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Eurovision Song Contest: Oslo 2010 was the official compilation album of the 2010 contest, put together by the European Broadcasting Union and released by EMI Records and CMC International on 17 May 2010.The album featured all 39 songs that entered in the 2010 contest, including the semi-finalists that failed to qualify into the grand final.
The final results were determined by a 50/50 combination of votes from a jury panel and a public televote. For "an even greater national representation", 25% of the jury vote were made up by a Bucharest panel, and the rest by the overall result of four regional juries in Cluj-Napoca, Craiova, Iași and Timișoara.
The first Eurovision Song Contest was not won on points, but by votes (two per country), and only the winner was announced. [ 2 ] There have been 68 contests, with one winner each year except for the tied 1969 contest , which had four. 27 countries have won the contest, with Switzerland winning the first contest in 1956.
The second round was a public wildcard vote held between 29 January and 14 February 2010, which selected an additional 5 semi-finalists out of 50 entries not selected from the first round to proceed to the third round, the televised national final. 15 semi-finalists competed in each semi-final on 27 and 28 February 2010.
[10] [11] [12] The selected entries were revealed via RTVE's official website on 18 January 2010 and users had until 5 February 2010 to submit up to five votes for their favourite entries per day. 5,722,596 votes were received at the conclusion of the voting and the top ten entries that qualified for the national final were announced on 8 ...
Three and then one for Oslo) was the national final organised by RTS in order to select the Serbian entry for the Eurovision Song Contest 2010. The selection was held on 13 March 2010, hosted by Maja Nikolić and broadcast on RTS1 , RTS Sat , via radio on Radio Belgrade 1 as well as streamed online via the broadcaster's website rts.rs .
On 2 January 2010, Ferah declined the offer stating that Eurovision was no longer a musical contest. [19] On 7 January 2010, TRT announced that they had reached a preliminary agreement with Manga to represent Turkey in Oslo following the refusal of Aydın. [20] [21] Manga was confirmed as the Turkish representative on 12 January.
Since 2004 the votes have been translated due to time constraints. To offset increased voting time required by a larger number of participating countries, since 2006 only countries' 8-, 10-, and 12-point scores were read aloud. One- to seven-point votes were added automatically to the scoreboard, while each country's spokesperson was introduced.