Tools
Change country:

Eurovision says it’s “apolitical.” History says otherwise.

The Eurovision stage with a scrim that reads “United by Music.”
Jessica Gow/TT News Agency/AFP via Getty Images

Politics on Eurovision isn’t new. It’s been part of it almost from the start.

The annual Eurovision Song Contest kicked off yesterday and is bracing for protests and audience disruptions over Israel’s inclusion in the event as its war in Gaza in response to Hamas’s October 7 attack rages on.

The song contest will be thousands of miles away — in Malmo, Sweden — but fury over the war is expected to be palpable in the small Scandinavian city, whose population will swell with both Eurovision fans and protesters. Over 1,000 artists in the host country signed a letter calling for Israel’s disqualification for its “brutal warfare in Gaza,” according to the Guardian, and pro-Palestinian groups are lobbying state broadcasters not to air the event and calling on artists to refuse to participate.

Already, Swedish pop star Eric Saade appeared wearing a keffiyeh — a traditional scarf that has come to symbolize resistance to Israel’s incursion into Gaza — around his wrist during a performance on Tuesday night. A spokesperson for European Broadcasting Union (EBU) — which organizes the event — issued their “regrets” over the decision, according to the BBC. Saade has appeared as a Eurovision competitor before but was a guest performer last night.

Politics intruding on Eurovision isn’t new, despite its stated desire to stay above the fray.

In 2022, the contest disqualified Russia over its invasion of Ukraine.

Nonetheless, the EBU has rejected demands from pro-Palestinian activists, maintaining that it is a music event that keeps political messages away from the stage. Sweden will bring additional police from Denmark and Norway to Malmo, and the Eurovision Song Contest is expected to continue with the usual participants, including Israel, which has won Eurovision four times since joining the contest in 1973.

The EBU did require Israel to revise its entry this year, though, which was a song initially called “October Rain,” featuring the lyrics “those that write history, stand with me.” The song appeared to be a reference to Hamas’s October 7 attack on southern Israel that killed more than 1,100 people and led to the kidnapping of some 240, dozens of whom are still held hostage.

The reference to the attack was deemed too political by the EBU, and thus ineligible for the competition. Israel initially refused to sanitize its entry, even threatening to pull out of the competition, but revised it after involvement from President Isaac Herzog. The new song, which will be performed by Eden Golan, is now a romantic ballad entitled “Hurricane,” and the opening line was changed to “writer of my symphony, play with me.”

The controversy over Israel’s song and the protests looming over this year’s event underscore how much politics encroaches on an event that seeks to promote a utopian vision of global comity. But as Tess Megginson, a PhD candidate studying European history at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, argues, the song contest, founded during the Cold War with seven European countries and initially excluding the Soviet Union, has always been a space for political performance. In an interview with Today, Explained host Sean Rameswaram, she explained that while some of today’s controversy is unique, the contest had some of its most contentious political moments after the dissolution of the Soviet Union.

This conversation has been edited for length and clarity. You can listen to a longer version of Megginson’s interview and highlights from Eurovision on Today, Explained. —Haleema Shah, producer

Sean Rameswaram

You wrote in the Washington Post that politics at Eurovision is nothing new, using the ’90s as an example.

Tess Megginson

I would argue the 1990s are actually some of the most political years of the contest, and this actually isn’t always a bad thing.

As soon as you have the Eastern European countries start joining, hosts are talking about welcome to the rest of Europe, and now we’re finally unified. And you have all these songs about peace and unity and breaking down walls. Some of these do quite well in the contest, some of them don’t. In 1990, the first competition held in Eastern Europe, in Zagreb, the winning entry was Italy with “Insieme: 1992.” The hook in the chorus is “unite, unite Europe,” and it got a very good reception and won the competition.

