User:Jochem van Hees/Drafts/Wikipedia:WikiProject Eurovision/Manual of Style

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This page is a draft proposal for a manual of style for WikiProject Eurovision, that would replace the current Formatting & Guidance page. It exists in addition to Wikipedia's manuals of style on music and television.

These guidelines are based on past consensus and the status quo on articles and talk pages throughout the project. Relevant discussions are referenced where applicable.

General

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Since almost all articles about Eurovision are centered around Europe, British English and DMY dates should be consistently used. Furthermore, Citation Style 1 should be used for citing sources. For a list of reliable sources useful for Eurovision articles, see Wikipedia:WikiProject Eurovision/Sources.

For marking divisions within a sentence, spaced en dashes ( – ) should be used, rather than em dashes or spaced hyphens. Although the character itself can be inserted into the wikitext, using the {{Spaced en dash}} template (or {{snd}} for short) is preferred.

Words and phrases

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Wikipedia's wording sometimes differs from what is used in official sources (such as the European Broadcasting Union).

Although the word "Eurovision" may be used in article text to refer either to the Eurovision Song Contest or to the Eurovision network, it should be disambiguated in titles of articles and categories (for example, Category:Eurovision Song Contest winners rather than Category:Eurovision winners).[3][4]

Song titles

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In general, Wikipedia's Manual of Style guidelines at Titles § Capital letters and Text formatting § Names and titles should be followed. This means that:

  • Song titles are always given in double quotation marks.
  • English-language song titles use title case (e.g. "Born to Sing").[5]
  • Song titles in other languages generally retain the casing, which is often sentence case (e.g. "Tout l'univers").
  • The "English translation" of a foreign-language song title is not (or is only very rarely) a title in its own right, so the original casing is still retained (e.g. "Autant d'amoureux que d'étoiles" (English: "As many lovers as stars")).[6]
  • Foreign-language titles should be wrapped in the {{lang}} template.

In tables, English translations of songs should not be added, although they should be added in prose.[7]

TBD vs TBA

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The abbreviations "TBD" and "TBA" may be used based on their specific and individual purposes. Below are details on the definitions for each of the abbreviations, along with the usage below to decide when each should be used.[8]

  • To be announced (TBA): For anything that has already been determined but has yet to be announced. Example: broadcaster opts for an internal selection. We would be waiting for such information "to be announced".
  • To be confirmed (TBC): For anything that suggests a decision has been made, but is awaiting final (formal) confirmation from authorities and/or organizers.
  • To be determined (TBD): For anything that has to be determined by a voting method. Example: Melodifestivalen relies on a public vote "to determine" the singer and song.
Abbreviation Usage Template code
TBA Internal selections. {{TBA|align=left}}
TBC When something has been announced, but has yet to be officially confirmed. {{TBA|TBC|align=left}}
TBD National pre-selections. {{TBA|TBD|align=left}}

Categorisation

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All Eurovision-related articles are in appropriate subcategories of Category:Arts competitions, with most being in Category:Eurovision events.

Articles and categories about Eurovision spin-off shows should not be in Category:Eurovision Song Contest or its subcategories, since they are separate competitions. Instead, put them in their own categories, like Category:Junior Eurovision Song Contest or Category:ABU Song Festivals.

Article footers

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External links sections should generally only include a link to Eurovision.tv, and the content guideline Wikipedia:External links should be followed.[9]

Articles about contest editions

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The titles of these articles contain the name of the competition followed by the year in which it was held, such as Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2003.

Do not create these articles (or redirects from these article titles) too soon, even if there is already information about the competition.[10][11] Generally, these articles are only created after the previous edition has happened.

Section layout overview
Sections may be left out if appropriate. Sections 2 and 3 may be combined into "Format and production" if there is limited info.[12]
  • 1Location
    • 1.1Bidding phase
  • 2Production
  • 3Format
  • 4Participating countries
    • 4.1Returning artists
    • 4.2Semi-final 1
    • 4.3Semi-final 2
    • 4.4Final
  • 5Detailed voting results
    • 5.1Semi-final 1
      • 5.1.112 points
    • 5.2Semi-final 2
      • 5.2.112 points
    • 5.3Final
      • 5.3.112 points
      • 5.3.2Spokespersons
  • 6Other countries
    • 6.1Active EBU members
    • 6.2Associate EBU members
    • 6.3Non-EBU members
  • 7Broadcasts
  • 8Incidents (with a subsection per incident)
  • 9Other awards (with a subsection per award)
  • 10Official album
    • 9.1Charts
  • 11See also
  • 12Notes
  • 13References
  • 14External links

