 So, what is your favorite hidden spot in Oslo? I don't have exactly one hidden spot per se. However, there's one category of hidden spots that I really like in the city. There are a couple, maybe three or four, tiny museums plotted around the city that I really like going to. They're not as extravagant, not as big. You can't spend hours in there, obviously, as you could in Oslo or at Moscow Museum. But they have this really nice charm because they're usually curated by people who have a very strong passion for these almost niche subjects that the museums cover. One example would be the Viking Museum, which is sort of hidden away in the basement of a bank in the middle of the city. There's also the antiquity museum here at Ores University, which I really enjoy going to because despite it's sort of a hidden location also in the basement, it just has so much charm and it's so well done in every aspect that you can even imagine. And usually those museums are not as crowded as the others. Obviously, they don't attract the same tourist crowds. All museums I really like is the Occupation Museum, located right next to the center of the city. It is located underneath the Women's Museum, which is also a great museum, I gotta say. But underneath there, there is the Occupation Museum. It's very tiny. You could spend perhaps an afternoon down there, but what I really like about it, as I mentioned before, is the genuine passion of the people who work there. You might not even realize some of the stories that you can find from the Second World War, the occupation of Denmark. If you just read on Wikipedia, you wouldn't get the same impression as some of these very personal stories that the curators at the museum are able to deliver to you. It's also very nice, but it's a very unique setting down there, where you really feel connected to this very dark spot in our history and past in the history of Denmark and the history of Ores. Usually, when you think about the Second World War and the Occupation, you think of the Grand Aspen, the war, the fighting. But you can sometimes forget the little man, the little people, the people who had to carry on with their everyday and relatively tiny city as orders. How did they manage? What did they experience during this time? I was very surprised when I went there a few years ago, the hardships that even privileged people in a not so war-torn country as Denmark in a city as orders managed to experience. But it's really, really interesting and unfortunately hidden away, but that's part of the charm as well. My favorite hidden spot now is the Ores stadium, also called Serres Park, because that's where the local football team, AGF, is playing their home games. And there's a really great atmosphere there every time and they just had the best season for 22 years by winning the third place. So that's a really great place right now to be.