It is a really beautiful time in the contest, but also in the ’90s you have the Yugoslav wars. And this is the first time that we actually see a country banned from the competition. Yugoslavia was banned from the contest shortly after the 1992 competition because of the siege of Sarajevo. UN sanctions are imposed against Yugoslavia, and Bosnia is able to participate in the competition, but Yugoslavia cannot. Even though Bosnia is not participating with a song entry, they’re still able to vote in the contest [and] call into the contest while under siege.

Sean Rameswaram

Wow.

Tess Megginson

The phone line initially disconnects and it goes dead. And there’s just this silence that falls over the audience. Soon they’re able to reconnect, and there’s a loud applause and cheering from the audience as they’re able to give their points for the contest. It’s a really beautiful moment of solidarity for people who were at war and under occupation. And it’s something that, even though it’s a very political moment, it’s quite a beautiful moment in the contest’s history.

Sean Rameswaram

These political moments we’re talking about — the fall of the Berlin Wall, the fall of communism, the genocide in Bosnia — they all happened on the continent of Europe. But here, now, in 2024, we’ve got this controversy and calls for a boycott that relate to something happening in the Middle East. Is there a precedent for that at Eurovision?

Tess Megginson

Yeah. Boycotts in Eurovision are almost as old as the contest itself, starting in the 1970s. In 1975, Turkey invaded Cyprus, and Greece boycotted the contest. The following year, Greece submits a song that is a very anti-war song and clearly referencing Turkey’s presence in Cyprus, and Turkey boycotts the contest. So that’s kind of the first example we see of these big boycotts.

More recently [there have] been calls to boycott Azerbaijan because of their treatment of their viewers who vote for Armenia. They’ve threatened to block the Armenian broadcast before. And of course, when they hosted the contest in 2012, there was a big outcry because they displaced a lot of people living in a community in Baku because they were building a stadium just to host the Eurovision Song Contest.

Sean Rameswaram

Wow.

Tess Megginson

And then of course, Russia’s the big one that you see a lot in the conversation because of its invasion of Ukraine, finally banned from the competition in 2022.

Sean Rameswaram

It sounds like it’s par for the course to have this level of controversy and calls for boycotts and tensions between nations at Eurovision. Does that make this current controversy less exceptional?

Tess Megginson

Not necessarily. I think there’s also been a long and unique history with Israel’s participation in the contest. As the first non-European country to participate, it’s also had relative success since it joined.

It’s won the contest four times and hosted it three times. All the way back in 1978, we started seeing these controversies arise with Israel’s participation. In 1978, they actually won the competition, but in Jordan, which was a member of the EBU, although not participating in the contest, they didn’t air the Israel entry. And when it became clear that Israel was going to win the contest, they cut the broadcast short and announced Belgium as the winner in Jordan.

Sean Rameswaram

What? They just lied?!

Tess Megginson

Yep, they lied to people in Jordan and said Belgium had won the contest. I don’t know when they found out that wasn’t true.

Sean Rameswaram

When they got Wikipedia.

Tess Megginson

Yeah. Pre-Internet, it was a lot easier to get away with that sort of thing.

Sean Rameswaram

How does Eurovision typically handle the boycotts and the tensions between these nations?

Tess Megginson

Not very well. They officially market themselves as an apolitical contest. So when politics enter the contest, they are not happy about it. One kind of fun example is in 2015, they introduced what they called “anti-booing technology.”

You couldn’t hear the crowd booing the Russian entry during the contest. I don’t think it’s been used since then, but I wouldn’t be surprised if they use a similar thing this year.

And another thing is fines — they do really like to fine their members. In 2019, when Israel hosted the contest, there were calls to boycott and move the contest out of Israel. Icelandic performers held up Palestinian flags and the Icelandic broadcaster ended up getting a huge fine from the EBU for doing that.

Sean Rameswaram

Do you think Eurovision this year will end up transcending our current geopolitical situation?

Tess Megginson

There are a couple signs we can look for to see how Europeans are reacting to Israel’s participation. The first is going to be the live audience reaction. This is going to be more difficult for us to see as viewers; we’re probably going to have to rely on things like social media and journalists on the ground to hear how the audience is reacting to Israel participating.

