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Eurovision Still The Wrong Contest For UK - Clearly Europe Hates Us

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  • Eurovision Still The Wrong Contest For UK - Clearly Europe Hates Us

    EUROVISION STILL THE WRONG CONTEST FOR UK - CLEARLY EUROPE HATES US
    By Jim Shelley

    Mirror
    http://blogs.mirror.co.uk/shelleyvision/2010/05/eurovision-still-the-wrong-con.html
    May 31 2010
    UK

    During the build-up to this year's Eurovision Song Contest, Graham
    Norton uttered words guaranteed to strike fear into any sane man's
    heart... "Azerbaijan is the hot favourite."

    Did no one think the UK - the country that gave the world The Beatles,
    punk rock and Making Your Mind Up - had a hope of beating Azerbaijan?

    No, non, niet, they didn't.

    With four hours of "semi-finals" and a three-hour final, the BBC
    was taking no chances. Someone in Britain, they judged, must give
    a monkey's.

    This year's contest had all the classic ingredients of a
    great/appalling Eurovision:

    - A Moldovan fiddler standing on a giant record player, spinning
    round at 78rpm.

    - Eastern European backing dancers performing street mime you'd see
    in Covent Gardenski.

    - Songs with exclamation marks, including Allez Ola Ole! by Frenchman
    Jessy Matador (not, I suspect, his real name).

    There were the usual angst-ridden political anthems containing gnomic
    philosophies such as Life Looks Better In Spring by Cyprus. Rather
    confusingly, it was sung by some bloke from Wales.

    Iceland's song, meanwhile, was called Je Ne Sais Quoi while Denmark's
    representative was a Sting impersonator who had sold 40 million albums
    in Russia.

    A hooded Ukrainian version of Roxy from EastEnders sang Sweet People.

    "Oh sweet people," she admonished us. "Vot haff you done? Must you
    go on killing/Just to pass the time?"

    God knows what Armenia's Apricot Stone was about, but it included a
    piccolo-player in his pyjamas carrying a vase and, you've guessed it,
    a huge apricot stone.

    The night started with Spain's answer to Leo Sayer facing a stage
    invasion by a man in a bobble hat who was taken away by security -
    either to the Norwegian equivalent of Guantanamo Bay, or forced to
    stay and watch the rest of the show as punishment.

    The most surreal sight was the hosts' trans-European dance routine,
    presumably intended to demonstrate the universal language of appalling
    music.

    The sight of 18,000 audience members waving their hands in the air
    in Oslo resembled a Norwegian Nazi rally.

    Graham Norton then promised: "In a few moments, we'll be going live
    to a flashmob in Germany." Don't!

    My favourite was by Greece. Titled Opa, its militaristic disco-Cossack
    was so catchy, you believed a small army of butch men in white jeans
    and beads could invade another country's discos chanting "O-pa!"

    The worst effort was a ladyboy version of Fernando Torres performing
    what can only be described as Serbian reggae.

    Speaking of rubbish, the UK was represented by 19-year-old
    novice/non-entity Josh Dubovie singing a song written by those
    contemporary pop masters Mike Stock and Pete Waterman called That
    Sounds Good To Me.

    But 120 million Europeans begged to differ.

    We've come in the bottom two three times in four years. It's time to
    take this tripe seriously.

    Azerbaijan invested £2million and recruited Beyonce's choreographer.

    Surely someone half decent must want to perform in front of 120
    million people?

    Simon Cowell: your country needs you. The winner was Lena, the night's
    most irksome act, a German version of Bjork (just vot ze world needs).

    Her song Satellite stormed home with 246 points - 76 clear of the
    runners-up and a mere 236 ahead of the UK, who came last with dix
    points.

    Why we screen it, I don't know. The message is clear: Everybody
    hates us.




    From: A. Papazian
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