Tag Archive | "Eurovision Song Contest"

Tags: , , , , , ,

Eurovision 2009 Moscow Final Was The Most Expensive In History

Posted on 27 February 2010 by Italo

The final show of Eurovision Song Contest in Moscow (Russia) was probably the most costly event in Russian show-biz in 2009, the total sum of money spent by Russia being debated until now. There is information that the amount exceeded $45 million, of which $33 mln (or 1 billion rubles) were given by the RF Government, $6.6 mln (or 200 mln rubles) – by the Government of Moscow city, and about $6 mln – by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU). The expenses of the First Channel, a TV-channel that broadcasted the show, are unrevealed, as well as the amounts of sponsor contracts, among which there are Raiffeisenbank, Schwarzkopf, Pepsi and Rostelecom; these expenses were never taken into account in the sum total. At the same time, there is information that the budget of the contest was $42 mln, and the share of the First Channel accounted for about one third of the sum.

Anyway, the final show of Eurovision in Moscow became an absolute record-breaker as of expenditures, being far ahead the Greeks who spent €12 mln in 2006, and the Serbians who made it with €9.3 mln. The expenditures were mainly attributed to construction of the stage, -the largest one in the history of the contest, as well as to lease of Olympiysky sport complex, advertising, transportation, and escorting of delegacies. In particular, the director general of the First Channel, Konstantin Ernst boasted that they rented all LED screens available in Western Europe. From the very beginning the organizers considered the final show of the contest as unprofitable; they just couldn’t expect to win away at least some part of the expenses ’cause a good half of the tickets to Olympiysky turned out to have been distributed for free.

The final show of Eurovision Song Contest in Moscow became an absolute record-breaker as of expenditures - exceeded $45 million

The public opinion about the expenditures was mostly negative (over 39% of 1,200 Russians polled by Online Market Intelligence responded negatively). Experts, too, tell that the organizers could make a proper final show in Moscow for as little as $10 mln. However, everybody agreed that the Moscow show had politics behind it, and was another great occasion to work at a positive image of Russia. So they spared neither expense, nor time of high-ranking persons: Vladimir Putin (the Prime Minister of Russia) visited rehearsals of the show, and Yuri Luzhkov (the mayor of Moscow city) gave a speech on the opening day. In follow-up of the final show of Eurovision Song Contest some organizers, including Konstantin Ernst, got letters of award from Dmitriy Medvedev, the President of Russia.

Comments (0)

Tags: , , ,

Lithuania Withdrawn from Eurovision 2010

Posted on 16 December 2009 by Italo

Lithuania EurovisionLithuanian broadcaster LRT (Lithuanian National Radio and Television) have announced officially on December 15th, that Lithuania has formally withdrawn from the 2010 Eurovision Song Contest.

According to Head of the LRT Rimvydas Paleckis, the decision taken was a “formal action” that was needed to be taken until December 14th, the deadline to confirm or decline participation; otherwise Lithuania would have been fined.

However, LRT is still looking for funding to return to the competition. The sum needed to continue the Eurovision preparations for Lithuania is 300.000 litas (appr. 86,890 Euro).

If Lithuania could finally mobilize enough funding, the national selection process for Eurovision 2010 in Oslo would be continued.

Sasha Son of Lithuania on Eurovision 2009 in Moscow

Comments (0)

Tags: , , ,

Montenegro Withdraws from Eurovision 2010 Song Contest

Posted on 20 November 2009 by Italo

The state television of the Montenegro republic, RTCG (Radio Televizija Crne Gore), have withdrawn from the 2010 Eurovision Song Contest in Oslo, claimed financial reasons.
The broadcaster told that the decision had been taken in order to reach financial consolidation after 3 years as independent state.

