Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

New Crisis For The Eurovision Song Contest

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • New Crisis For The Eurovision Song Contest

    NEW CRISIS FOR THE EUROVISION SONG CONTEST

    esctoday.com
    http://www.esctoday.com/news /read/14419
    Oct 23 2009

    Yesterday's announcement by Hungarian broadcaster MTV that the country
    will not participate at the 2010 Eurovision Song Contest in Norway is
    another sign that the Eurovision Song Contest is now facing a major
    crisis. Hungary are not the first and are unlikely to be the last
    nation to step away from the competition as national broadcasters
    suffer huge financial pressure due to the global credit crunch.

    The Eurovision Song Contest has grown to new strengths in terms of
    the number of participating countries, viewing figures and commercial
    success in recent years. It has overcome the challenges of finding
    a way to include new nations and expand its format to create a fair
    and open competition. Just months after Alexander Rybak's record
    breaking win and the biggest commercial success of a Eurovision Song
    Contest winner for more than three decades, the competition seems to
    be stumbling into a new crisis.

    After overcoming problems concerning neighbourly and diaspora voting,
    introducing juries and receiving plaudits for what has been described
    as two of the best finals in memory, the competition now faces
    a challenge of maintaining the strong position that it has found
    itself in as broadcasters struggle to find the participation fees
    and additional finances to fund delegation trips to the competition
    and national selection processes in the tough economic climate facing
    almost every European country.

    Hungary's withdrawal follows that of the Czech Republic broadcaster,
    CT, who already announced in July that due to a lack of funding and
    poor viewing figures, they will not return to the competition next
    year. Lithuania, Estonia and potentially Latvia are all said to be
    considering whether to participate due to financial issues. (Read more
    about Hungary's withdrawal here and the Czech Republic withdrawal here)

    Latvia did withdraw in 2009, only to retract its decision after
    financial restructuring and additional funding could be found.

    Although LTV have secured a cooperation agreement with Ventsplils City
    Council, the broadcaster is still lookinf dor additional sponsors to
    allow a 2010 Eurovision Song Contest bid. With national broadcasters
    receiving reduced income, they are being forced to cut programming
    expences, fees and making employee redundancies.

    Andorra are also struggling to raise the funds needed to participate.

    The principality's national broadcaster spend â~B¬ 140,000 on the
    2009 Eurovision Song Contest. The final decision will be taken by
    shareholders in the near future. (Read more about Andorra's possible
    withdrawal from the Eurovision Song Contest here).

    San Marino participated in 2008 and are desperately keen to return
    to the competition in 2010 but financial concerns seem to be a major
    stumbling point to their return. Monaco has also ruled out a return
    to the competition in 2010 and there seems little likelihood at this
    stage of either Italy or Luxembourg returning to the Eurovision family
    fold. (Read more about San Marino's withdrawal from the Eurovision
    Song Contest here).

    Armenia may decide to boycott the 2010 Eurovision Song Contest after
    concerns about Azeri broadcaster deliberately blocking the voting
    number for Armenia on screen have yet to be allayed. An EBU verdict on
    the investigation was due in Mid September, but no announcement about
    whether the claims were valid has been given. If proved to be correct,
    Azerbaijan would face either a fine or ban from the competition.

    Should one or both countries fail to participate at the Oslo
    Eurovision Song Contest in May, the number of competiting countries
    could fall back to just 34. (Read more about the expected EBU ruling
    on Azerbaijan here).

    With fewer countries entering the competition, the cost of
    participation would increase for all other countries ans the fee is
    shared out through a specially devised formula based on national GDP
    and population size. This means that countries seeking to participate
    based on previous fees may yet find themselves priced out of the
    competition.

    esctoday.com has today asked a series of questions to the EBU regarding
    the participation fee of the Eurovision Song Contest, the increasing
    costs that have put off some fans from attending the competition
    in recent years and what is being done to prevent the loss of more
    countries from taking part in the 2010 Eurovision Song Contest in Oslo.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X