Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2007

Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2007
Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2007
"Make A Big Splash"
Junior ESC 07.png
Final date 8 December 2007
Presenter(s) Sipke Jan Bousema
Kim-Lian van der Meij
Host broadcaster Netherlands AVRO
Venue Ahoy, Rotterdam, Netherlands
Winning song  Belarus
"S druz'yami"
Voting system
Each country awards 1-8, 10, and 12 points to their 10 favourite songs
Number of entries 17
Debuting countries  Armenia
 Bulgaria
 Georgia
 Lithuania
Returning countries None
Withdrawing countries  Croatia
 Spain
Nul points All countries get 12 points from start
Opening act
60 young dancers performing to "One World"
Interval act
Katie Melua, Ch!pz, all JESC 2007 participants singing "One World"
Junior Eurovision Song Contest
◄2006    Wiki Eurovision Heart (Infobox).svg    2008►

The Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2007 was the fifth edition of the Junior Eurovision Song Contest. It was held in the Ahoy' indoor sporting arena in Rotterdam, the Netherlands on 8 December.[1] The host country was chosen by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) on 13 July 2006. The host city was announced on 11 September 2006. AVRO won the rights to host the show over Hrvatska radiotelevizija (HRT) of Croatia (who didn't actually participate in this contest) and the Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation (CyBC) of Cyprus.[2] The budget for the contest was stated to be more than 2,000,000.[3]

Belarus won the Contest by a single point over Armenia. The winning performer was Alexey Zhigalkovich, singing "S druzyami" (With friends). This was Belarus' second win; they won for the first time in 2005. This is the only contest to date where the winning song did not receive points from all of the participating countries.

Contents

Participants

Patricia Goldsmith, Communications Adviser of the Eurovision TV department, stated that "18 countries will take part" in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2007[4] though Spanish broadcaster Radiotelevisión Española (RTVE) later announced its withdraw from the contest.[5]

Armenia, Bulgaria, Georgia and Lithuania were the newcomers this year. Bosnia and Herzegovina was going to be one of the four débutants but Georgia took this place when Radiotelevizija Bosne i Hercegovine (BHRT) decided to withdraw from participation.[1]

The minimum age of contestants was raised from 8 to 10 years this year.

Individual entries

Results

Draw Country Language Artist Song English translation Spokesperson Place Points
01  Georgia Georgian Mariam Romelashvili "Odelia Ranuni"
(ოდელია რანუნი)
Nino Epremidze 4 116
02  Belgium Dutch Trust "Anders" Different Bab Buelens 15 19
03  Armenia Armenian Arevik "Erazanq" (Երազանք) A dream Ani Sahakyan 2 136
04  Cyprus Greek Yiorgos Ioannides "I mousiki dinei ftera"
(Ι μουσική δίνει φτερά)
Music gives wings Natalie Michael[6] 14 29
05  Portugal Portuguese Jorge Leiria "Só quero é cantar" I only want to sing Clara Pedro[6] 16 15
06  Russia Russian Alexandra Golovchenko "Otlichnitsa" (Отличница) "A" student Marina Knyazeva[6] 6 105
07  Romania Romanian 4Kids "Sha-la-la" Iulia Ciobanu 10 54
08  Bulgaria Bulgarian Bon-Bon "Bonbolandiya" (Бонболандия) Land of sweets Lyubomir Hadzhiiski[6] 7 86
09  Serbia Serbian Nevena Božović "Piši mi" (Пиши ми) Write to me Andjelija (Angela) Eric 3 120
10  Netherlands Dutch Lisa, Amy & Shelley "Adem in, adem uit" Breathe in, breathe out Kimberly Nieuwenhuizen 11 39
11  Macedonia Macedonian Rosica Kulakova &
Dimitar Stojmenovski
"Ding Ding Dong" (Динг Динг Донг) Mila Zafirovic 5 111
12  Ukraine Ukrainian Ilona Galytska "Urok hlamuru" (Урок гламуру) Lesson of glamour Assol 9 56
13  Sweden Swedish Frida Sandén "Nu eller aldrig" Now or never Molly Sandén 8 83
14  Malta English Cute "Music" Sophie Debattista 12 37
15  Greece Greek Made in Greece "Kapou mperdeftika"
(Καποu μπερδεύτηκα)
Confused Chloe Sofia Boleti 17 14
16  Lithuania Lithuanian Lina Joy "Kai miestas snaudžia" When the town is asleep Indre Grikstelyte[6] 13 33
17  Belarus Russian Alexey Zhigalkovich "S druz'yami" (С друзьями) With friends Alexander Rogachevskiy 1 137