Montenegro Eurovision 2010Montenegro debuted in the ESC as an independent country in 2007. Before that, they were participating as a Yugoslavia, and then as Serbia and Montenegro with Serbia. A scandal occurred in 2006 between Serbia and Montenegro because of fake voting from the Montenegro juries. As a result, Serbia and Montenegro didn’t have an entry that year and they received a ban from the ESC for 5 years. A few months later, both Serbia and Montenegro became independent and had separated, so the punishment was suspended. In 2007, the next year, Serbia won Eurovision Song Contest.

Comments (1)

Tags: , , ,

Next Eurovision 2010 In Norway!

Posted on 17 May 2009 by Italo

With Alexander Rybak’ victory in Eurovision 2009 in Moscow, the next Eurovision Song Contest will be held in Norway.

The first two semi-finals of the 55th Eurovision Song Contest are scheduled on 18 and 20 May 2010, and the final is on 22 May 2010.

Today, 17 May, is a Day of national celebration and pride in Norway, and the country is celebrating twice.

The Prime Minister of Norway, Jens Stoltenberg, stated “It’s a great holiday”.

The crowds were coming out on the streets of Norway towns and villages all the night to celebrate their victory. Alexander Ryback is the third winner, after Bobbysocks in 1985 and Secret Garden in 1995, which brings the Eurovision Song Contest first prize to Norway.

Eurovision 2010 Norway

The decision about a place of the 2010 Eurovision Song Contest will be made by the Norvegian national TV broadcaster NRK in the near future.

Odds are it will be Telenor Arena in Oslo.

Telenor Arena Eurovision 2010 Norway

Telenor Arena is a multi-use indoor stadium located at Fornebu in the municipality of Bærum, Norway. It will be used mostly for football matches and is the new home ground of the football club Stabæk, who played at Nadderud stadion from 1961 to 2008. The stadium was opened ahead of the 2009 season in Norwegian football.

In June 2008, the telecommunications company Telenor acquired the naming rights to the stadium in a deal lasting until 2018. Prior to this, the stadium was known informally as Fornebu Arena, and while still in the concept stages as Blue Dream Arena. It is also referred to by supporters as Hangar’n (the hangar in English), as the stadium resembles a hangar and is located on the premises of the former main airport of Oslo.

The structure will be a single-tiered bowl attached to a seven-storey building on one side containing retail space, restaurants and bars for the premium-priced seats, executive boxes, and offices. As originally planned, the stadium was to have a retractable roof, but due to the high costs involved it was decided that there would instead be a fixed roof covering both the stands and the pitch. For football matches and other sporting events the total capacity will be approximately 15,600, whereas for concerts it will be up to 23,000.

The Fornebu Arena project has its origins in Stabæk’s rapid ascent from the lower divisions of Norwegian football to the top division in the first half of the 1990s. Although several improvements have been made to their current home ground Nadderud stadion since then, including the construction a new main stand in 1996, it remains severely lacking in facilities, and does not meet national requirements for hosting football matches at the highest level. After initially seeking to buy and redevelop Nadderud, which is owned by the municipality, the club started to work towards moving to a new stadium elsewhere in Bærum instead.

In 1999 the club settled on Fornebu, the site of a large urban development project. Lengthy negotiations between the club, the municipality and the area’s main developer came to an end in 2005 and the plans gained final approval on 21 June 2006. Demolition of existing structures on site began on 17 February 2007 and construction began shortly after.

The project has an estimated cost of 585 million NOK.

The first match played at the stadium was a pre-season friendly between Stabæk and IFK Göteborg on 24 January 2009, which ended in a goalless draw. This was followed by a sold-out AC/DC concert on 18 February, the first concert on the European leg of the their Black Ice World Tour. Trond Olsen of Rosenborg became the first player to score a goal at Telenor Arena as Rosenborg defeated Stabæk 1–0 in another pre-season friendly, on 27 February.

The stadium was officially opened on 8 March 2009 with a “Charity Shield”-style match between league champions Stabæk and cup champions Vålerenga, which ended in a 3–1 win for Stabæk. Daniel Nannskog scored the first ever Stabæk goal at Telenor Arena in the 19th minute of the game. The net proceeds of the match were donated to UNICEF.

