User:NotGuyFieri/sandbox Eurovision2024Fix

Eurovision Song Contest 2024
United by Music
Dates
Semi-final 17 May 2024
Semi-final 29 May 2024
Final11 May 2024
Host
VenueMalmö Arena
Malmö, Sweden
Presenter(s)
Directed by
  • Robin Hofwander
  • Daniel Jelinek
  • Fredrik Bäcklund
Executive supervisorMartin Österdahl
Executive producer
  • Ebba Adielsson
  • Christel Tholse Willers
Host broadcasterSveriges Television (SVT)
Participants
Number of entries37
Number of finalists25[a]
Debuting countriesNone
Returning countries Luxembourg
Disqualified countries Netherlands
Non-returning countries Romania
  • A coloured map of the countries of EuropePortugal in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024San Marino in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024France in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024United Kingdom in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Ireland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Iceland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Belgium in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Netherlands in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Switzerland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Germany in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Malta in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Italy in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Norway in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Sweden in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Finland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Estonia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Latvia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Lithuania in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Slovakia in the Eurovision Song ContestAustria in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Slovenia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Hungary in the Eurovision Song ContestCroatia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Eurovision Song ContestMontenegro in the Eurovision Song ContestSerbia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Albania in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024North Macedonia in the Eurovision Song ContestGreece in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Bulgaria in the Eurovision Song ContestRomania in the Eurovision Song ContestMoldova in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Ukraine in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Belarus in the Eurovision Song ContestAustralia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Russia in the Eurovision Song ContestGeorgia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Azerbaijan in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Turkey in the Eurovision Song ContestCyprus in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Israel in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Armenia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Morocco in the Eurovision Song ContestLiechtenstein in the Eurovision Song ContestAndorra in the Eurovision Song ContestMonaco in the Eurovision Song ContestPoland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Czech Republic in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Luxembourg in the Eurovision Song Contest 2024Lebanon in the Eurovision Song ContestTunisia in the Eurovision Song Contest
         Finalist countries     Country that qualified from the semi-finals, but was disqualified prior to the final     Countries eliminated in the semi-finals     Countries that participated in the past but not in 2024
Vote
Voting systemEach country awards one set in the semi-finals, and two sets in the final, of 12, 10, 8–1 points to ten songs.
In all three shows, online votes from viewers in non-participating countries are aggregated and awarded as one set of points.
Winning song Croatia
"Rim Tim Tagi Dim"
2023 ← Eurovision Song Contest → 2025

The Eurovision Song Contest 2024 was the 68th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest. It took place in Malmö, Sweden, following the country's victory at the 2023 contest with the song "Tattoo" by Loreen. Organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and host broadcaster Sveriges Television (SVT), the contest was held at the Malmö Arena, and consisted of two semi-finals, on 7 and 9 May, and a final on 11 May 2024. The three live shows were presented by Petra Mede and Malin Åkerman, with Mede having previously taken on the role in 2013 and 2016.

Thirty-seven countries participated in the contest, the same number as in 2023. Romania opted not to participate, and Luxembourg competed for the first time since 1993. The Netherlands was disqualified from the contest between the second semi-final and the final, but the country retained its right to vote. The inclusion of Israel among the participants in the context of the Israel–Hamas war was met with controversy, and additional security measures were put in place for the event.

The winner was Switzerland with the song "The Code", performed by the Swiss singer Nemo and written by them with Benjamin Alasu, Lasse Midtsian Nymann, and Linda Dale. Switzerland won the combined vote and jury vote, and placed fifth in the televote. Croatia won the televote and finished in second place, its best result to date as an independent country. Ukraine, France, and Israel completed the top five.

The EBU reported that the contest had a television audience of 163 million viewers in 37 European markets, an increase of a million viewers from the previous edition, with an additional 7.3 million viewers online on YouTube.[1]

Location

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Malmö Arena – host venue of the 2024 contest

The 2024 contest took place in Malmö, Sweden, following the country's victory at the 2023 contest with the song "Tattoo", performed by Loreen.[2] It was the seventh time Sweden had hosted the contest, having previously done so in 1975, 1985, 1992, 2000, 2013, and 2016. The venue for the contest was the 15,500-seat Malmö Arena, which had previously hosted the contest in 2013.[3]

Participating countries

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Eurovision Song Contest 2024 – Participation summaries by country
 
A group of participating artists of the Eurovision Song Contest 2024 at the Eurovision in Concert pre-party event in Amsterdam, April 2024

Eligibility for participation in the Eurovision Song Contest requires a national broadcaster with an active EBU membership capable of receiving the contest via the Eurovision network and broadcasting it live nationwide. The EBU issues invitations to participate in the contest to all active members.

On 5 December 2023, the EBU announced that 37 countries would participate in the 2024 contest. Luxembourg returned to the contest 31 years after its last participation in 1993. Romania, which participated in the 2023 contest, was provisionally announced as not participating in 2024.[4][5] This was confirmed on 25 January 2024.[6][7]

The contest features two returning artists: Natalia Barbu and Hera Björk, who previously represented Moldova in 2007 and Iceland in 2010, respectively.[8][9]

Other countries

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Active EBU member broadcasters in Andorra,[48] Bosnia and Herzegovina,[49] Monaco[50] and Slovakia[51] confirmed non-participation prior to the announcement of the participants list by the EBU. The Romanian broadcaster, TVR, remained in talks with the EBU until 25 January 2024, but decided not to participate for financial reasons.[4][7]

Production

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The exterior of the Malmö Arena, the host venue, during the Eurovision event weeks

The Eurovision Song Contest 2024 was produced by the Swedish national broadcaster Sveriges Television (SVT). The core team consisted of Ebba Adielsson as executive producer, Christel Tholse Willers [sv] as deputy executive producer, Tobias Åberg as executive in charge of production, Johan Bernhagen as executive line producer, Christer Björkman as contest producer, and Per Blankens [sv] as TV producer. Additional production personnel included head of production David Wessén, head of legal Mats Lindgren, head of media Madeleine Sinding-Larsen, and executive assistant Linnea Lopez.[52][53][54]

Edward af Sillén and Daniel Réhn [sv] wrote the script for the live shows' hosting segments and the opening and interval acts,[55] while Robin Hofwander, Daniel Jelinek and Fredrik Bäcklund served as multi-camera directors.[56] Background music for the shows was composed by Eirik Røland and Johan Nilsson.[57][58] A majority of the production personnel for 2024 previously worked in the previous three editions of the contest held in Sweden: 2000, 2013 and 2016.