Score sheet

Results
Total Score Georgia Belgium Armenia Cyprus Portugal Russia Romania Bulgaria Serbia Netherlands Macedonia Ukraine Sweden Malta Greece Lithuania Belarus
Contestants Georgia 116 4 12 10 4 8 4 5 6 5 8 5 10 8 10 5
Belgium 19 7
Armenia 136 12 12 12 12 12 8 5 12 12 10 10 7
Cyprus 29 5 12
Portugal 15 2 1
Russia 105 1 2 10 5 6 3 6 10 3 10 7 2 8 4 4 12
Romania 54 8 8 1 7 4 3 1 5 2 1 2
Bulgaria 86 6 7 6 7 1 3 8 7 5 7 3 3 4 5 2
Serbia 120 7 6 4 6 7 7 5 4 8 12 6 12 6 6 6 6
Netherlands 39 3 10 1 4 1 6 2
Macedonia 111 5 3 7 3 10 5 10 12 12 5 7 7 5 8
Ukraine 56 10 3 3 6 1 1 1 1 1 7 10
Sweden 83 2 8 5 4 6 2 6 10 6 4 3 3 8 4
Malta 37 2 2 3 2 1 4 1 4 3 3
Greece 14 2
Lithuania 33 8 1 2 3 2 2 2 1
Belarus 137 4 5 8 12 10 7 10 8 4 8 10 8 12 7 12
The table is ordered by appearance
All countries automatically receive 12 points

12 points

Below is a summary of all 12 points received:

N. Recipient nation Voting nation
7 Armenia Belgium, Cyprus, Georgia, Netherlands, Romania, Russia, Ukraine
3 Belarus Lithuania, Malta, Portugal
2 Serbia Macedonia, Sweden
Macedonia Bulgaria, Serbia
1 Cyprus Greece
Georgia Armenia
Russia Belarus
  • All countries were given 12 points at the start of voting. This is so no country gets nul points.

Broadcasting

Australia Australia
Although Australia is not itself eligible to enter, it broadcast the event on the Special Broadcasting Service (SBS). As is the case each year, it did not however broadcast it live due to the difference in Australian time zones. It was screened at the later date of 24 December at 4.30pm in the afternoon, and repeated a few weeks after. Since this period is non-rated for television stations, how many people watched the broadcast is unknown.
AzerbaijanAzerbaijan
Israel Israel
The contest was broadcast in Israel where it was watched by 400,000 viewers.[7]

Commentators

Controversy

Over the past few years, most Eurovision contests have involved some controversy due to allegations of song plagiarism. This year is no exception, the Russian entry received claims from an adult composer that she is the original songwriter of the song. Further claims were made that the song was performed before the national selection as far as a year ago in August 2006 which is allegedly a violation of the rules as defined by the EBU. At the time of writing no resolution to this matter has been made.[8]

Official CD and DVD

An official double CD of the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2007 was intended to go on sale on 23 December 2007. The EBU announced that there would be no official DVD of the Contest due to a lack of interest.[9]

The Belgian single was released on 5 October 2007, while the Dutch entry went on sale on 26 October 2007. There are no plans for commercial single releases of JESC entries in other countries, but a few promo copies for Rotterdam might be printed.[10]

References


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