The French Culture Podcast (by Paris Unlocked)
<p><strong>The French Culture Podcast by Paris Unlocked</strong> is a deep dive into the people, historical moments, food, art, and trends that have shaped the Gallic world in the modern era. Written & hosted by Courtney Traub, a Franco-American writer & journalist who’s a longtime expert on Parisian culture and history, this show is an antidote to the cliché ideas about France you’ve imbibed over the years. Please follow, share & <a target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow" href="https://parisunlocked.substack.com/podcast">subscribe at Substack</a> (Paris Unlocked Newsletter)<strong> </strong>for more insights, bonus episodes and perks. You can also <a target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow" href="https://www.parisunlocked.com">visit Paris Unlocked </a>for hundreds of features on French food, art, culture, history and travel, and <a target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow" href="https://ko-fi.com/parisunlocked/goal?g=7">buy us a coffee at Ko-Fi </a>to help this podcast thrive and grow. Merci!</p>
Епизоди
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Sick of Clichés About French Culture? Make Time For This Podcast. 30.04.2026 1минThe official trailer for The French Culture Podcast (by Paris Unlocked), which debuts in June 2026 with four episodes from our first season, "Great French Icons of the 20th Century". Follow the podcast and share with anyone who might be interested. Merci, and hope to see you in June.
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Welcome to the French Culture Podcast -- & Season 1 Preview (Great French Icons of the 20th Century) 16.04.2026 18минThis is a short preview episode introducing you to The French Culture Podcast and its debut season. In Season 1, 20th Century French Icons & Artists, Part I, we’ll be taking a look at some of the great writers, musicians, and artists who made an outsized mark on French and Parisian culture last century. You can expect deep dives into the lives and legacies of the artist Henri Matisse, the singer and performer Edith Piaf, the Franco-American dancer, performer, film star and resistance fighter Josephine Baker, the Nobel Prize-winning author Albert Camus, the bawdy provocateur folk singer Serge Gainsbourg, and Louise Bourgeois, considered one of the 20th century's greatest sculptors.Keep listening to hear details on who we'll be profiling over eight episodes in the coming year-- and to learn how you can follow and support our work.If you like this episode, please share it as widely as you can– and save it to make sure new episodes arrive directly in your queue on your favorite platforms.You can also lend your precious support to both the French Culture Podcast and to our sister website and newsletter, Paris Unlocked, by buying us a coffee– or even better, becoming a “Donor Subscriber” on Substack.This episode was conceived, written, narrated and edited by Courtney Traub. Visuals: Artwork for the French Culture Podcast was created by Mateeya.Music credits:Intro and outro): Music by Trygve Larsen from Pixabay (Erik Satie’s Gnossienne 1 – Classical Remix Piano and Sax)Main preview section:Music by Samuel F. Johanns from Pixabay (“Erik Satie, Gymnopédie No. 1” )Music by Jakob Welik from Pixabay (“Le Coeur de Paris”)Music by Alana Jordan from Pixabay (“short Charleston, 1920s”)Music by Bryan Welborn from Pixabay (“Noir Alley”)Music by catch22music from
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The Radically Colorful World of Henri Matisse (Great French Icons of the 20th Century, Part 1) 02.06.2026 1ч 1минMost see Henri Matisse as someone who razed classical artistic conventions to the ground with his ferocious commitment to vibrant color and decoration. Yet it took decades for his work to earn wide acclaim in France, and to be considered a pioneering modern artist globally. How did he use public outrage and new places to produce such original work? How did he go from copying European masters to inventing radical new ways of “feeling through” color and form?Join us as we explore a crucial period that transformed Matisse’s life and modern art writ large. Along the way, we’ll also learn about his personality quirks, including a lifelong battle with insomnia and health problems, and an affection for collecting pretty rugs, butterflies and live birds. Then we’ll explore his crucial relationships with his wife Amelie and his daughter Marguerite, with Gertrude Stein and her family, with Pablo Picasso, and other luminaries of his period.PRODUCTION TEAMConceived, Written, Narrated & Edited by Courtney Traub (Translations of original French quotes by Courtney Traub)Producer, Research, Script Editor & Additional Voiceovers: Brendan WhalenAudio Editing: Engin Hassan (Edit Fade Warp)Artwork: MateeyaSUPPORT THE SHOW: If you liked this episode, please follow and share it! Support the French Culture Podcast and our sister site, Paris Unlocked by doing the following:Support Us: Buy us a coffee at Ko-Fi or become a "Donor Subscriber" on Substack for unlimited access to our archive of France stories, reviews, essays, and personalized travel advice.For full show Notes & episide sources: Visit the podcast web page at Paris Unlocked (All images are in the public domain).MUSIC CREDITS (Public Domain & Creative Commons)Intro/Outro: "Erik Satie’s Gnossienne 1 – Classical Remix Piano and Sax” by Trygve Larsen via PixabayEpisode Music (In Order): "Erik Satie, Gymnopédie No. 1” by Samuel F. Johanns / "Songs From the 18th Century - Belle O Brien (1895)” by Trygve Larsen / "La Belle Dame Sans Merci/Violin Duet” by Victory Day / "marché" SFX by freesound_community via PixabayFeature Track: "Sardana" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under CC BY 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)Closing Track: "Classical piano by Debussy: Suite Bergamasque 1905-Menuet" by Trygve Larsen via Pixabay