Malmö Municipality contributed SEK 30 million (approximately 2.5 million) to the budget of the contest.[59][60]

Slogan and visual design

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The graphic design of the 2024 contest on display in Malmö

On 14 November 2023, the EBU announced that "United by Music", the slogan of the 2023 contest, would be retained for 2024 and future editions.[61] The accompanying theme art for 2024, named "The Eurovision Lights", was unveiled on 14 December. Designed by Stockholm-based agencies Uncut and Bold Scandinavia, it was based on simple, linear gradients inspired by vertical lines found on auroras and sound equalisers, and was built with adaptability across different formats taken into account.[62][63][64]

Stage design

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The stage in the arena

The stage design for the 2024 contest, revealed in December 2023, was devised by German production designer Florian Wieder, who had previously designed the sets of six previous contests – the most recent being in 2021. Lighting and screen content was designed by Swedish designer Fredrik Stormby. The stage featured five movable LED cubes, floors and a backdrop screen along with other lighting, video and stagecraft technology, all set around a cross-shaped centre, with the aim of "creating a unique 360-degree experience" for viewers.[65] The green room was placed behind the backdrop screen, in a similar fashion to the stages for the 2010 and 2011 contests.[66] Construction of the stage began on 2 April and concluded on 25 April.[67]

Postcards

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The "postcards" are short video introductions shown on television while the stage is being prepared for the next entry. Filmed from November 2023 to May 2024, the postcards were composed of footage shot by the participating artists through "selfie-mode", introducing the artists themselves and the country they represent. Archival footage of two of a country's previous entries was also used in each postcard.[68][69] During the interval of the final, the postcards were parodied by presenter Petra Mede, with archival footage from her previous hostings in 2013 and 2016 being featured.[70][71]

Featured entries
Country Entries[72][73]
Year Artist Song
  Albania 2009 Kejsi Tola "Carry Me in Your Dreams"
2012 Rona Nishliu "Suus"
  Armenia 2009 Inga and Anush "Jan Jan" (Ջան Ջան)
2022 Rosa Linn "Snap"
  Australia 2015 Guy Sebastian "Tonight Again"
2019 Kate Miller-Heidke "Zero Gravity"
  Austria 2014 Conchita Wurst "Rise Like a Phoenix"
2018 Cesár Sampson "Nobody but You"
  Azerbaijan 2009 Aysel and Arash "Always"
2011 Ell and Nikki "Running Scared"
  Belgium 1986 Sandra Kim "J'aime la vie"
2015 Loïc Nottet "Rhythm Inside"
  Croatia 1999 Doris Dragović "Marija Magdalena"
2023 Let 3 "Mama ŠČ!"
  Cyprus 1997 Hara and Andreas Konstantinou "Mana mou" (Μάνα μου)
2012 Ivi Adamou "La La Love"
  Czechia 2018 Mikolas Josef "Lie to Me"
2022 We Are Domi "Lights Off"
  Denmark 1988 Hot Eyes "Ka' du se hva' jeg sa'"
2000 Olsen Brothers "Fly on the Wings of Love"
  Estonia 2001 Tanel Padar, Dave Benton and 2XL "Everybody"
2009 Urban Symphony "Rändajad"
  Finland 1994 CatCat "Bye Bye Baby"
2023 Käärijä "Cha Cha Cha"
  France 1977 Marie Myriam "L'Oiseau et l'Enfant"
2021 Barbara Pravi "Voilà"
  Georgia 2007 Sopho "Visionary Dream"
2015 Nina Sublatti "Warrior"
  Germany 1994 Mekado "Wir geben 'ne Party"
2010 Lena "Satellite"
  Greece 1974 Marinella "Krasi, thalassa kai t' agori mou"
(Κρασί, θάλασσα και τ' αγόρι μου)
2005 Helena Paparizou "My Number One"
  Iceland 1986 ICY "Gleðibankinn"
2021 Daði og Gagnamagnið "10 Years"
  Ireland 1987 Johnny Logan "Hold Me Now"
2011 Jedward "Lipstick"
  Israel 1991 Duo Datz "Kan" (כאן)
1998 Dana International "Diva" (דיווה)
  Italy 1987 Umberto Tozzi and Raf "Gente di mare"
2021 Måneskin "Zitti e buoni"
  Latvia 2002 Marie N "I Wanna"
2015 Aminata "Love Injected"
  Lithuania 2012 Donny Montell "Love Is Blind"
2021 The Roop "Discoteque"
  Luxembourg 1965 France Gall "Poupée de cire, poupée de son"
1988 Lara Fabian "Croire"
  Malta 1998 Chiara "The One That I Love"
2021 Destiny "Je me casse"
  Moldova 2005 Zdob și Zdub "Boonika bate doba"
2010 SunStroke Project and Olia Tira "Run Away"
  Netherlands 1998 Edsilia Rombley "Hemel en aarde"
2019 Duncan Laurence "Arcade"
  Norway 1986 Ketil Stokkan "Romeo"
2009 Alexander Rybak "Fairytale"
  Poland 1994 Edyta Górniak "To nie ja!"
2014 Donatan and Cleo "My Słowianie – We Are Slavic"
  Portugal 1982 Doce "Bem bom"
2017 Salvador Sobral "Amar pelos dois"
  San Marino 2014 Valentina Monetta "Maybe"
2019 Serhat "Say Na Na Na"
  Serbia 2007 Marija Šerifović "Molitva" (Молитва)
2022 Konstrakta "In corpore sano"
  Slovenia 2001 Nuša Derenda "Energy"
2019 Zala Kralj and Gašper Šantl "Sebi"
  Spain 1968 Massiel "La La La"
2022 Chanel "SloMo"
  Sweden 1983 Carola "Främling"
2023 Loreen "Tattoo"
   Switzerland 1988 Celine Dion "Ne partez pas sans moi"
2021 Gjon's Tears "Tout l'univers"
  Ukraine 2004 Ruslana "Wild Dances"
2021 Go_A "Shum" (Шум)
  United Kingdom 1967 Sandie Shaw "Puppet on a String"
2022 Sam Ryder "Space Man"

Presenters

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Malin Åkerman and Petra Mede, presenters of the 2024 contest