Infobox

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These articles should use the template {{Infobox song contest}} at the top of the page, containing basic information about the competition. Keep in mind that information must only be added once it has been officially confirmed. In particular, do not add the number of participating countries, or the debuting, returning or non-returning countries, until the full list of participants is published by the organisers.[13]

The infobox can contain the logo of the event, which should be uploaded on Wikimedia Commons. However, keep in mind that logos of television broadcasts almost always are not free images, so before uploading a logo you must make sure it complies with Wikipedia's non-free content criteria. Past discussions have often led to the deletion of Eurovision logos.[14][15]

The maps of participating countries are named in the same format as File:ESC 1956 Map.svg, so that the infobox automatically detects and displays it. These maps should be in SVG format.[16]

Lead section

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The lead paragraph mentions the following information about the contest:

  • Which edition it is (e.g. 50th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest);[17]
  • In which city and country it was held;
  • In short, the reason why it was held there (often referring to the country's victory at the previous contest);[18]
  • The organising broadcasters;
  • The date(s) of the final(s);
  • The winning country, act and performer.

An example of how the lead may be formatted (after the event) can be seen at the template articles for the Eurovision Song Contest and the Junior Eurovision Song Contest. No citations need to be included in the lead, since all of this info is already cited in the body of the article.

Other information that may be included in the lead section, but not always in the lead paragraph, includes:

  • The number of participating countries, and any debuting, returning or non-returning countries (again, only if the full list of participants has been confirmed);
  • More information about the winner, such as songwriters and number of points received;
  • Other countries that scored well in the competition;
  • A summary of ratings and viewing figures;
  • In rare cases, incidents that had a large impact on the event.

Location

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This section mentions in which city the contest was (or will be) held, and how it was chosen. Other information about the host city should not be mentioned, unless it is relevant to the contest. The section also includes a map of the host country, showing the location of the selected host city with a red dot, and (if applicable) the locations of other bidding cities with blue dots and the cities that expressed interest but ultimately did not bid with yellow dots.[19] Political maps are preferred over relief maps, to make the labels more readable.[20]

Do not include capacity figures for bidding venues that did not end up hosting the contest.[21]

Participating countries

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This section should only be titled "Participating countries" after the official list of participating countries is announced. Until then, it should be titled "Provisional list of participating countries".

If the competition has semi-finals, another SVG map could be added to the article highlighting in which semi-final each country competes (similar to File:ESC 2021 Semi-Finals.svg).

Returning artists should be mentioned in prose format.[22] This may include JESC-ESC crossover participants, or backing singers who become main artists or vice versa.

The countries that took part in the final should be listed in a table, with some details about the entries. If the competition has semi-finals, each semi-final should have a participants table as well. The rows for qualified entries should be styled with style="font-weight: bold; background: navajowhite;". For the final, only decorate the winning entry with style="font-weight: bold; background: gold;". Do not display medals in the table.[23]

The participants table(s) should contain the following columns (in order): "R/O", "Country", "Artist", "Song", "Language(s)", and after the final was held, "Points" and "Place".[24] When there is a separate televote and jury result, like in ESC since 2016, the "Points" column can be split up into "Jury", "Public" and "Total".[25] The table should not contain columns for genre, nature or rhythm,[26] or an English translation of the song title.[7] It should be sortable (by giving it the sortable class),[27] although by default the entries should be listed in the order at which they appeared in the show (the running order).[28][29] In the languages column, English is the only language that does not need to be wikilinked.[30][31]

If the list of participating countries is provisional, references to reliable sources should be given for every participant that explicitly confirms the country's participation. Otherwise, the country should not (yet) be included in the list. A broadcaster holding a national selection show does not confirm its participation.[32][33]

Detailed voting results

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This section contains tables for each show of the competition, showing how every country awared its points. They should be hidden by default.[34] Colours may be used to differentiate between different voting systems.[35] For editions that had each country award separate sets of televote and jury vote points, there should be separate tables for televote and jury vote results. Each table should contain total columns for both votes, as well as the overall total.[36]

In Eurovision, the points awarded by countries are announced by their spokespersons. Their names should be listed in a numbered list, in the order they appeared during the show.[37][38] The entry for each spokesperson looks something like this:

# {{Esc|Country name}}{{snd}}[[Name of spokesperson]]<ref>Reliable source</ref>

Do not add explanatory notes about who the spokespeople are; relevant information should be on the person's own article.[37][39] If the subject does not have an article in English, then interlanguage links may be added instead, or the wikilink may simply be omitted.