(Wikipedia)

Comments (20)

Tags: , , , ,

Eurovision 2009 Final Results: Norway, Alexander Rybak Won!

Posted on 17 May 2009 by Italo

The 54th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest was held tonight in Moscow, Russia. 25 countries performed their songs, and afterwards the televoters and the juries decided to give the victory to Alexander Rybak from Norway with his own song Fairytale which is inspired by Russian and Norwegian folk music.


(Application video)

Alexander’s victory wasn’t a surprise. He was among the favorites since the Norwegian national finals. But the star boy managed to beat every possible records: he gathered 387 points altogether! This is an absolute record in the Eurovision song contest history.

Alexander Rybak - the Winner of the Eurovision 2009!

Alexander Rybak was born in Minsk, BSSR, Soviet Union (now Minsk, Belarus) on 13 May 1986. He and his parents moved to Norway, where he grew up, since the age of four. Rybak has been playing instruments since the age of five, and he now plays both violin and piano. His parents are well-known musicians. He lives in Nesodden outside of the Norwegian capital Oslo.

Rybak was awarded the highly respected Anders Jahres Culture Prize in 2004. He entered the Norway’s version of Idol reaching the semi final and in 2006 he won the talent competition Kjempesjansen with his own song Foolin’. Alexander Rybak has collaborated with artists like A-Ha’s Morten Harket and Arve Tellefsen. As of 2007, Rybak played the fiddler in Oslo Nye Teater’s production Fiddler on the Roof. For this role he won the Heddaprisen. He stars as Levi in the film Yohan directed by Grete Salomonsen, also featuring the noted model and singer Aylar Lie.

Congratulations, Alexander!

 

The complete results of the Eurovision 2009 Final are as follows:

1. Norway - 387 points
2. Iceland - 218 points
3. Azerbaijan - 207 points
4. Turkey - 177 points
5. United Kingdom - 173 points
6. Estonia - 129 points
7. Greece - 120 points
8. France - 107 points
9. Bosnia & Herzegovina - 106 points
10. Armenia - 92 points
11. Russia - 91 points
12. Ukraine - 76 points
13. Denmark - 74 points
14. Moldova - 69 points
15. Portugal - 57 points
16. Israel - 53 points
17. Albania - 48 points
18. Croatia - 45 points
19. Romania - 40 points
20. Germany - 35 points
21. Sweden - 33 points
22. Malta - 31 points
23. Lithuania - 23 points
24. Spain - 23 points
25. Finland - 22 points

Comments (19)

Tags: , , , ,

Gay Protest Broken Up in Moscow, up to 40 Detained

Posted on 16 May 2009 by Italo

By DAVID NOWAK, Associated Press, Sat May 16

MOSCOW – Riot police broke up several gay rights demonstrations in Moscow on Saturday, hauling away scores of protesters hours before the capital hosted a major international pop music competition.

No injuries were reported, but the detentions could damage Russia’s desire to be seen as a modern nation as it holds the finals of the Eurovision song contest, a cultural event televised around the world.

City officials had warned that they would not tolerate marches or rallies supporting the rights of gays and lesbians, but activists had targeted Moscow and the Eurovision contest to press their claims that Russia officially sanctions homophobia.

Moscow police spokesman Anatoly Listovetsky said 40 people were detained, but media reports said up to 80 had been seized. None of the protests in central Moscow took place near the capital’s Olimpiysky Sports Complex, where the Eurovision concert being held live Saturday night.

Police seized gay rights advocates as well as some religious and nationalist protesters who staged counter-demonstrations. They also took away gay rights activists for talking to reporters, and ripped the bra and shirt off one female protester.

Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov has drawn international criticism by describing homosexuality as “satanic” and seeking to justify official discrimination against gay people in Russia by claiming they help spread the AIDS virus. Luzhkov has banned gay pride rallies in recent years, and attempted marches by gay activists have typically ended in detentions and attacks by nationalist groups.