Swedish comedian and television host Petra Mede and Swedish-American actress Malin Åkerman were announced as the presenters of the 2024 contest on 5 February 2024. Mede had previously hosted both the 2013 and 2016 editions (solo and with Måns Zelmerlöw, respectively), as well as the 2015 special anniversary programme Eurovision Song Contest's Greatest Hits alongside Graham Norton.[74] The "Turquoise Carpet" and opening ceremony events were hosted by Elecktra and Tia Kofi,[75] while Jovan Radomir moderated the contest's press conferences.[76]

Security

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In November 2023, the production team at SVT stated its intention to increase security measures and to keep in contact with Malmö's police authority during the contest, citing a tense climate of protest amid Israel's participation.[77] This included police reinforcement from Denmark and Norway, tightened cybersecurity, and a no-fly zone to prevent drone attacks,[78][79][80] as well as adjustments to the number of locations set to host side events. Through social media content, Israeli broadcaster Kan also expressed concerns over alleged antisemitism in Malmö, attributing this to the "Islamisation of Europe".[81] Additional measures were taken to protect the Israeli delegation, with the representative Eden Golan being escorted by Shin Bet agents in addition to local police officers following death threats directed at her via social media.[82] Shin Bet also advised Israeli citizens against travelling to Malmö and sent there a delegation, headed by its director Ronen Bar, to prevent potential threats against them.[83] Thousands of pro-Palestinian demonstrators gathered in Malmö to protest against Israel's participation in the competition.[84][85][86]

SVT's decision was made in the context of a high terroristic threat level in Sweden, with the Swedish Security Service (SÄPO) having raised the level from 3 to 4 out of 5 in August 2023, primarily in response to the 2023 Quran burnings in the country and prior to the Israel–Hamas war.[87] Concerns about the risk of terrorist attacks resurged in the wake of the Crocus City Hall attack outside Moscow on 22 March 2024.[81] In the event of an emergency, Malmö Municipality would provide accommodations in local schools and sports facilities as well as psychological support.[88][89]

Format

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Voting system and contest structure

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After the outcome of the 2023 contest, which saw Sweden win, despite Finland's lead in the televoting, sparked controversy among the audience, Norwegian broadcaster NRK began discussions with the EBU regarding a potential revision of the jury voting procedure. It was noted that Norwegian entries in recent years had been penalised by the juries, particularly in 2019 and 2023, when Norway finished in sixth and fifth place overall, respectively, despite coming first in 2019 and third in 2023 with the televote.[90] In an interview, the Norwegian head of delegation Stig Karlsen [no] discussed the idea of reducing the jury's weight on the final score, from the current 49.4%, to 40% or 30%.[91][92] No changes to the voting system were ultimately implemented in this regard.[93]

For 2024, the "Rest of the World" voting window was open for 24 hours before each show, as well as during each show. For participating countries, it was open after the last song is performed – as in previous years – in the semi-finals. In the final, it was opened just before the first performance and closed 25 minutes after the last performance.[d][94] The automatic qualifiers – the host country and the "Big Five" – performed their entries in full during the semi-finals, in between the competing acts.[94] Following an incident which ultimately led to the disqualification of the Dutch representative, the opening of the "Rest of the World" voting window for the final was delayed until eight hours before the show.[95]

Thirteen of the twenty-five open positions in the running order of the final will be subject to a "producer's choice" draw option, alongside six positions available each, for the first half and second half of the show. For those countries which draw the "producer's choice" category, the contest producers will be able to place that country anywhere in the running order.[96] The runtime of the final was initially planned to be reduced by approximately an hour.[97][98] This was ultimately not a priority, with the final planned to be shortened by a maximum of five minutes.[99]

Semi-final allocation draw

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Results of the semi-final allocation draw
  Participating countries in the first semi-final
  Pre-qualified for the final but also voting in the first semi-final
  Participating countries in the second semi-final
  Pre-qualified for the final but also voting in the second semi-final

The draw to determine the participating countries' semi-finals took place on 30 January 2024 at 19:00 CET, at the Malmö Town Hall [sv].[100][101] The thirty-one semi-finalists were divided over five pots, based on historical voting patterns, with the purpose of reducing the chance of bloc voting and increasing suspense in the semi-finals.[102][103] The draw also determined which semi-final each of the six automatic qualifiers – host country Sweden and "Big Five" countries (France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom) – would vote in and be required to broadcast. The ceremony was hosted by Pernilla Månsson Colt and Farah Abadi, and included the passing of the host city insignia from Steve Rotheram, the mayor of the Liverpool City Region and representative of previous host city Liverpool, to Katrin Stjernfeldt Jammeh, the mayor of Malmö Municipality.[103][104][101]

With the approval from the contest's reference group, Israel was allocated to the second semi-final following a request from Israeli broadcaster Kan, as the rehearsal date for the first semi-final coincided with Yom HaShoah.[105]

Pot 1 Pot 2 Pot 3 Pot 4 Pot 5

Contest overview

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Semi-final 1

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Eric Saade and Chanel performed as part of the opening act, while Benjamin Ingrosso performed as an interval act in the first semi-final.

The first semi-final took place on 7 May 2024 at 21:00 CEST[106] and featured fifteen competing countries. Those countries, plus Germany, Sweden and the United Kingdom, as well as non-participating countries under an aggregated "Rest of the World" vote, voted in this semi-final.[107] The running order (R/O) was determined by the contest producers and was announced publicly on 26 March.[108] In addition to the competing entries, the United Kingdom, Germany and Sweden performed their entries during the show, appearing on stage after the entries from Ireland, Iceland and Moldova, respectively.[94] Croatia was awarded the most points in the semi-final, and qualified for the final alongside, in order of points total, Ukraine, Ireland, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Cyprus, Finland, Portugal, Slovenia, and Serbia. The countries that failed to reach the final were Australia, Poland, Moldova, Azerbaijan, and Iceland.[109]

This semi-final was opened by former participants Eleni Foureira, Eric Saade and Chanel, who performed their respective competing songs – "Fuego" (Cyprus 2018), "Popular" (Sweden 2011) and "SloMo" (Spain 2022).[110] The interval acts included three-time winner for Ireland (1980, 1987 and 1992) Johnny Logan performing the 2012 Swedish winning entry "Euphoria",[111][112] and 2018 Swedish entrant Benjamin Ingrosso performing a medley of his songs "Look Who's Laughing Now", "Kite" and "Honey Boy".[113][112]

