Although I’ve never been a huge fan of the camp cheesefest
that is the Eurovision Song Contest, this year my Husband and I have decided to
have a few friends over, open a bottle of pop and a bag of crisps (well, alright then, a bottle of cava and a packet of grissini... I do have standards, you know) and watch the
whole wretched thing from start to Finnish. My money’s on Netta, the Israeli Bjork,
with her Chinese lucky cats and her electro chicken song, although I can see
Saara Aalto doing well too. With Brexit on the horizon there's no way the UK's entry, Storm, a perfectly passable song performed by SuRie, will take the top spot. A shame, as it's easily one of the best entries this year. Even without Brexit we still would not do well: our position as America's lapdog ensures that most countries will vote against us on principle. It's 21 years since we last won, and since then we've only scored in the top ten three times and taken last place three times as well.
The Eurovision Song Contest is the longest-running international
TV song competition in the world. Beginning in 1956, each participating country
submits an original song to be performed live, and then casts votes for the
other countries’ songs to determine the competition’s winning entry. One of the
most watched non-sporting events in the world, with audience figures of up to
600 million internationally, the annual show often falls victim to
tactical voting, but with both Russia and Azerbaijan out this year,
who will those countries vote for?
This time last year we took a look at some of the worst UK
entries of recent years, but in an all-embracing effort to include everyone,
ahead of this year’s Eurovision I thought I’d give you a few examples of the
worst from some of the other countries involved. By the way, you don’t have to
be European to take part, qualifying countries simply have to be members of the
European Broadcasting Union, or to have
paid a fee to the EBU to allow them to join in. It’s that mercenary.
It’s hard to select the lowlights from a sixty-two year-old
festival dedicated to the worst imaginable Europop excesses. There are so many,
from rubber-masked rock band Lordi taking the honours in 2006 with Hard Rock Hallelujah, to the ‘comedy’ of Iceland’s Sylvia Night and her abysmal Congratulations, but here are a handful
of stinkers that really stand out – for me at least.
From Lithuania comes LT United’s boastful (and factually
incorrect) We Are The Winners, easily
one of the most annoying and tuneless efforts viewers of the contest have ever
had to suffer through. Obviously LT United were not the winners, although they
did respectably well, ending in sixth place. Apparently the single went platinum
in Lithuania, although to do that it only had to sell 5,000 copies. Even though
it fell at semi-final stage, Ireland’s Dustin the Turkey (a cheaply made puppet
being wheeled across the stage in a shopping trolley) deserved to reach the
finals with Irlande Douze Pointe, a
song which understands exactly what the show is all about. And what can you say
about Montenegro’s Rambo Amadeus and Euro
Neuro? Apart from WTF, that is. Finally, seven-time winner Israel seemingly
lost the plot with the truly abysmal Ping Pong, and Sameach from the 2000 contest, a bouncy pop tune that rips off
Taffy’s 1985 hit I Love My Radio and
features a lead singer who could not carry a tune in a bucket, surrounded by a bunch
of people jumping around like drunks at a particularly chavvy wedding. It placed
twenty-second out of twenty-four entries that year, with a measly seven points.
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