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ANKARA: Eurovision's Song Remains The Same

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  • ANKARA: Eurovision's Song Remains The Same

    EUROVISION'S SONG REMAINS THE SAME

    Hurriyet
    May 18 2009
    Turkey

    ISTANBUL - Though this year's Eurovision Song Contest ended Saturday
    night, with a victory for Norway, debate over the voting patterns in
    the half-a-century-old cultural competition continues.

    Norwegian performer Alexander Rybak, 23, received the highest number
    of points from tele-voters and juries from 42 countries, setting a
    new record of 387 points. The baby-faced singer garnered the most
    points in Eurovision's 53-year history with his song "Fairytale,"
    outstripping Finland's Lordi, which set the previous record in
    2006. Turkey came in fourth, thanks to the support of Turks living
    in Europe as well as that of neighboring countries such as Azerbaijan.

    Minsk-born Rybak, who left Belarus with his musician parents when he
    was four years old, earned the maximum number of points from several of
    the former Soviet Union countries that participated in the event. In a
    press conference right after the contest ended, Rybak said his victory
    brought a mixture of happiness and sadness. According to the official
    Eurovision Web site, Rybak "explained that Belarus is known for the
    melancholy of its people, whereas the happiest people in the world live
    in Norway. For him, the mix of both was a key for success." Asked about
    a televised Norwegian talent show that he lost in 2006, Rybak said he
    "wasn't among the best" on that show, but that he was "one of the
    best singers" in Eurovision and won because he "had a story to tell."

    The second-place finisher, Iceland's Yohanna, garnered 218 points for
    the song "Is It True?" Aysel & Arash from Azerbaijan came in was third
    with 207 points; their song, "Always," accompanied a folksy melody with
    an acrobatic dance routine and two blonde female backup singers. Local
    media in Azerbaijan welcomed the good news yesterday, as finishing
    third was a first-of-its-kind success the country's Eurovision history.

    Turkish representative Hadise performed her song "Dum Tek Tek" at this
    year's event, which was held at Moscow's Olimpisky Indoor Arena. She
    took fourth place with 177 points. "I represented my country very
    well," Hadise said after the competition.

    Despite the change in the voting system this year, the essential
    routine in the song contest did not change, as politics played a role
    in the voting once again.

    Over the past decades, six different systems have been used to pick
    the winner of the Eurovision Song Contest. Tele-voting was introduced
    in the late 1990s in response to accusations that the juries were
    making their selections based on political considerations, but the
    new system, which aimed to give power to the people, ended up favoring
    former Yugoslavian and Soviet Union countries.

    To try and tackle the issue of political votes and reciprocal ones from
    neighboring countries, the organizers at the European Broadcasting
    Union switched to yet another new system, one that attempts to give
    equal weight to both the juries' and the people's votes.

    "After all songs have been performed, viewers in all 42 participating
    countries can vote by making a phone call and/or sending an SMS
    for their favorite song. Professional juries in all 42 countries
    vote as well," read an explanation on the Web site for this year's
    contest. "The tele-voting results and the jury results are then merged
    for each country. Each result counts for 50 percent." Viewers are
    allowed to vote up to 20 times, but, as always, cannot cast a vote
    for his or her own country.

    Staying loyal to the unwritten "neighbor voting" rules, Turkey
    and Azerbaijan exchanged their 12 points, showing that Azerbaijan's
    resentment toward Turkey over its rapprochement policy with archrival
    Armenia was not reflected in its voting pattern. Although Azerbaijan
    did not give any votes to Armenia, it received one vote from Armenia,
    which was seen as a gesture. Armenia gave 12 points to Russia, and,
    for the first time, four points to Turkey, likely a direct result of
    the normalization talks that have been recently initiated between the
    two countries. Turkey closed its border with Armenia in solidarity
    with Azerbaijan over the 20 percent of its territory that is under
    Armenian occupation.

    12 points from France

    Turkey also received 12 points from its Balkan neighbor, Macedonia,
    with which it enjoys friendly relations, and Hadise likewise got 12
    points from Belgium, the country where she was born. The 12 points that
    came from the United Kingdom, Switzerland and France are attributed to
    both the sizable Turkish communities in each country and to the juries'
    enjoyment of the song. French President Nicolas Sarkozy's objection to
    Turkish entry into European Union, under the argument that Turkey does
    not belong to Europe, seems not to have affected the jury in Paris.

    Croatia, Montenegro and Serbia each gave 12 votes to Bosnia and
    Herzegovina, which came in ninth. Greece gave its maximum points to
    the United Kingdom and received maximum points from Albania, Bulgaria
    and Cyprus.

    Britain had been billed as a favorite in the contest, but its
    singer, Jade, only managed fifth place, despite renown composer
    Andrew Lloyd Webber writing her song, the Associated Press reported
    yesterday. Greece, another favorite, pinned its hopes on an elaborately
    choreographed stage performance involving a giant flashing treadmill.

    In its performance, Israel appealed for peace and harmony with
    "There Must Be Another Way," sung in Arabic, Hebrew and English by
    the Arab-Jewish duo Noa and Mira. Taking the contest seriously this
    year did not result in a pleasing outcome for France, whose famous
    singer Patricia Kaas could only garner 107 points, coming in seventh.

    In a Eurovision first, crewmembers on the International Space Station
    gave the command to start telephone voting in a video message from the
    orbiting science laboratory. Moscow reportedly spent $42 million on the
    five-day event, making it the most expensive competition in Eurovision
    history, Reuters reported. As the winner, Norway will host the next
    Eurovision Song Contest in 2010. Russia's efforts to capitalize on the
    prestigious event to showcase the nation's hospitality and growing role
    in modern society were undermined several hours before the start of the
    competition when riot police attacked gay-pride rallies in the capital.

    Police hauled away some 40 demonstrators, including British activist
    Peter Tatchell and American Andy Thayer of Chicago, the co-founder
    of the Gay Liberation Network, who had defied Moscow authorities and
    tried to stage a banned demonstration.

    Eurovision winner Rybak appeared to throw his support behind the
    protesters when he said at the news conference, "Why did they [the
    Moscow police] spend all their energy stopping gays in Moscow when
    the biggest gay parade was here tonight?
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