  Qualifiers
First semi-final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2024[109]
R/O Country Artist Song Points Place
1   Cyprus Silia Kapsis "Liar" 64 10
2   Serbia Teya Dora "Ramonda" 36 12
3   Lithuania Silvester Belt "Luktelk" 77 7
4   Ireland Bambie Thug "Doomsday Blue" 118 3
5   Ukraine Alyona Alyona and Jerry Heil "Teresa & Maria" 141 2
6   Poland Luna "The Tower" 77 6
7   Croatia Baby Lasagna "Rim Tim Tagi Dim" 178 1
8   Iceland Hera Björk "Scared of Heights" 15 13
9   Slovenia Raiven "Veronika" 117 4
10   Finland Windows95man[b] "No Rules!" 93 5
11   Moldova Natalia Barbu "In the Middle" 9 14
12   Azerbaijan Fahree feat. Ilkin Dovlatov "Özünlə apar" 4 15
13   Australia Electric Fields "One Milkali (One Blood)" 69 8
14   Portugal Iolanda "Grito" 49 11
15   Luxembourg Tali "Fighter" 65 9

Semi-final 2

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Sarah Dawn Finer (in character as Lynda Woodruff), presenter Petra Mede, and Charlotte Perrelli performed the musical number "We Just Love Eurovision Too Much" as an interval act in the second semi-final.

The second semi-final took place on 9 May 2024 at 21:00 CEST[106] and features sixteen competing countries. Those countries plus France, Italy and Spain, as well as non-participating countries under an aggregated "Rest of the World" vote, voted in this semi-final.[107] The running order (R/O) was determined by the contest producers and was announced publicly on 26 March.[108] In addition to the competing entries, France, Spain and Italy performed their entries during the show, appearing on stage after the entries from Czechia, Latvia and Estonia, respectively.[94] Israel was awarded the most points in the semi-final, and qualified for the final alongside, in order of points total, the Netherlands, Armenia, Switzerland, Greece, Estonia, Latvia, Georgia, Austria, and Norway. The countries that failed to reach the final were Czechia, Denmark, Belgium, San Marino, Albania, and Malta.[114]

This semi-final was opened by a pre-recorded segment, in which presenters Petra Mede and Malin Åkerman performed the 2023 winning song "Tattoo" with minor lyrical changes.[115][116] The interval acts included Helena Paparizou, Charlotte Perrelli and Sertab Erener performing their respective winning songs – "My Number One" (Greece 2005), "Take Me to Your Heaven" (Sweden 1999) and "Everyway That I Can" (Turkey 2003) – with the audience taking part in a sing-along,[113] and "We Just Love Eurovision Too Much", a musical number performed by Mede that satirised various aspects of the contest and Sweden's success in the event, with appearances by Perrelli, Sarah Dawn Finer reprising her role as Lynda Woodruff, and 2023 Finnish representative Käärijä performing an excerpt of his competing song "Cha Cha Cha". 1984 winners for Sweden, Herreys, performed their winning song "Diggi-Loo Diggi-Ley" after the qualifiers were announced.[117][118][119]

  Qualifiers
Second semi-final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2024[114]
R/O Country Artist Song Points Place
1   Malta Sarah Bonnici "Loop" 95 6
2   Albania Besa "Titan" 11 14
3   Greece Marina Satti "Zari" 8 15
4    Switzerland Nemo "The Code" 152 2
5   Czechia Aiko "Pedestal" 102 5
6   Austria Kaleen "We Will Rave" 63 9
7   Denmark Saba "Sand" 41 12
8   Armenia Ladaniva "Jako" 63 10
9   Latvia Dons "Hollow" 123 3
10   San Marino Megara "11:11" 72 8
11   Georgia Nutsa Buzaladze "Firefighter" 60 11
12   Belgium Mustii "Before the Party's Over" 22 13
13   Estonia 5miinust and Puuluup "(Nendest) narkootikumidest ei tea me (küll) midagi" 103 4
14   Israel Eden Golan "Hurricane" 0 16
15   Norway Gåte "Ulveham" 163 1
16   Netherlands Joost Klein "Europapa" 82 7

Final

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Charlotte Perrelli, Carola, and Conchita Wurst performed "Waterloo" as an interval act in the final.

The final took place on 11 May 2024 at 21:00 CEST[106] and featured 25 competing countries. All 37 participating countries with jury and televote, as well as non-participating countries under an aggregated "Rest of the World" online vote, voted in the final. The running order (R/O) of the host nation was determined by a random draw on 11 March during the annual meeting of heads of the participating delegations.[120] The running order for the remaining finalists was determined by the contest producers following the second semi-final.[121]

Switzerland won the contest with the song "The Code", performed by Nemo and written by them along with Benjamin Alasu, Lasse Midtsian Nymann, and Linda Dale. Switzerland won with 591 points, also winning the jury vote. It was the country's third win in the contest, following victories in the inaugural edition in 1956 and in 1988. Croatia came second with 547 points and won the televote, with Ukraine, France, Israel, Ireland, Italy, Armenia, Sweden, and Portugal completing the top ten. Georgia, Spain, Slovenia, Austria, and Norway occupied the bottom five positions.[122][123]

The final was opened by Björn Skifs performing "Hooked on a Feeling", followed by the flag parade, introducing all twenty-five finalists, set to a medley of well-known Swedish hits.[f] In a pre-recorded segment during a break between the competing performances, Sarah Dawn Finer as Lynda Woodruff performed a song about the contest's executive supervisor Martin Österdahl, "You're Good to Go",[124] which was later released as a single.[125] The interval acts included Alcazar performing "Crying at the Discoteque";[126] a tribute performance of the 1974 Swedish winning song "Waterloo" by three past winners – Carola (Sweden 1991), Charlotte Perrelli (Sweden 1999) and Conchita Wurst (Austria 2014)[127] – preceded by a pre-recorded segment from the ABBA Voyage concert residency in London in which the song's original performers, ABBA, as their virtual avatar selves in the concert, discussed their Eurovision experience on the occasion of its 50th anniversary;[128][129] and Loreen performing her new single "Forever" and her 2023 winning song "Tattoo".[130][124][131] Following a reprise of their winning song, Nemo broke the trophy,[132][133] although its design had been strengthened after the one presented to Alexander Rybak in 2009 met a similar fate.[134]

