arson risk). This episode features a duo that needs no

Opposite them: the smooth, meticulous , armed with polite precision, and his partner, the puckish Claes Malmberg . If Oldsberg and Strömstedt are heavy metal, Lundin and Malmberg are complex jazz – unpredictable but technically flawless.