But we’re also going to see this maybe with the other performers, if they, say, wave Palestinian flags like we saw in 2019. Also, when the votes are given out at the end of the competition, are people going to boo countries that give Israel top votes? We’ll have to see.

A second thing, of course, is the popular vote. Will people vote for Israel or will this be a protest vote against them? If there’s a big difference between the jury vote for Israel and the popular vote, that’s probably a sign that people are not voting for Israel because they don’t agree with what they’re doing in Gaza.

The third thing to see is viewership. If the boycott is effective, there’ll probably be a stark decline in viewership in certain countries. Obviously, there are other factors at play here. So if a country, a participant, doesn’t make the finals, there could be a decline in viewership because of that, but if we see a significant decline, I would probably argue that it’s the boycott.

Be sure to follow Today, Explained on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Pandora, or wherever you listen to podcasts.


Read full article on: vox.com
Biden, Fauci and Butker each deliver starkly different speeches — and the best message gets vilified
The graduating class of 2024 has been treated to three very different commencement speeches in recent days. Only one was not self-serving, dishonest and destructive.
nypost.com
Discusión entre dos mujeres desencadena tiroteo que deja 11 heridos en Georgia
Una discusión entre dos mujeres desencadenó un tiroteo que dejó 11 heridos en una concurrida zona turística de Savannah el sábado por la noche, una de cinco balaceras el fin de semana en esta ciudad de Georgia, dos de ellas con víctimas mortales, informaron las autoridades.
latimes.com
Justin Thomas wanted hometown PGA Championship win ‘a little too bad’
Justin Thomas didn’t win the PGA Championship in his hometown this week, but he walked off the 18th green after Sunday’s round at Valhalla feeling like a winner.
nypost.com
Seis muertos y 10 heridos en Idaho al chocar camioneta pickup con furgoneta
Seis personas perdieron la vida en Idaho al chocar una camioneta pickup con una furgoneta de pasajeros, dijeron autoridades.
latimes.com
Opositora Gálvez mide fuerzas ante Sheinbaum con un gran acto en Ciudad de México y el debate final
CIUDAD DE MÉXICO (AP) — Faltan dos semanas para las elecciones presidenciales de México y la opositora Xóchitl Gálvez afrontó un día decisivo el domingo para medir sus fuerzas ante la candidata puntera, la oficialista Claudia Sheinbaum, con un gran acto en la capital y el debate final.
latimes.com
Yankees ‘locker buddies’ Jose Trevino, Jon Berti combine for sneaky defensive gem
Jose Trevino smacked a game-tying, two-run single and was robbed of what would have been his sixth home run of the year. But the Yankees catcher did not need a bat on the most memorable and impressive play of the afternoon.
nypost.com
Knicks’ OG Anunoby ‘couldn’t move’ in brief Game 7 return
OG Anunoby tested the balky hamstring he injured in Game 2 of this series and was in the starting lineup but he was unable to play for the final three-plus quarters of the Knicks’ 130-109 defeat.
nypost.com
Florida man drunkenly steals school bus, drives 4 hours to Miami: police
Florida man Daniel Saez, 32, is accused of stealing a school bus while high and drunk and driving it around the state. He was charged with grand theft auto.
foxnews.com
RFK Jr.'s fight for presidential debate seat shows the two-party system 'is not working'
RFK Jr. claims that his political opponents don’t want to debate him on stage or “talk about the issues" that are of concern to the American public.
foxnews.com
‘The Sympathizer’ Stages a Second Vietnam War