  Winner
Final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2024[135]
R/O Country Artist Song Points Place
1   Sweden Marcus & Martinus "Unforgettable" 49 23
2   Ukraine Alyona Alyona and Jerry Heil "Teresa & Maria" 327 4
3   Germany Isaak "Always on the Run" 51 22
4   Luxembourg Tali "Fighter" 80 17
5   Netherlands Joost Klein "Europapa" 188 10
6   Malta Sarah Bonnici "Loop" 64 20
7   Lithuania Silvester Belt "Luktelk" 87 16
8   Spain Nebulossa "Zorra" 72 19
9   Estonia 5miinust and Puuluup "(Nendest) narkootikumidest ei tea me (küll) midagi" 251 5
10   Ireland Bambie Thug "Doomsday Blue" 244 7
11   Latvia Dons "Hollow" 248 6
12   Czechia Aiko "Pedestal" 213 9
13   United Kingdom Olly Alexander "Dizzy" 27 24
14   Norway Gåte "Ulveham" 434 3
15   Italy Angelina Mango "La noia" 131 12
16   Poland Luna "The Tower" 90 15
17   Finland Windows95man[b] "No Rules!" 152 11
18   Australia Electric Fields "One Milkali (One Blood)" 63 21
19   Armenia Ladaniva "Jako" 73 18
20   Cyprus Silia Kapsis "Liar" 106 13
21    Switzerland Nemo "The Code" 476 2
22   Slovenia Raiven "Veronika" 227 8
23   Croatia Baby Lasagna "Rim Tim Tagi Dim" 553 1
24   San Marino Megara "11:11" 105 14
25   France Slimane "Mon amour" 9 26
26   Austria Kaleen "We Will Rave" 33 25

Spokespersons

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The spokespersons announced the 12-point score from their respective country's national jury in the following order:[136]

  1.   Ukraine – Jamala
  2.   United Kingdom – Joanna Lumley
  3.   Luxembourg – Désirée Nosbusch
  4.   Azerbaijan – Aysel Teymurzadeh
  5.   San Marino – Kida
  6.   Malta – Matt Blxck
  7.   Croatia – Ivan Dorian Molnar
  8.   Albania – Andri Xhahu
  9.   Czechia – Radka Rosická [cs]
  10.   Israel – Maya Alkulumbre [he]
  11.   Australia – Danny Estrin
  12.   Denmark – Stéphanie Surrugue [da]
  13.   Spain – Soraya Arnelas
  14.   Norway – Ingvild Helljesen[137]
  15.   Germany – Ina Müller
  16.   Armenia – Brunette
  17.   Slovenia – Lorella Flego
  18.   Georgia – Sopho Khalvashi
  19.    Switzerland – Jennifer Bosshard
  20.   Moldova – Doina Stimpovschi
  21.   Greece – Helena Paparizou
  22.   Estonia – Birgit
  23.   Netherlands – None[g]
  24.   Austria – Philipp Hansa
  25.   France – Natasha St-Pier
  26.   Italy – Mario Acampa [it]
  27.   Finland – Toni Laaksonen [fi][139]
  28.   Portugal – Mimicat
  29.   Belgium – Livia Dushkoff
  30.   Iceland – Friðrik Ómar Hjörleifsson
  31.   Latvia – Andrejs Reinis Zitmanis
  32.   Ireland – Paul Harrington
  33.   Poland – Viki Gabor
  34.   Cyprus – Loukas Hamatsos
  35.   Lithuania – Monika Linkytė
  36.   Serbia – Konstrakta
  37.   Sweden – Frans

Detailed results

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Semi-final 1

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The ten qualifiers from the first semi-final were determined solely by televoting. All fifteen countries competing in the first semi-final voted, alongside Germany, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and the aggregated Rest of the World vote. The ten qualifying countries were announced in no particular order, and the full results were published after the final was held.

  Qualifiers
Detailed voting results of the first semi-final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2024[109]
Voting procedure used:
  100% Televoting
Total score
Cyprus
Serbia
Lithuania
Ireland
Ukraine
Poland
Croatia
Iceland
Slovenia
Finland
Moldova
Azerbaijan
Australia
Portugal
Luxembourg
Germany
Sweden
United Kingdom
Rest of the World
Contestants
Cyprus 64 2 5 3 2 3 1 4 7 3 8 2 3 12 2 7
Serbia 36 6 1 1 8 3 7 1 1 3 5
Lithuania 77 8 7 4 7 7 2 8 2 10 2 1 5 4 1 1 8
Ireland 118 12 3 8 5 12 10 6 12 5 6 6 6 12 7 7 1
Ukraine 141 10 4 6 10 10 12 7 3 5 12 8 10 5 12 5 10 12
Poland 77 1 1 10 6 4 2 6 4 12 4 4 7 6 4 6
Croatia 178 8 12 12 12 10 8 8 12 10 8 7 12 7 10 10 10 12 10
Iceland 15 4 2 3 2 2 2
Slovenia 117 5 10 1 4 12 2 10 8 7 10 7 12 8 7 6 8
Finland 93 2 6 7 8 3 6 6 12 10 2 3 5 8 3 2 3 3 4
Moldova 9 1 1 4 3
Azerbaijan 4 2 1 1
Australia 69 4 7 3 5 4 3 5 1 10 8 5 6 8
Portugal 49 3 2 7 8 5 5 4 6 1 4 4
Luxembourg 65 7 5 6 7 5 6 4 6 3 1 8 5 2

12 points

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Below is a summary of all 12 points received in the first semi-final. Croatia received the maximum score of 12 points from eight countries, while Ukraine received five sets of 12 points. Both Lithuania and Cyprus received two sets of 12 points, while Portugal and Serbia received one each.

12 points awarded in the first semi-final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2024[140]
# Recipient
6   Croatia
4   Ireland
  Ukraine
2   Slovenia
1   Cyprus
  Finland
  Poland

Semi-final 2

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The ten qualifiers from the second semi-final were determined solely by televoting, with the exception of San Marino who were unable to provide a valid televote result and thus used the votes of their back-up jury.[citation needed] All sixteen countries competing in the second semi-final voted, alongside France, Italy, Spain, and the aggregated Rest of the World vote. The ten qualifying countries were announced in no particular order, and the full results of how each country voted were published after the final was held.

