Our Story

Valhalla Media Company is a dynamic new venture specializing in Viking and Saga history. Our team has a proven track record in creating immersive projects, from cutting-edge VR experiences and international expeditions to lavish, large-scale book productions and smaller, intimate publishing runs. Each project reflects our deep commitment to making history accessible while honoring its rich legacy.  The company is based in Chicago, IL, but traces its roots to a historic place in the country of Norway.

Baard Titlestad (Left) (CEO, Chair, VMC) and his father, Professor Torgrim Titlestad with Iceland’s president Gudni Th. Johannesson.

The scenic Hafrsfjord, where Harald Fairhair unified Norway in a legendary battle in the year 872.
[Photo: Toren Reksnis]

It began in 1995 by a small fjord in the South-Western part of Norway. The name of the Fjord is Hafrsfjord, and it was there, in ca. 872, that the Viking King Harald Fairhair unified Norway into one Kingdom in a battle that must have been a dramatic and cataclysmic event, as it is mentioned by nearly all surviving saga accounts. 

It was here in this historic location that historian Torgrim Titlestad and his business partner and playwright Randi Wedvich started a small publishing company to publish books that were not picked up by the mainstream publishers, but books nonetheless, which told an important story about one of the most iconic eras of human history: The Viking Age. 

Professor Torgrim Titlestad and Baard Titlestad with the (former) President of Iceland,
Gudni Th. Johannesson, Reykjavik, Iceland.

I think there’s a need for a company that is part production house, part boutique, small scale publisher and that can involve itself in larger projects which combines commercial enterprise and the idea that the roots of our current human story should be preserved for posterity.
— Baard Titlestad, founder

After spending several years living in the United States, Valhalla Media Company founder Baard Titlestad had grown a deep fondness of America as a place to combine and amplify the unique cultural nuances of its people originating from all over the world, and felt especially close to the Nordic-American communities. Having worked for decades in his family company, Saga House in Norway, he decided to start a US based company serving a similar purpose with co-founders John Bednarski and Michael Schneider, of Swedish-Polish and German descent respectively.

Norway and the United States share deep historical and cultural ties, rooted in significant waves of Norwegian immigration to the U.S. during the 19th and early 20th centuries. Norwegian immigrants played a key role in settling the American Midwest, establishing strong communities that maintained their cultural heritage while contributing to U.S. society. These ties have persisted through shared democratic values, strong diplomatic relations, and military cooperation, including in NATO. Cultural exchanges, such as the celebration of Norwegian holidays and festivals in U.S. states like Minnesota and North Dakota, further reinforce these bonds, highlighting the enduring connections between the two nations.

Many prominent Americans of Norwegian descent have served in high public offices, reflecting these enduring ties. Walter Mondale, a U.S. Vice President under Jimmy Carter, was one of the most prominent figures of Norwegian heritage in American politics. Deb Haaland, the first Native American to serve as Secretary of the Interior, is also of partial Norwegian descent.