Photo Illustration by Erin O'Flynn/The Daily Beast/HBOIn the sixth episode of The Sympathizer, the General (Toan Le) is preparing a militia to invade Vietnam and stage a second Vietnam War. Great. Awesome. Definitely what the world needs: More war! But as the Captain (Hoa Xuande) tours the General’s secret military base in the plains of California, he finds out something even worse about this mess—his best friend Bon (Fred Nguyen Khan) has volunteered for this doomed-to-lose army.Captain could’ve just avoided this shitshow entirely if it wasn’t for Bon. Sure, whatever! Send everyone back to Vietnam to lose the war all over again. But now, he has to defend his friend. Ugh. Captain sends a coded message to Man (Duy Nguyễn) that their side will end up killing Bon if the two of them don’t do anything to protect their non-Commie friend. While he waits for a response, Captain does some digging to figure out where the funds for this militia are coming from.They’ve got to be coming from one of the many characters Robert Downey, Jr. is playing, either CIA informant Claude or politician Ned Godwin. It’s the latter, so Captain volunteers for the campaign to get insider information on the donations—proof, essentially, to send back to Man. Captain schmoozes around with Ned’s wife (Veronica Della Vedova) to get access to the senator’s private drawing room, where, later, he takes the donation documents.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Scottie Scheffler finishes strong in final round as chaotic PGA Championship comes to close
Scottie Scheffler's chaotic week in Louisville came to an end on Sunday, but he finished on a high note at Valhalla Golf Club to end tied for eighth at the PGA Championship.
foxnews.com
Courteney Cox says late ‘Friends’ co-star Matthew Perry still ‘visits’ her after death: He’s ‘around for sure’
Perry was pronounced dead on Oct. 28, 2023, at age 54 after being found unresponsive in a hot tub at his home.
nypost.com
Maya Brady hits game-winning single that sends UCLA softball to Super Regional
UCLA dominated Grand Canyon from the opening, winning the Bruins' NCAA regional Sunday and advancing to host Georgia in the Super Regional round.
latimes.com
Mets have serious issues beyond Edwin Diaz’s closer status
Their pen situation is far from a disaster thanks to solid backup plans. But ultimately though, the Mets all know they need Edwin Diaz to be right to have a real chance to reach their goal and make the playoffs.
1 h
nypost.com
Reggie Miller gleefully trolls Knicks after Pacers’ convincing Game 7 win
Pacers great Reggie Miller trolled the Knicks on Instagram following their Game 7 loss to Indiana on Sunday at Madison Square Garden.
1 h
nypost.com
New York man with ties to European royalty reported missing in California: police
Authorities in California are searching for a New York man with ties to European royalty who disappeared in Malibu early Saturday morning.
1 h
foxnews.com
Arizona police save 6-month-old shot multiple times, find suspect dead in burning home after hostage standoff
Arizona police rushed into a home to rescue a 6-month-old infant who had been shot multiple times after a suspect took the child and the child’s mother hostage on Friday, authorities said.
1 h
nypost.com
Foster Care Activist Dr. Candice Matthews Says Death Threats Won’t Stop Her
Courtesy of Candice MatthewsA Black civil rights activist in Texas who is notorious for “dropping the hammer for accountability on corruption” and was targeted with a racist hate letter and noose has spoken about how the threat will not stop her mission from protecting foster children of color in the Lone Star State from abuse.In an exclusive interview with The Daily Beast, Dr. Candice Matthews said she was scared “at first,” but that didn’t deter her.“At the end of the day, I’m the voice of the people. I’m the voice for children, the voiceless. My job is to protect the unprotected and that’s what I’m going to,” she said.Read more at The Daily Beast.
1 h
thedailybeast.com
Pacers’ Tyrese Haliburton dons Reggie Miller choke-sign hoodie after tormenting Knicks
A courtside Knicks fan stirred up Tyrese Haliburton, just like Spike Lee had done to Reggie Miller almost 30 years earlier. This one went even worse for the Knicks.
1 h
nypost.com
Schumer says Senate to take up border bill again this week