  Qualifiers
Detailed voting results of the second semi-final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2024[114]
Voting procedure used:
  100% Televoting
  100% Jury vote
Total score
Malta
Albania
Greece
Switzerland
Czechia
Austria
Denmark
Armenia
Latvia
San Marino
Georgia
Belgium
Estonia
Israel
Norway
Netherlands
France
Italy
Spain
Rest of the World
Contestants
Malta 95 5 12 3 3 6 3 10 1 5 3 7 8 6 8 10 5
Albania 11 6 1 2 1 1
Greece 8 6 2
Switzerland 152 10 12 7 5 12 10 6 8 12 2 3 5 10 5 10 12 7 6 10
Czechia 102 3 7 2 8 2 7 5 2 6 3 12 8 10 8 6 5 8
Austria 63 4 1 7 1 4 3 7 2 8 4 1 7 12 2
Denmark 41 2 4 1 5 4 2 6 6 2 8 1
Armenia 63 5 2 3 6 5 4 12 4 3 7 1 8 3
Latvia 123 6 8 3 10 12 7 8 7 7 5 6 12 12 2 5 7 6
San Marino 72 1 5 7 4 2 3 10 1 7 12 7 10 3
Georgia 60 10 5 4 5 4 8 1 1 5 3 3 3 4 4
Belgium 22 3 1 2 1 5 1 5 4
Estonia 103 8 4 10 2 10 1 3 12 12 8 6 4 2 4 5 3 2 7
Israel 0
Norway 163 7 1 8 12 8 10 12 10 7 10 8 8 10 6 12 6 4 12 12
Netherlands 82 12 4 6 6 8 2 6 4 7 10 4 10 2 1

12 points

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Below is a summary of all 12 points received in the second semi-final. Israel received the maximum score of 12 points from ten countries, followed by the Netherlands which received four sets of 12 points. Armenia received two sets of 12 points, and Switzerland, Greece and Latvia were each awarded one set of 12 points.[114]

12 points awarded in the second semi-final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2024[114]
# Recipient
5   Norway
4    Switzerland
3   Latvia
2   Estonia
1   Armenia
  Austria
  Czech Republic
  Malta
  Netherlands
  San Marino

Final

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The results of the final were determined by televoting and jury voting in all thirty-seven participating countries, plus the Rest of the World aggregate public vote. The announcement of the jury points was conducted by each country individually, with the country's spokesperson announcing their jury's favorite entry that received 12 points, with the remaining points shown on screen. Following the completion of the jury points announcement, the public points were announced as an aggregate by the contest hosts in ascending order starting from the country which received the fewest points from the jury.[141]

  Winner
Split results[122]
Place Combined Jury Televoting
Country Points Country Points Country Points
1   Croatia 553    Switzerland 230   Croatia 352
2    Switzerland 476   Croatia 201   Norway 249
3   Norway 432   Norway 183    Switzerland 246
4   Ukraine 327   Latvia 173   Ukraine 173
5   Estonia 251   Estonia 162   Netherlands 142
6   Latvia 248   Ukraine 154   Ireland 125
7   Ireland 244   Czechia 126   Slovenia 104
8   Slovenia 227   Slovenia 123   Finland 93
9   Czechia 213   Ireland 119   Estonia 89
10   Netherlands 188   San Marino 73   Czechia 87
11   Finland 152   Italy 66   Latvia 75
12   Italy 131   Poland 61   Italy 65
13   Cyprus 106   Finland 59   Cyprus 57
14   San Marino 105   Lithuania 49   Spain 42
15   Poland 90   Cyprus 49   Luxembourg 40
16   Lithuania 87   Netherlands 46   Lithuania 38
17   Luxembourg 80   Luxembourg 40   Sweden 34
18   Armenia 73   Armenia 40   Armenia 33
19   Spain 72   Malta 40   San Marino 32
20   Malta 64   Australia 33   Australia 30
21   Australia 63   Spain 30   Poland 29
22   Germany 51   Germany 25   Germany 26
23   Sweden 49   United Kingdom 24   Malta 24
24   Austria 33   Austria 17   Austria 16
25   United Kingdom 27   Sweden 15   United Kingdom 3
26   France 9   France 8   France 1
Detailed jury voting results of the final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2024[122]
  • Voting procedure used:
  •   100% Televoting
  •   100% Jury vote
Total score
Jury vote score
Televoting score
Jury vote
Ukraine
United Kingdom
Luxembourg
Azerbaijan
San Marino
Malta
Croatia
Albania
Czechia
Israel
Australia
Denmark
Spain
Norway
Germany
Armenia
Slovenia
Georgia
Switzerland
Moldova
Greece
Estonia
Netherlands
Austria
France
Italy
Finland
Portugal
Belgium
Iceland
Latvia
Ireland
Poland
Cyprus
Lithuania
Serbia
Sweden
Contestants
Sweden 15 5 2 1 1 6
Ukraine 154 5 12 10 8 10 10 8 8 5 12 12 5 8 3 5 1 4 5 10 12 1
Germany 25 1 8 6 4 1 2 1 2
Luxembourg 40 2 2 5 1 5 10 10 2 3
Netherlands 46 4 1 1 6 8 4 8 1 7 3 3
Malta 40 2 3 4 2 5 7 2 3 2 1 1 7 1
Lithuania 49 1 10 3 4 1 2 1 6 2 12 6 1
Spain 30 2 7 3 2 1 7 3 5
Estonia 162 4 6 6 5 4 7 3 4 7 10 1 12 10 8 3 4 6 6 8 7 10 3 8 4 8 8
Ireland 119 3 4 1 8 5 4 8 6 4 7 6 5 2 10 8 8 8 12 10
Latvia 173 7 7 7 6 12 4 3 10 12 7 10 12 12 5 3 5 10 3 6 6 3 12 6 5
Czechia 126 5 6 8 7 2 5 6 10 8 12 7 4 4 7 5 2 4 7 2 7 8
United Kingdom 24 2 6 10 4 2
Norway 185 6 10 12 10 10 8 12 6 8 3 7 2 7 6 8 7 12 12 12 5 10 12
Italy 66 7 12 2 6 7 5 4 10 6 4 3
Poland 61 7 4 4 1 5 1 8 4 4 1 3 6 2 4 5 1 1
Finland 59 3 3 3 2 10 6 3 6 10 1 1 4 7
Australia 33 3 1 5 2 2 6 5 2 5 2
Armenia 40 7 3 4 1 7 8 5 5
Cyprus 49 2 5 10 3 1 7 6 2 4 3 6
Switzerland 230 12 8 10 4 6 12 6 12 7 12 3 12 4 6 10 5 7 3 12 12 12 10 8 6 8 2 10 5 4 2
Slovenia 123 8 3 12 12 8 4 1 2 3 3 10 4 2 1 3 6 7 1 4 8 7 10 4
Croatia 201 10 12 5 8 12 5 8 10 12 6 12 8 4 8 5 7 12 12 10 10 7 6 12
San Marino 73 1 6 7 10 2 5 5 7 7 2 10 2 1 3 5
France 8 8
Austria 17 2 3 3 1 8
Detailed televoting results of the final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2024[122]
Voting procedure used:
  100% Televoting
  100% Jury vote
Total score
Jury vote score
Televoting score
Televote
Ukraine
United Kingdom
Luxembourg
Azerbaijan
San Marino
Malta
Croatia
Albania
Czechia
Israel
Australia
Denmark
Spain
Norway
Germany
Armenia
Slovenia
Georgia
Switzerland
Moldova
Greece
Estonia
Netherlands
Austria
France
Italy
Finland
Portugal
Belgium
Iceland
Latvia
Ireland
Poland
Cyprus
Lithuania
Serbia
Sweden
Rest of the World
Contestants
Sweden 49 15 34 1 1 2 7 1 6 2 6 4 1 3
Ukraine 327 154 173 12 3 12 8 3 8 7 2 3 10 12 5 8 10 10 2 5 7 5 6 7 6 4 5 7 1 5
Germany 51 25 26 1 6 2 6 1 3 2 5
Luxembourg 80 40 40 4 12 2 4 1 5 5 2 2 3
Netherlands 188 46 142 6 3 5 10 7 6 12 4 10 8 8 5 7 6 12 6 10 5 1 3 8
Malta 64 40 24 4 1 3 2 3 5 1 2 3
Lithuania 87 49 38 2 5 5 4 1 1 3 1 6 1 5 4
Spain 72 30 42 4 2 3 1 8 3 8 1 4 8
Estonia 251 162 89 8 4 5 8 3 12 2 5 10 2 8 10 6 6
Ireland 244 119 125 2 10 7 6 5 3 8 4 10 6 1 12 8 10 8 7 10 8
Latvia 248 173 75 3 5 5 6 10 3 2 6 7 2 7 2 3 12 2
Czechia 213 126 87 5 6 6 7 6 4 12 6 3 7 8 4 5 7 1
United Kingdom 27 24 3 3
Norway 434 185 249 10 3 7 12 6 7 8 12 5 8 1 5 7 12 10 10 8 6 12 10 7 12 7 12 10 7 6 10 12 7
Italy 131 66 65 2 5 4 6 4 2 5 7 6 4 6 8 6
Poland 90 61 29 4 7 3 1 3 3 2 6
Finland 152 59 93 3 7 1 4 7 7 7 1 4 8 4 7 4 2 4 8 3 5 4 3
Australia 63 33 30 3 5 6 3 5 2 2 4
Armenia 73 40 33 8 2 5 2 3 3 7 1 2
Cyprus 106 49 57 7 1 3 8 8 2 5 6 1 5 8 3
Switzerland 476 230 246 5 8 10 1 8 2 10 8 12 12 10 4 8 7 7 10 12 7 4 5 12 8 5 4 12 7 6 10 8 6 1 5 12
Slovenia 227 123 104 6 10 12 2 5 3 4 6 6 3 5 4 8 1 2 3 1 1 12 2 4 4
Croatia 553 201 352 12 12 8 10 10 8 12 10 12 10 10 12 12 10 12 4 12 5 10 8 12 10 10 10 7 12 5 10 8 6 12 12 7 12 10 10
San Marino 105 73 32 7 2 1 2 7 1 2 4 1 2 3
France 9 8 1 1
Austria 33 17 16 3 1 1 4 2 4 1