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Edith Piaf Part 1: Early Life & The Making of a Star (Great French Icons of the 20th Century, Part 2) 02.06.2026 1ч 2минTo see the full show notes, including a full list of sources and music used for this episode, visit the podcast webpage at Paris Unlocked.More than a mere diva, Piaf was something of a force of nature. She had an uncanny ability to reach a wide public with her soaring, guttural voice, but also with her odd physical presence. She captivated audiences around the world with her repertoire of French working-class dance hall hits, love songs and portraits of marginalized women, from prostitutes to penniless, unmarried mademoiselles embarking on ill-fated affairs with military men.In this first of two episodes on Piaf, we'll address some of the holes at the heart of the Piaf myth, in order to, I hope, get at the immensely complex and fascinating woman that she was. So often painted as a tragic figure, she was a survivor. She was an acerbic wit with mad street smarts, an eternal vagabond with an instinct for survival and a conjoined, paradoxical instinct for self-destruction.Show Credits & NotesProduction: This episode was conceived, written, narrated, and edited by Courtney Traub. The Producer was Brendan Whalen, who also contributed additional research and script editing.Audio Editing: Additional editing and sound design was by Engin Hassan of Edit Fade Warp.Artwork: MateeyaTranslations: All original French quotes translated by Courtney Traub unless specified.Support the ShowIf you enjoyed this episode, please follow the podcast, and share it as widely as you can. You can really help the French Culture Podcast grow and thrive by:Buying us a coffee (give whatever you can)-- via Ko-FiBecoming a "Donor Subscriber" on Substack for unlimited access to our archive of Paris and France-related news, travel tips, essays, and personalized travel advice, plus access to bonus episodes and early releases from this podcast.A Note on Music Clips & Fair Use (& my Spotify playlist)As discussed in the episode, copyright restrictions prevented securing the rights to play excerpts of Piaf’s music. Please listen to the songs referred to in this episode by going to the Spotify playlist I’ve put together. It’s less ideal than playing clips from the songs in the episode, but it’s (at the least) a way to listen .
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Edith Piaf Part 2: Performing Through a World War, Later Life, & Untimely Death (Great French Icons of the 20th Century, Part 3) 02.06.2026 1ч 6минTo see the full show notes, including a full list of sources and music used for this episode, visit the podcast webpage at Paris Unlocked.In this episode, Part II of our look at France's most-beloved diva, we’ll be focusing on a few key phases and turning points in Piaf’s life, especially pivotal moments in her musical artistry and the collaborations that made those pivots possible. You’ll also learn a bit about her appearances in theatre and films. Piaf was a talented theatrical performer, but this aspect of her career hasn’t typically received that much attention. Yet she moved with remarkable ease between concert halls, stages and film sets– and I think she could have had a formidable career as an actor, had she wanted one.Credits & NotesProduction: This episode was conceived, written, narrated, and edited by Courtney Traub.Producer: Brendan Whalen (who also contributed additional research, script editing, and voiceovers).Audio Engineering: Additional audio editing and sound design was by Engin Hassan of Edit Fade Warp.Artwork: MateeyaTranslations: French quotes and song translations by Courtney Traub, unless specified.You can also lend your precious support to both the French Culture Podcast and to our sister website and newsletter, Paris Unlocked, by buying us a coffee– or even better, becoming a “Donor Subscriber” on Substack.The problem of fair use and music clips: As I discuss in the episode, I was unable to secure the rights to Piaf’s music, in order to play short excerpts of the songs I reference in this episode.There is no “safe” amount of a piece of copyrighted music that one can play under fair use laws, so I preferred to be cautious.Spotify playlist: Please listen to the songs referred to in this episode by going to the Spotify playlist I’ve put together. It’s less ideal than playing clips from the songs in the episode, but it’s (at the least) a way to listen .
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Josephine Baker: Performer, Spy, Civil Rights Hero, Enigma (Great French Icons of the 20th Century, Part 4) 02.06.2026 1ч 4минTo see the full show notes, including a full list of sources and music used for this episode, visit the podcast webpage at Paris Unlocked.Josephine Baker is best known as the African-American performer and dancer who took Paris by storm in the 1920s with her own takes on the Charleston and the Black Bottom, performed in an iconic banana skirt. But Baker, who became a French citizen, shouldn't be reduced to this stereotypical image. She starred in numerous films, opened her own clubs, and as a member of France's counterintelligence agency Deuxième Bureau during World War II, proved a talented spy and resistance fighter, using her performer status as her only cloak and dagger.In later life, she was a civil rights activist and humanitarian who spoke at the Civil Rights March on Washington in 1963, taking the podium right before Martin Luther King, Jr. And her later shows, performed amid chronic health problems, only cemented her fame by showing Baker was as charismatic and original as ever. Baker was, in short, a complex and remarkable woman: one who deserves to be remembered for the many facets of her career and legacy, rather than for one iconic moment in the 1920s.Show Credits & NotesProduction: This episode was conceived, written, narrated, and edited by Courtney Traub. The Producer was Brendan Whalen, who also contributed additional research and script editing.Audio Editing: Additional editing and sound design was by Engin Hassan of Edit Fade Warp.Artwork: MateeyaTranslations: All original French quotes translated by Courtney Traub unless specified.Support the ShowIf you enjoyed this episode, please follow the podcast, and share it as widely as you can. You can really help the French Culture Podcast grow and thrive by:Buying us a coffee (give whatever you can)-- via Ko-FiBecoming a "Donor Subscriber" on Substack for unlimited access to our archive of Paris and France-related news, travel tips, essays, and personalized travel advice, plus access to bonus episodes and early releases from this podcast.
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