Among those detained Saturday were British activist Peter Tatchell and American activist Andy Thayer of Chicago, co-founder of the Gay Liberation Network.

Tatchell and most of the others were detained during a hastily organized protest near Moscow State University in southwest Moscow, where about 30 protesters shouted “Homophobia is a disgrace of this country!” and “We are demanding equal rights!”

“This shows the Russian people are not free!” Tatchell yelled as he was being dragged to a police car. He was released a short time later.

“The arrests were done in a very violent, aggressive manner,” Tatchell told The Associated Press after his release. “We believe the reaction of the Moscow police was totally unjustified.”

Tatchell said Russian gay rights leaders had appealed to Eurovision contestants to denounce the police crackdown from the stage at tonight’s competition. The live contest, which pits finalists from 24 different nations against each other, has drawn up to 100 million television viewers previously and is Europe’s most prestigious pop song competition.

“Today’s arrests go against the principles of Eurovision, which are about peace, harmony, cooperation and unity between all the peoples in Europe,” Tatchell said.

Thayer was hustled off by police as he spoke with reporters.

“If … the right to assemble is taken away from lesbian and gay people here in Russia, then other Russians have to fear for their own freedom,” Thayer said, just before police burst through a ring of journalists to take him away.

Police ripped the shirt and bra off one female protester, who identified herself as Ksenia Prilebskaya, and roughly pushed her into a police bus. Her glasses fell and she shrieked in apparent pain.

City authorities had barred Saturday’s rally, saying it was morally wrong.

“(Gay pride events) not only destroy moral foundations of our society, but also purposefully provoke disturbances that will threaten the lives and safety of Moscow residents and guests,” City Hall spokesman Sergei Tsoi was quoted by the ITAR-Tass news agency as saying Saturday.

At one rally a short walk from the Kremlin, about 50 demonstrators from nationalist and Orthodox Christian organizations denounced homosexuality. One man was detained when he alleged officials in the Kremlin were gay.

A half-dozen anti-gay rights demonstrators were also seized by police during a demonstration in Moscow’s central Pushkin Square.

Decades of official persecution of Russian gays ended in 1993 with the decriminalization of homosexuality, but opposition to gay rights remains widespread.

There are no official estimates of how many gays and lesbians live in Russia, and only a few big cities such as Moscow and St. Petersburg have gay nightclubs and gyms.

Gay activists say several gay male couples have attempted to wed since the mid-1990s, but officials rejected those efforts. Last week two homosexual women were denied their application for a marriage license.

Associated Press writer Peter Leonard contributed to this report.

Gay Protest Broken Up in Moscow on the Eurovision Final day
A Russian anti-gay activist is taken away by riot police officers in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, May 16, 2009.  (AP Photo/Mikhail Metzel)

Comments (29)

Tags: , , , ,

Photos: Moscow Police Is Getting Ready For Gay Parade Disrupt

Posted on 16 May 2009 by Italo

Photos: Moscow police is getting ready for Gay Parade disrupt on the Eurovision Final day.

Moscow Gay Parade Eurovision Moscow Gay Parade Eurovision Moscow Gay Parade Eurovision Moscow Gay Parade Eurovision

Photos by Norwegsky Lesnoy

Comments (21)

Tags: , , , , , ,

Head of Eurovision Jury Resigns

Posted on 16 May 2009 by Italo

source: esctoday.com

Russian singer and producer Philip Kirkorov has announced that he is withdrawing from the Eurovision Song Contest jury in his country, both as member and chairman. The decision follows questions about his impartiality due to his close relationship with some participants in the competition. He will continue to work for Channel One Russia as commentator of the Final of the 2009 Eurovision Song Contest, this Saturday.

Last night during the Second Eurovision Song Contest semi final winners’ press conference, a journalist asked Greek representative Sakis Rouvas if his close friendship with Kirkorov would help Greece to win votes from Russia. Rouvas responded by saying that Kirkorov was a professional and would never allow his personal feelings to influence his responsibilities.