12 points

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Below is a summary of all 12 points received in the final. In the jury vote, Switzerland received the maximum score from twenty-two countries, followed by France and Portugal with four and three sets of 12 points, respectively. Croatia and Ukraine received two sets of 12 points, and Croatia, Greece, Ireland, Luxembourg, and Sweden were each awarded one set of 12 points. In the public vote, Israel received the maximum score of 12 points from fourteen countries and the Rest of the World vote, followed by Croatia with nine sets of 12 points, and Ukraine with seven. Cyprus, Estonia, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Serbia, and Switzerland were each awarded one set of 12 points.[122]

12 points awarded by juries in the final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2024[122]
# Recipient Countries giving 12 points
22    Switzerland   Albania,   Austria,   Azerbaijan,   Denmark,   Estonia,   Finland,   Georgia,   Greece,   Ireland,   Italy,   Latvia,   Lithuania,   Luxembourg,   Malta,   Netherlands,   Norway,   Poland,   Portugal,   San Marino,   Spain,   Sweden,   Ukraine
4   France   Armenia,   Belgium,   Iceland,   Slovenia
3   Portugal   Croatia,   France,   United Kingdom
2   Croatia   Cyprus,   Serbia
  Ukraine   Czechia,   Moldova
1   Greece    Switzerland
  Ireland   Australia
  Luxembourg   Israel
  Sweden   Germany
12 points awarded by televoting in the final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2024[122]
# Recipient Countries giving 12 points
15   Israel   Australia,   Belgium,   Finland,   France,   Germany,   Italy,   Luxembourg,   Netherlands,   Portugal,   Rest of the World,   San Marino,   Spain,   Sweden,    Switzerland,   United Kingdom
9   Croatia   Albania,   Austria,   Azerbaijan,   Denmark,   Iceland,   Ireland,   Norway,   Serbia,   Slovenia
7   Ukraine   Czechia,   Estonia,   Georgia,   Lithuania,   Malta,   Moldova,   Poland
1   Cyprus   Greece
  Estonia   Latvia
  France   Armenia
  Greece   Cyprus
  Luxembourg   Israel
  Serbia   Croatia
   Switzerland   Ukraine

Broadcasts

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All participating broadcasters may choose to have on-site or remote commentators providing insight and voting information to their local audience. Although required to show only the final and semi-final in which their country votes, most broadcasters cover both semi-finals. Some non-participating broadcasters also air the contest. The Eurovision Song Contest YouTube channel provides international live streams with no commentary of all shows. According to the EBU, in total 163 million people watched at least a minute of the television broadcasts, and 7.3 million people watched the YouTube broadcasts. Votes were received from 156 countries, including the 37 competing countries.[1]

Broadcasters and commentators in other countries
Country Broadcaster Channel(s) Show(s) Commentator(s) Ref(s)
  Chile Zapping Zapping Channel Final Rayén Araya and Ignacio Lira [286]
  Kosovo RTK RTK 1, Radio Kosovo 2 All shows Agron Krasniqi and Egzona Rafuna [287]
  Montenegro RTCG TVCG 1 All shows Dražen Bauković [288][289]
Radio 98 Unknown
  North Macedonia MRT MRT 1, Radio Skopje All shows Aleksandra Jovanovska [290]
  Peru Zapping Zapping Music Live Final Rayén Araya and Ignacio Lira [291]
  Slovakia RTVS Rádio FM Final Daniel Baláž [sk], Lucia Haverlík, Pavol Hubinák and Juraj Malíček [sk] [292][293]
  United States NBC Peacock All shows No commentator [294][295]
WJFD-FM Final Ewan Spence and Samantha Ross [296]

Other awards

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In addition to the main winner's trophy, the Marcel Bezençon Awards and the You're a Vision Award were contested during the Eurovision Song Contest 2024. The OGAE (General Organisation of Eurovision Fans) voting poll also took place before the contest.

