±«Óãtv

Explore the ±«Óãtv
This page has been archived and is no longer updated. Find out more about page archiving.

24 September 2014
Press Office
Search the ±«Óãtv and Web
Search ±«Óãtv Press Office

±«Óãtv ±«Óãtvpage

Contact Us

Press Packs

Eurovision Song Contest 2008


About the Eurovision Song Contest


The entrants

Andorra Albania Armenia Azerbaijan
Belarus Belgium Bosnia & Herz. Bulgaria
Croatia Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark
Estonia Finland France Ìý
FYR Macedonia Georgia Germany Greece
Hungary Iceland Ireland Israel
Latvia Lithuania Malta Moldova
Montenegro Netherlands Norway Poland
Portugal Romania Russia San Marino
Serbia Slovenia Spain Sweden
Switzerland Turkey Ukraine UK

Ìý

Eurovision facts and figures

  • An estimated 100 million people across the world watch the contest every year.
  • Last year, 11 million British viewers watched the culmination of the voting on ±«Óãtv One.
  • The United Kingdom has won the contest five times.
  • Norway has been at the bottom of the list 10 times.
  • The Eurovision Song Contest has been broadcast every year since 1956, which makes it one of the longest-running television programmes in the world.
  • The competition has also been broadcast in Australia, Canada, Egypt, Hong Kong, India, Jordan, Korea, New Zealand and the United States, even though these countries do not participate.
  • The most covered Eurovision song is Volare, which has been covered by top stars including Frank Sinatra, Cliff Richard and David Bowie.
  • More winning songs have been performed in English than any other language.
  • Songs in English have won 22 times. French is also popular, with 14 victories, although this year's French entry will be in English. Dutch and Hebrew songs have won three times each.
  • The Eurovision Song Contest is the biggest non-sporting event in the world.
  • Celine Dion, Olivia Newton-John, Julio Iglesias and Las Ketchup have all participated in Eurovision.
  • The United Kingdom didn't award a single point to Abba in 1974.
  • In 1969 there was a four-way tie at the top of the leader board.
  • The UK's Lulu was one of the four winners that year.
  • Last year's UK entry Scooch reached number five in the UK singles chart, the highest chart placing since Katrina & The Waves in 1997.
  • Ruslana, the Ukranian winner of 2004 Eurovision Song Contest, was elected to the country's parliament in 2006.

Ìý

Ìý


EUROVISION SONG CONTEST 2008 PRESS PACK

RELATED PRESS OFFICE LINKS:

PRESS RELEASES

BIOGRAPHIES

PRESS PACKS

RELATED ±«Óãtv LINKS:


RELATED WEB LINKS:


The ±«Óãtv is not responsible for the content of external internet sites

RSS FEEDS:

< previous section next section >
Printable version top^


The ±«Óãtv is not responsible for the content of external internet sites



About the ±«Óãtv | Help | Terms of Use | Privacy & Cookies Policy
Ìý