Other countries

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This section lists countries that are not in the (provisional) list of participants, but did either:

  • make an attempt to participate, or
  • participate in the previous edition and has a reason for not returning.

For the upcoming edition, also list the names of the countries that confirmed non-particpation without further information, until the full participants list is announced.[40]

For the Eurovision Song Contest, this section is always formatted in a specific way. At the top of the section, there should be a {{Further}} hatnote linking to List of countries in the Eurovision Song Contest. It should be introduced by explaining that eligibility for participation requires EBU membership. The list of countries itself is divided into subsections by membership status (so one section called "Active EBU members", another called "Associate EBU members", etc.).[41] Each country's list item looks something like this:

* {{Esc|Country name}}{{snd}}Info on the country's non-participation.<ref>Reliable source</ref>

Broadcasts

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The article should may include a table showing which broadcasters aired the competition and who the commentators were.[42] Do not include spokespersons in this section.[37] Per-country viewing figures are generally better placed on the individual country's articles.[43]

Incidents

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The article may have a section dedicated to specific incidents, but only if those incidents are directly relevant to the contest, and if the information is well-sourced.[44] In compliance with Wikipedia:Criticism, this section should not contain only negative material.

Other awards

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Unlike the detailed voting results section, this section contains notable results that aren't part of the contest, such as awards given by fans. For the Eurovision Song Contest, these awards include the Marcel Bezençon Awards, OGAE's voting, and the Barbara Dex Award. Each award gets their own subsection, but keep it short. Each subsection should contain a {{Further}} hatnote linking to the main page about the award, one paragraph to introduce the award and how the results are decided, and (if applicable) a table summarising the results, listing not more than the top five.[45] The prose for the introductory paragraph can be adapted from the template article.

Articles about countries in competitions

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These articles contain an overview of the country's participation. Countries that have not participated in the competition may, in rare cases, still have an article, but only if there is significant verifyable information about a likely future debut.[46][47][48] However, these articles are often merged into broader articles such as List of countries in the Eurovision Song Contest.

If a country has participated in the competition before as part of another country (such as Serbia in the Eurovision Song Contest or Wales in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest), then the two are still considered separate countries, and the one article should not detail on the participation of the other.[49][50] Sometimes however, two technically different countries are considered the same in Eurovision, such as Germany and West Germany.[51][52][53]

For statistics about the country's highest placement, any result in the final is considered to be higher than a semi-final result, and the total number of participating countries is not taken into consideration.[b] Do not call something the "worst" or "best" result, since there is no clear definition for it.[54][55][56]

Section layout overview
Sections may be adapted based on the article's needs.
  • 1History
  • 2Participation overview
  • 3Awards (with a subsection per award)
  • 4Related involvement (commentators, spokespersons, conductors, musical directors, etc.)
  • 5See also
  • 6Notes
  • 7References
  • 8External links

Participation overview

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If the country has participated multiple times, the article should contain a table listing all the past participations of the country, with their associated acts and the results at the competition. Also add some introductory prose above the table.[57]

What columns are present in the table varies depending on the competition, but generally there is at least a "Year" column, and an "Entrant" column.[58][59] The years should be the row headers, but do not make the years bold,[60] and do not include rows for years in which the country did not participate.[61] If the country sent multiple entries to a competition, such as in the Eurovision Song Contest 1956, use one row for each, and rowspan may be used for rows with the same year. Do not group identical names from different contests.[62][c]

Song contests have additional "Song" and "Language" columns, and contests for musicians may have an "Instrument" column. The results of the country at the competition should also be mentioned, at least with a "Place" column, and if applicable, "Points". If the contest has multiple rounds, the place could be in a "Final" and "Semi" column (both with their own points column). If the country did not participate in the (semi-)final for a given year, the {{N/A}} template should be used, with in short the reason why. In the language column, like with the table in the contest edition article, English is the only language that does not need to be wikilinked.

The following key should be used for the table.[63][64][65] If a legend colour is not used in the table, it should also not be included in the legend. The affected table rows in the contestants table should be entirely in the appropriate background colour, except for the year column which should stay in grey, being row headers.[66]

Table key
1 Winner
2 Second place
3 Third place
Last place
X Entry selected but did not compete

Other sections

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If applicable, "Hostings" and "Awards" sections can be added, although they should only be summaries and link to the main articles.[67] People who were involved in the country's particpation, such as commentators and spokespersons, or musical directors and conductors,[68] may have their own tables below the contestants table. If both exist, they should be grouped under "Related involvement".

