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  1. The Eurovision Song Contest 2023 was the 67th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest. It took place in Liverpool, United Kingdom, as Ukraine, the winner of the 2022 contest with the song "Stefania" by Kalush Orchestra, was unable to host the event due to the Russian invasion of the country.

  2. 2023 2024 2025. O Festival Eurovisão da Canção (em Inglês: Eurovision Song Contest; em Francês: Concours Eurovision de la Chanson) é uma competição internacional de canções organizada anualmente pela União Europeia de Radiodifusão (UER) (em Inglês: European Broadcasting Union (EBU), em Francês: L'Union Européenne de Radio ...

    • Overview
    • Format
    • Incidents
    • Participants
    • Withdrawing/Unknown
    • Other Countries
    • Trivia
    • References (if any)

    The Eurovision Song Contest 2023 was the 67th annual edition and was held at the M&S Bank Arena in Liverpool, United Kingdom. The 2 semifinals were held on 9 and 11 May 2023, with the grand final on 13 May 2023.

    Kalush Orchestra won for Ukraine in Turin the previous year. However, given the country's situation with Russia as well as concerns about safety, security and the intense production process, the EBU announced in a statement on 17 June 2022 that it would be impossible for the 2023 contest to be held in Ukraine.

    After negotiations with the BBC as runner-up, it was announced by the EBU on 25 July 2022 that the United Kingdom would take charge of hosting the event on Ukraine's behalf. It is the 9th time that the United Kingdom hosted the contest (5th by deferral from the winning country), and the first time since 1980 that another country had to step in because the previous year's winner was unable to do so in some capacity. Ukrainian broadcaster Suspilne co-operated with the BBC in developing elements of Ukrainian culture for the event. Additionally, as defending champion Ukraine was given automatic qualification for the final along with the Big Five.

    37 countries participated, tying 2014 for the lowest number of participating countries in recent years. Bulgaria, Montenegro and North Macedonia all withdrew. As of this contest, Czech Republic now competes under the name of "Czechia".

    Croatia qualified from the semifinals for the first time since 2017, while Austria qualified for the first time since 2018. The Netherlands failed to qualify for only the second time since its 2013 revival.

    Sweden was the winner with Tattoo by Loreen. With this victory, Sweden now ties Ireland for most wins with 7, with Loreen becoming the second artist to win the contest twice, as well as the first female artist to do so. Peter Bostrom and Thomas G:son also joined the club of writers who have composed 2 winning songs. Finland finished in 2nd place (their best result since their win in 2006) with Israel finishing 3rd (their best result since their win in 2018). Italy and Norway rounded out the top 5.

    Pre-Recorded Backing Tracks

    For the third year in a row, the EBU allowed pre-recorded backing tracks to be used by delegations. All lead and featured (classified in the rules as "lead dubs") vocals would continue to be required to be performed live, however playback (lip-syncing) was prohibited. Delegations would be able to use live backing vocals on or off stage if they so desired.

    Voting

    A change in the voting format was announced for the 2023 contest on 22 November 2022, likely as a result of the fallout from the second semifinal jury voting scandal the year before. The 50:50 split vote between juries and televote would remain for the final, however the semifinal qualifiers would be decided by televote only. In the event that a country's televote fails during the semifinals, juries would still be used as a backup. Additionally, viewers in non-participating countries would also be able to vote via a secure online platform (esc.vote) in all 3 shows which would be aggregated and make up a new set of televotes classified as "Rest of the World". This vote would count as one extra country. Australia and Israel also voted via this platform.

    Presenters

    The presenters were revealed on 22 February 2022. It consisted of TV presenter and Britain's Got Talent judge Alesha Dixon, Ted Lasso actress Hannah Waddingham, and Ukrainian singer Julia Sanina (lead singer of the band The Hardkiss). Joining the trio for the Grand Final was United Kingdom commentator Graham Norton, who presented the voting results alongside Waddingham. 2017 co-presenter and longtime Ukrainian commentator Timur Miroshnychenko hosted the Opening Ceremony alongside BBC Sports comentator and Olympic Champion in field hockey Sam Quek. Miroshnychenko was also the one of the bridges between the United Kingdom and Ukraine as a special correspondent during all three shows. All shows in the United Kingdom aired on BBC One featuring commentary by Scott Mills and Rylan for the semifinals. Mel Giedroyc joined Graham for the final. On BBC Radio 2, Paddy O'Connell handled commentary for the semifinals, with Scott and Rylan covering the final. Melanie Chisholm (aka Mel C) from the Spice Girls, who is from the Liverpool area, introduced the presenters for all three live shows.

