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The contest's organisation will be restructured for 2025; this was announced by the EBU on 1 July 2024, following a review into the controversies of the 2024 contest. [112] Two new positions were created: the ESC director and the head of brand and commercial, with the ESC director overseeing the work of executive supervisor Martin Österdahl ...
The competition was watched by an average of 1.48 million viewers in Finland (0.236 more than in 2024), with a peak viewership of 2.27 million, corresponding to over 40% of the Finnish population. This made 2025 the most watched edition of UMK since its establishment in 2012. [15]
The Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2025 is set to be the 23rd edition of the Junior Eurovision Song Contest, organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU). The contest is expected to take place in Georgia , following the country's victory at the 2024 contest with the song "To My Mom" by Andria Putkaradze.
In 2024, RTS confirmed that the national final format Pesma za Evroviziju would once again be organised to determine its representative at the Eurovision Song Contest 2025. [2] The selection will consist of two semi-finals on 25 and 27 February 2024, and a final on 1 March 2024. [ 3 ]
Pages in category "Countries in the Eurovision Song Contest 2025" The following 38 pages are in this category, out of 38 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Each shows featured four of the eight artists presenting their candidate Eurovision song without any staging and a cover version of a past Eurovision Song Contest song. The final took place on 1 February 2025, where the winner was chosen by an expert jury and public televoting. [4] The jury panel consisted of: [5]
Q1 2025 Earnings Call Oct 30, 2024, 5:30 p.m. ET. ... over 500,000 internal queries and process more than 200,000 documents. ... expense is expected to be roughly negative $1.5 billion, primarily ...
Lys Assia, the winner of the first Eurovision Song Contest in 1956, performing at the 1958 contest. The Eurovision Song Contest was developed by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) as an experiment in live television broadcasting and a way to produce cheaper programming for national broadcasting organisations.