These articles should generally not include image galleries of all past representatives of the country; instead, display stacked images of a few noteworthy contestants.[69][70]

These articles should not contain tables listing how many points this country this country awarded or received historically. These kinds of voting tables should be on participation-specific pages only.[71][72][73][74][75][76] Furthermore, do not include sections dedicated to trivia or records, although these records may still be mentioned in the history section.[77][78]

Lastly, the "See also" section may include the country's participation in similar contests.[79]

Articles about individual participations

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The titles of these articles are formatted as "(Country) in the (Contest) (year)"; for example, Switzerland in the Eurovision Song Contest 1956. The main purpose of these articles are to detail on the selection of the country's representative for the competition, and the country's results at the competition.[80] Since the titles of these articles are descriptive, they should not have a short description.

If a country has only participated in the competition only once, then that participation should be merged with the main article about the country's participation instead, similar to Morocco in the Eurovision Song Contest.[81]

The lead sentence should include a link to the article about the country.[82]

Section layout overview
The names of the sections should be made more specific where appropriate. For example, "Before event" could become "Before Eurovision", or "National final" could become "Melodifestivalen". Sections may also be left out if they don't apply to this participation.
  • 1Background
  • 2Before event
  • 3At event
    • 3.1Semi-final
    • 3.2Final
    • 3.3Awards
    • 3.4Voting
      • 3.4.1Points awarded to country
      • 3.4.2Points awarded by country
  • 4After event
  • 5See also
  • 6Notes
  • 7References
  • 8External links

Infobox

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These articles should use {{Infobox song contest national year}}. The selection date does not refer to when the song was released, but selected (so the date of the national final).[83]

National selection shows

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Many participating broadcasters organise televised national selections (or "national finals") for international music competitions, where either the performer(s), the act, or both are selected. The article about the country's participation should include details about the format, the competing entries and the final results of this show, in a section titled "National final" (or the name of the national final, e.g. "Eurovision: You Decide").[84] A main article for the national final may already exist, such as Melodifestivalen 2015, in which case a {{Main article}} link should be added, and the national final should only be summarised on the participation article.

Voting

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The article may contain a table that lists the points that were awared to this country, and one that lists the points that this country awarded to others. If the country competed or voted in both a semi-final and the final, then there should be one table for each. This means that in total there could be four voting tables, which would look something similar to the tables at Ukraine in the Eurovision Song Contest 2016 § Voting.[71] The tables should not be initially collapsed.[85]

Detailed voting results tables should be collapsible.[85] Do not include them if the data has not (yet) been released.[86]

In all voting tables, when a country's name is linked, it should link to the country's participation in the same edition of the contest (for example, link to San Marino in the Eurovision Song Contest 2021, not San Marino in the Eurovision Song Contest or San Marino).[87]

Articles about songs and artists

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These articles are already covered by other style guidelines and policies, including:

This section only covers Eurovision-related content on these pages.

Note that participating in a Eurovision event is not a guarantee for notability.[88] Non-notable songs or artists may be covered in their own subsections of the appropriate participation articles instead, such as in Kazakhstan in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2020 § Artist and song information. Links to the artist or song should link to those sections instead.[89][90]

Articles about songs should use {{Infobox song}}, with {{Infobox song contest entry}} embedded. The two infoboxes have some identical parameters, such as |lyricist=; in those cases, only include them in the song infobox.[91] If the song's composers and lyricists are the same, only use the "Songwriter(s)" field.[92]

These articles may contain awards and achievements boxes or succession boxes at the bottom of the page.[93]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Of course, do use a capital letter if the whole title of the competition is mentioned, such as in Eurovision Song Contest. But the word should not be capitalised in the 2012 Contest or the rules of the Contest.
  2. ^ For example, if a country achieved 1st place in a semi-final, but in the final it has placed 11th out of 12 and also 12th out of 26, then the 11th place is considered the highest placement.
  3. ^ Except for cells that contain {{N/A}}; those often span multiple contests.