Marcel Bezençon Awards

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The Marcel Bezençon Awards, organised since 2002 by Sweden's then-head of delegation and 1992 representative Christer Björkman, and winner of the 1984 contest Richard Herrey, honours songs in the contest's final.[297] The awards are divided into three categories: the Artistic Award, the Composers Award, and the Press Award.[298] The winners were revealed shortly before the Eurovision final on 11 May.[299]

Category Country Song Performer(s) Songwriter(s)
Artistic Award    Switzerland "The Code" Nemo
Composers Award
Press Award   Croatia "Rim Tim Tagi Dim" Baby Lasagna

OGAE

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OGAE, an organisation of over forty Eurovision Song Contest fan clubs across Europe and beyond, conducts an annual voting poll first held in 2002 as the Marcel Bezençon Fan Award. After all votes were cast, the top-ranked entry in the 2024 poll was "Rim Tim Tagi Dim" performed by Baby Lasagna; the top five results are shown below.[300][301][302]

Country Performer Song OGAE result
  Croatia Baby Lasagna "Rim Tim Tagi Dim" 356
  Italy Angelina Mango "La noia" 338
   Switzerland Nemo "The Code" 290
  Belgium Mustii "Before the Party's Over" 223
  France Slimane "Mon amour" 188

You're a Vision Award

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The You're a Vision Award (a word play of "Eurovision"), established in 2022 by the fansite Songfestival.be following the cancellation of the Barbara Dex Award due to its associated negative connotations, aims to "celebrate the creativity and diversity that embody the Eurovision spirit", with the winner being the one with the most notable outfit. Croatia's Baby Lasagna won the 2024 award, with Ireland's Bambie Thug and the Netherlands' Joost Klein completing the top three.[303]

Place Country Performer(s)
1   Croatia Baby Lasagna
2   Ireland Bambie Thug
3   Netherlands Joost Klein

Incidents and controversies

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I didn't take care of the whole thing

Reception

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Doesn't matter, i'm right.

Official album

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Eurovision Song Contest: Malmö 2024 is the official compilation album of the contest, featuring all 37 entries. It was put together by the European Broadcasting Union and was released by Universal Music Group digitally on 12 April 2024, in CD format on 19 April 2024, and in vinyl format on 24 May 2024.[304][305][306]

Charts

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Weekly chart performance for Eurovision Song Contest: Malmö 2024
Chart (2024) Peak
position
Australian Albums (ARIA)[307] 22
Belgian Compilation Albums (Ultratop 50 Flanders)[308] 1
Belgian Compilation Albums (Ultratop 50 Wallonia)[309] 1
Czech Albums (ČNS IFPI)[310] 6
Danish Compilation Albums (Tracklisten)[311] 7
Dutch Compilation Albums (Compilation Top 30)[312] 1
Finnish Physical Albums (Suomen virallinen lista)[313] 8
German Compilation Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[314] 1
Greek Albums (IFPI)[315] 9
Irish Compilation Albums (IRMA)[316] 1
Italian Physical Albums (FIMI)[317] 20
Polish Physical Albums (ZPAV)[318] 32
Slovak Albums (ČNS IFPI)[319] 15
Swedish Physical Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[320] 3
Swiss Compilation Albums (Swiss Hitparade)[321] 1
UK Compilation Albums (OCC)[322] 1
US Compilation Albums (Billboard)[323] 7

Notes

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  1. ^ 26 countries were set to perform, but the Netherlands was disqualified from the contest between the second semi-final and the final. The country retained its right to vote in the final.
  2. ^ a b c Features uncredited vocals by Henri Piispanen
  3. ^ On behalf of the German public broadcasting consortium ARD[24]
  4. ^ The voting window had been extended to commence before the first competing performance on two previous occasions: in 2010 and 2011.
  5. ^ Israel was allocated to the second semi-final at the request of the Israeli broadcaster Kan.
  6. ^ Namely Icona Pop's "I Love It", Ace of Base's "Beautiful Life", Roxette's "The Look", Lykke Li's "I Follow Rivers", Axwell & Ingrosso's "Sun Is Shining", and ABBA's "Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! (A Man After Midnight)" and "The Winner Takes It All"
  7. ^ Nikkie de Jager was supposed to announce the jury points from the Netherlands, but withdrew after the disqualification of the Dutch entry from the final.[138] The contest's executive supervisor Martin Österdahl announced the Dutch jury points instead.
  8. ^ Including Finnish- and Swedish-language commentary options from Yle TV1
  9. ^ The broadcast of the second semi-final started delayed, at 22:30 WEST
  10. ^ The broadcast of the final will start delayed, at 21:01 WEST
  11. ^ During the performance of Poland in the first semi-final, the broadcast was temporarily moved from RTS1 to RTS2, so the former could air the arrival ceremony of Chinese president Xi Jinping, who was conducting a state visit to Serbia. RTS2 aired approximately 25 minutes of the semi-final, including the remainder of the Polish entry, performances from Iceland, Croatia, and the first part of the German performance, before the broadcast was restored to RTS1.[237][238]
  12. ^ In simulcast of broadcast from Finland's Yle Areena [fi; sv]
  13. ^ The broadcast of the semi-finals mostly featured TV commentary by Miroshnychenko. Only the second recaps (which Miroshnychenko left unnarrated on TV) were commentated on by Zakharchenko and Antypenko. The broadcasts also included brief studio discussions and brief on-site reports by Anna Zakletska between the close of the voting window and results announcements, which were presented by Zakharchenko and Antypenko.[275][276][277][278][279][280]

References

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