    Failed attempt at new qualifier format

    A new format to reveal the qualifiers was trialed during the first dress rehearsal for the first semi-final. In this format, all the artists would be standing on stage together in a situation similar to what happens on several reality shows such as X Factor, The Voice or Idols. When in their places,the 5 first qualifiers would be announced, then following interviews with Alesha, 4 more would be announced followed by a split-screen to reveal the final qualifier, with the eliminated acts exiting the stage. Following critical concerns from fans and a uncesstest run during the rehearsal, the EBU released a statement that it would scrap this results format and revert back to the normal format where each qualifying country celebrates with their team in the green room.

    Conspiracy theories regarding Sweden

    After her act was over, and she was filmed offstage, Loreen produced very odd behavior that was commented on. This was also seen in her interview just before the final votes were in. There were also rumors about fixing, due to the fact that 2024 is the 50th anniversary of ABBA in Eurovision, and as a Swedish band, it would be ideal to be held in Sweden. Others have argued that overwhelming jury bias contributed to Loreen's victory. Some digital media outlets have said that she gave a less than perfect performance in the jury final, yet she still received 15 sets of 12-point scores with a total jury score of almost double of that of her nearest rival (Noa Kirel) while not receiving a single top score from the televote.

    The semi-final allocation draw was held on 31 January 2023 at St. George's Hall, and hosted by AJ Odudu and Rylan Clark-Neal. The insignia handover ceremony took place before the draw begins, officially beginning the countdown to the contest.

    The pots were as follows, calculated by the EBU's voting providers Digame and based on voting patterns over the past 19 years:

    •Andorra - RTVA confirmed on 27 May 2022 that Andorra would not return for 2023.

    •Belarus - BTRC is currently suspended by the EBU following their disqualification from the 2021 contest.

    •Bosnia and Herzegovina - BHRT confirmed on 14 October 2022 that Bosnia and Herzegovina would not return for 2023 due to ongoing financial problems. It did not air the 2023 contest.

    •Bulgaria - BNT withdrew on 14 October 2022 citing financial issues and lack of interest in the contest.

    •Kazakhstan - Khabar Agency was not given an invitation to participate, therefore Kazakhstan did not debut in 2023. It did not air the contest on TV.

    •Kosovo - RTK is currently ineligible to participate in Eurovision. The broadcaster had aimed to apply for EBU membership by the end of 2022, therefore the earliest Kosovo could debut if membership is approved is 2024. RTK aired all three shows of the 2023 contest.

    •After Omni Television lost the Canadian broadcast rights to Eurovision in 2022, the official YouTube channel of the contest allowed fans in Canada to watch the live streams of all three shows without commentary.

    •Canal 13 aired the grand final in Chile, marking the contest's return to the Chilean airwaves since its last airing in 1970.

    •KVF aired all three shows in the Faroe Islands using DR's commentary.

    •A special team provided additional commentary on BBC Radio Merseyside consisting of Claire Sweeney and "The Voice of Eurovision" talent search winner Paul Quinn.

    •This contest marked the first time...

    •none of the competing songs included a key change, a defining gimmick of contest entries.

    •all three live shows aired in the United Kingdom on BBC One (the semifinals usually air on BBC Three). The semifinal allocation draw aired live on BBC Two.

    •Iceland participated in a contest hosted by the United Kingdom, as they were relegated in 1998 - the last time the UK hosted the event.

    •all participating ex-Yugoslav nations qualified since the introduction of the semifinal.

    •Serbia and Croatia both qualified after performing in the same semifinal.

    1.https://eurovision.tv/mediacentre/release/ebu-statement-2023-eurovision-hosting

    2.https://eurovision.tv/mediacentre/release/ebu-statement-on-hosting-of-the-2023-eurovision

  3. 9 de mai. de 2023 · Liverpool 2023. Overview Participants First Semi-Final Second Semi-Final Grand Final. Details of the event. The 67th Eurovision Song Contest took place in in Liverpool on the banks of the River Mersey, where a crowd of thousands witnessed Loreen become the first woman to lift the trophy twice, having secured victory with her song 'Tattoo'.

  4. 16 de mar. de 2023 · A web page that lists all the participants and songs of the 67th Eurovision Song Contest in Liverpool, United Kingdom. It also provides links to the official 2023 roundup video, the app, the newsletter, and the podcast.