Philip Kirkorov withdraws from the Eurovision Jury

Philip Kirkorov gave the following statement:

“I am grateful for the honor that the organizers bestowed on me, to be chosen as the president of a professional jury…This job is certainly very interesting for me, because for many years I have been involved in the Eurovision Song Contest - first as a participant, than as a producer, consultant and always as a big fan. However, I decided that I need to refrain from participating in the judging process as a member of the jury, since I’ve taken such an active role in the life of the contest and have close ties with some of the contestants, for instance with Sakis Rouvas, who I’ve been friends with for many years. All this can raise questions from the participating countries about the objectivity of the decision of the Russian jury.

“Of course my colleagues and I understand that for a professional, personal friendships don’t matter and do not play any role in the scoring of a song, but I cannot let even a slightest shadow of doubt involved with this process and have questions raised about the impartiality of a professional Russian jury and my role as chairman. That is why I took the decision to leave. This will allow me to freely express my opinion and to communicate openly with contestants from different countries, which for me as an artist and a producer means a great deal”.

Svante Stockselius, Executive Supervisor of the Eurovision Song Contest on behalf of the European Broadcasting Union, commented: “We respect the decision of Philip Kirkorov, who we know as a committed musician and dedicated supporter of the Eurovision Song Contest and its participants. He assured us that he voted independently in the first Semi-Final and also signed a declaration stating so”.

Philip Kirkorov represented Russia at the Eurovision Song Contest in 1995 and was involved with several entries ever since, including Ani Lorak’s Ukrainian entry last year that placed second. The Final of the Eurovision Song Contest will take place this Saturday, 16th of May, in Moscow, Russia. Professional juries and televoters in all participating country will each provide 50 per cent of the outcome.

Comments (2)

Tags: , , ,

Getting Ready For Eurovision 2009 Final!

Posted on 15 May 2009 by Italo

The 2009 Eurovision Song Contest Final that will take place on the 16th of May in Moscow.

See full Eurovision Final illustrated schedule here!

 

Eurovision 2009 Final

Comments (37)

Tags: , , , ,

Eurovision 2nd Semi-Final Results

Posted on 15 May 2009 by Italo

Semi-final 2 - 14th May 2009, Moscow

Albania ALBANIA: Kejsi Tola - Carry Me In Your Dreams - Qualified

Azerbaijan AZERBAIJAN: Aysel - Always - Qualified

Croatia CROATIA: Igor Cukrov - Lijepa Tena - Qualified

Cyprus CYPRUS: Christina Metaxa - Firefly - Eliminated

Denmark DENMARK: Niels Brinck - Believe Again - Qualified

Estonia ESTONIA: Urban Symphony - Rändajad - Qualified

Greece GREECE: Sakis Rouvas - This Is Our Night - Qualified

Hungary HUNGARY: Zoli Ádok - Tánclépés (Dance With Me) - Eliminated

Ireland IRELAND: Sinéad Mulvey & Black Daisy - Et Cetera - Eliminated

Latvia LATVIA: Intars Busulis - Probka - Eliminated

Lithuania LITHUANIA: Sasha Son - Love - Qualified

Moldova MOLDOVA: Nelly Ciobanu - Hora Din Moldova - Qualified

Netherlands NETHERLANDS: De Toppers - Shine - Eliminated

Norway NORWAY: Alexander Rybak - Fairytale - Qualified

Poland POLAND: Lidia Kopania - I Don’t Wanna Leave - Eliminated

Serbia SERBIA: Marko Kon & Milan Nikolić - Cipela - Eliminated

Slovakia SLOVAKIA: Kamil Mikulčík & Nela Pocisková - Leť tmou - Eliminated

Slovenia SLOVENIA: Quartissimo - Love Symphony - Eliminated

Ukraine UKRAINE: Svetlana Loboda - Be My Valentine - Qualified

Comments (41)

Advertise Here
Advertise Here

Our Friends

You Should Look

GOOGLE ADS