The Senate will vote this week on a bipartisan border security bill after previous efforts collapsed when Republicans withdrew their support, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said.
1 h
foxnews.com
St. John’s leaves no doubt, repeats as DCSAA softball champions
The Cadets coasted to an 11-1 win over Georgetown Visitation.
2 h
washingtonpost.com
Paul Pierce stomps on Jalen Brunson jersey after Knicks’ loss in bizarre video
Paul Pierce didn't wait long to celebrate the Knicks' demise.
2 h
nypost.com
Pope Francis Calls Out ‘Conservative’ American Bishops on ‘60 Minutes’
60 MinutesPope Francis on Sunday railed against conservative bishops in the United States who oppose his efforts to revitalize the Catholic Church.When quizzed by CBS Evening News anchor Norah O’Donnell over the issue on Sunday’s 60 Minutes, the 87-year-old provided an unexpected response.“You used an adjective, ‘conservative,’” Pope Francis said. “That is, conservative is one who clings to something and does not want to see beyond that. It is a suicidal attitude. Because one thing is to take tradition into account, to consider situations from the past, but quite another is to be closed up inside a dogmatic box.”Read more at The Daily Beast.
2 h
thedailybeast.com
Auburn running back Brian Battie critically injured in Florida shooting that killed brother
Auburn running back Brian Battie is in critical condition after being shot over the weekend and his brother Tommie was killed in the same shooting in Sarasota, Florida over the weekend. 
2 h
nypost.com
Comet Fragment Explodes in Dark Skies Over Spain and Portugal
A brilliant flash of blue, green and white on Saturday night came from a shard of an as yet unidentified comet that was moving around 100,000 miles per hour, experts said.
2 h
nytimes.com
F1 News: Max Verstappen Tops Off His Emilia Romagna GP Victory With 24-Hour Race Win
Max Verstappen's won the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix on the same weekend as a 24-hour sim race.
2 h
newsweek.com
‘MaryLand’ on PBS Ending Explained: Does Mary’s Dying Wish to Stay on the Isle of Man Come True?
Do Becca and Rosaline protect their mother's dream?
2 h
nypost.com
Cassie's lawyer criticizes Diddy's 'disingenuous' apology video as stars react to hotel assault statement
Sean "Diddy" Combs attempted to apologize for past aggressions against Cassie, but 50 Cent and Aubrey O'Day were not impressed.
2 h
foxnews.com
Canadians Humana-Paredes, Wilkerson win Olympic preview at Huntington Beach Open
The loaded women's field included three of the top five teams, all headed to the Olympic Games. Taylor Sander and Taylor Crabb cruised to the men's title.
2 h
latimes.com
Rapper Cardi B won’t endorse Biden in 2024: ‘Layers of disappointment’
The rapper said that while she still believes Trump to be a threat, she's felt "layers of disappointment" under Biden.
2 h
nypost.com
Shani Louk, whose body was paraded through Gaza, laid to rest in Israeli funeral: ‘In your death you became a symbol’
Shani Louk's body was recently recovered from Rafah by the Israeli Defense Forces.
2 h
nypost.com
A three-run comeback lifts Jackson-Reed to DCSAA baseball title
Etan Rosario produced the walk-off single in the seventh as the Tigers earned a 5-4 win against Maret.
2 h
washingtonpost.com
Missouri museum achieves world record for largest gathering of people with underwear on their heads
A museum in Missouri recently broke a Guinness World Record for hosting the world’s largest gathering of people with underwear on their head. 
2 h
nypost.com
A Brief History of Political Podium Scandals
Photo Illustration by Thomas Levinson/The Daily Beast/GettyIt was the wobble felt around the world.Well—at least by a room of Minnesota Republicans who watched Donald Trump’s podium teeter during a speech Friday night. And, of course, the 450,000-some X-users who came upon a clip of Trump swaying on stage courtesy of a Biden-Harris campaign account that’s seeking to cast the former president as over-the-hill.As Trump delivered a speech to the annual Minnesota GOP dinner, a budget-looking podium buckled as he leaned forward to make a point. An exasperated Trump then teed off, bemoaning that the “freaking place is falling down” and chiding that the lectern was tilting further and further left like “too many other things.”Read more at The Daily Beast.