References

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  1. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 21 § Grand final vs final
  2. ^ Talk:Eurovision Song Contest/Archive 2 § Capital C for Contest
  3. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 5 § Re-naming the Eurovision portal and re-organising categories on Wikipedia and Commons
  4. ^ Wikipedia:Categories for discussion/Log/2008 March 10 § Eurovision Song Contest
  5. ^ Talk:Eurovision Song Contest/Archive 2 § Capitalization
  6. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 2 § Format of song titles
  7. ^ a b Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 17
  8. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 15 § TBD vs TBA
  9. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 8 § External links
  10. ^ Examples of articles deleted because they were created too soon:
  11. ^ Wikipedia:Redirects for discussion/Log/2015 May 29 § Future Eurovision Song Contests
  12. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision § Production (to be archived)
  13. ^ Talk:Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2020/Archive 1 § The infobox and the addition of returning / withdrawing / debuting countries
  14. ^ commons:Commons:Deletion requests/File:142151-esc2008logo-RESIZE-s925-s450-fit.jpg
  15. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 5 § Update on Eurovision logos on Commons
  16. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 2 § Eurovision maps
  17. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 9 § Primary definition of Specific contest
  18. ^ Talk:Eurovision Song Contest 2020 § Phrasing of the lead pharagraph (to be archived)
  19. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 9 § "Location" section
  20. ^ Talk:Eurovision Song Contest 2022 § Map marker colors
  21. ^ Talk:Eurovision Song Contest 2020/Archive 3 § Capacity of MECC Maastricht
  22. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 8 § Returning artists
  23. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 20 § Adding "medals" to tables
  24. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 11 § Order of the columns in the tables
  25. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision § Participating countries (to be archived)
  26. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 9 § Styles
  27. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 3 § Results tables
  28. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 1 § Running order
  29. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 1 § Country Table
  30. ^ Talk:Eurovision Song Contest 2021/Archive 1 § English language link
  31. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 24 § Links to languages in tables
  32. ^ Talk:Eurovision Song Contest 2020/Archive 1 § Denmark
  33. ^ Talk:Eurovision Song Contest 2022/Archive 1 § Estonia confirmation
  34. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 8 § Scoreboards
  35. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 15 § Proposed colouring changes to scoreboard and standardisation
  36. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision § Scoreboard tables (to be archived)
  37. ^ a b c Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 22 § Spokespersons sections
  38. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 8 § Voting and spokespersons / Spokespersons
  39. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision § Small notes for spokespersons (to be archived)
  40. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision § Other countries (to be archived)
  41. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 12 § Other countries section
  42. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 5 § What to do with commentators and spokespersons
  43. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision § Broadcasts (to be archived)
  44. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 8 § Incidents
  45. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 21 § OGAE voting
  46. ^ Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Kosovo in the Eurovision Song Contest
  47. ^ Talk:Kosovo in the Eurovision Song Contest § Merge/Delete
  48. ^ Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Libya in the Eurovision Song Contest
  49. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 2 § Former Yugoslav countries pages
  50. ^ Talk:Eurovision Song Contest/Archive 2 § Serbia
  51. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 8 § The old Germany vs number of wins debate
  52. ^ File talk:Eurovision winners map.svg § Germany and West Germany
  53. ^ Talk:Eurovision Song Contest/Archive 3 § RFC: Representation of Germany's Wins in the Map
  54. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 20 § "Worst result" field
  55. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 23 § Worst result
  56. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 23 § Change "best result" to "highest result"
  57. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 9 § Contestants
  58. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 23 § "Song" vs "Title"
  59. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 21 § Country in contest participation tables 2
  60. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 20 § Years in bold
  61. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 21 § Non-participants in country tables
  62. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 20 § Merging boxes in tables
  63. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 10 § Colour codes for last placings
  64. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 12 § Contestants section
  65. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 20 § "Country in contest" contestants table format
  66. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 23 § Row colours in the year column
  67. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 9 § Section-by-section
  68. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 21 § A case for conductors
  69. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 3 § Image galleries
  70. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 10 § Contestants
  71. ^ a b Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 7 § Do we really need to distinguish between "All-time points" and "Points since the introduction of semifinals"?
  72. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 9 § Voting history
  73. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 10 § Voting history
  74. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 12 § 12 points section
  75. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 20 § Voting history charts
  76. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 20 § Points table
  77. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 9 § Records
  78. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 10 § Records
  79. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 10 § See also
  80. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 1 § Misc
  81. ^ Talk:Germany in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest § The JESC 2020 section
  82. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 24 § Country link in "country in the contest year" articles
  83. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 20 § Selection dates
  84. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 2 § 'Melodifestivalen XXXX & Sweden in the Eurovision Song Contest XXXX
  85. ^ a b Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 13 § Voting tables in the Country by Year pages
  86. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 18 § 2016 Split Voting
  87. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 18 § Consistency
  88. ^ Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Chris Baldo
  89. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 18 § Linking to Artist and song Information
  90. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 19 § Artist and song information
  91. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 22 § Identical parameters in song infoboxes
  92. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 13 § Composer and lyricist information
  93. ^ Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive 18 § Awards and Achievements