2 h
thedailybeast.com
‘Bachelorette’ star Ryan Sutter says he, Trista Sutter are ‘fine’ after series of confusing posts
"Bachlorette" alum Ryan Sutter tried to clarify a series of cryptic posts on social media that made it seem like he and wife Trista were no longer together.
2 h
foxnews.com
Arizona man sentenced to life in prison for burying wife alive in hand-dug grave
An Arizona man was sentenced to life in prison for burying his wife alive and killing her, as well as an addition 16.5 years for kidnapping, forgery and fraud.
2 h
foxnews.com
NYC-Dublin portal reopens with limited hours, new guardrails to deter shenanigans
“The team will continue making updates as needed to ensure that everyone can continue to enjoy the Portal,” the Flatiron NoMad Partnership and Dublin City Council said in a joint statement on Sunday.
2 h
nypost.com
What could have been hangs over Scottie Scheffler after uneven PGA Championship, arrest whirlwind
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Scottie Scheffler’s stressful and adventurous week was almost over. It was time to go home. Finally. The world’s No. 1-ranked player was standing on the 18th green under the searing Kentucky sun waiting for his playing partner, Mark Hubbard, to putt out so he could make his 271st and final stroke of...
2 h
nypost.com
Colin Jost cracks awkward joke about wife Scarlett Johansson’s body on ‘SNL’
The joke was delivered during a traditional bit that requires Jost and Weekend Update co-host Michael Che to write offensive jokes for each other.
2 h
nypost.com
Ella Steven’s late goal leads Gotham over Red Stars to push unbeaten streak to five
By the time Gotham's 2-1 win against the Chicago Red Stars (5-3-1) ended, it was Ella Stevens that was the center of their celebration against her former team from the past three years.
2 h
nypost.com
Many families take patients off life support too soon after traumatic brain injuries: study
Many patients who died after traumatic brain injuries may have survived and recovered if their families had waited to take them off life support, a new study found.
2 h
foxnews.com
Ed Dwight, 90, America’s first black astronaut candidate, finally goes to space 60 years later
Ed Dwight, America’s first Black astronaut candidate, finally rocketed into space 60 years later, flying with Jeff Bezos’ rocket company on Sunday.
3 h
nypost.com
Knicks fought until there was ‘nothing left to give’ in bitter end to captivating season
By the end, most of the faithful were still in the house, even if they couldn’t wait for the final buzzer to put them all out of their misery. Josh Hart drew his sixth foul, three minutes before the end. The Knicks were down by 17. The season was inching toward the abyss. And still...
3 h
nypost.com
Oakland locals blame homeless encampment for city removing traffic lights to stop copper thieves
Oakland, California replaced a traffic light at an intersection with stop signs as locals place blame at a growing nearby homeless encampment.
3 h
foxnews.com
‘90 Day Fiancé’ Star “Big” Ed Brown Regrets How He Called Off His Wedding To Liz Woods: “It Was Torture”
"I don't regret calling off the wedding as much as I regret how I did it."
3 h
nypost.com
Carlos Rodon feels and looks more at ‘home’ in year 2 with Yankees
Physically, a slimmer Carlos Rodon looks differently this season. With a deeper repertoire, Rodon is pitching differently and no longer so reliant upon his fastball and slider.
3 h
nypost.com
Israel continues operation in Rafah amid growing pressure
Israel continued its attacks in Gaza, including in the southern Gaza city of Rafah, despite growing international pressure to limit the scope of the offensive. Imtiaz Tyab has more.
3 h
cbsnews.com
Georgetown Visitation closes season with DCSAA girls’ lacrosse title
The Cubs led for much of Sunday’s championship, making the most of their final game as a team.
3 h
washingtonpost.com