Some shots from earlier this year in Lisboa and about! Including Cabo da Roca, the most western point of Europe. Some photos from Almada, the other side of the river.
"...Buildings with a hundred floors, swinging 'round revolvin' doors Maybe I don't know where they take me but gotta keep movin' on Movin' on, fly away, breakaway.."
So..... Community is buzzing about the results of the Grand Final and especially the voting system. I find it unlikely EBU wouldn’t change the system in somehow considering how huge is the people’s reaction and they did drop the juries from semifinals last year so... Anyhow here are some options.
1. JURIES ARE DROPPED FROM EUROVISION ENTIRELY
France 2023.
I don’t think this will happen. First of all, there are too many delegations and countries that benefit from the jurers. Second, it wouldn’t change the problem. Last year folks were crying why Juries didn’t stop Ukraine winning with sympathy televotes. People don’t always know the best and we do make decisions based on politics etc soo.. Every year we’re not happy with either side of voting system but I do believe we need both sides to continue in the contest.
2. JURIES PERCENTAGE WILL BE DROPPED
Currently jurers hold 50% of the votes in the final (semifinals it’s only televote). In some national finals their percentage is less and people votes have more impact. If this scenario did happen, would it be 30%? 40%? 45%?
Ukraine 2023.
3. JURERS WILL BE INCREASED TO ADD DIVERSITY OF THE VOTES
Currently there are 5 jurers / country. Would adding more people bring diversity of giving the points? Because they often are surprisingly aligned on their big favourites. They should be musical professionals or media professionals experticed in music industry and they’re not allowed to talk about the acts to each other or have any connection to the delegations, artists etc.
4. BRINGING IN 3RD VOTES (TELESCOPIC)
Georgia 2023.
Sanremo and Benidorm Fest use Telescopic votes. I think they have 15-25% impact to the final points. This might help to smoothe the biggest differences between audience and the jurers or make the final decision in some cases perhaps.
5. KEEPING JURERS BUT MAKING JURY SHOW PERFORMANCES PUBLIC
Currently only the audience that bought the tickets to Jury shows and press sees the actual Jury show. Would it be better to add visibility here by publishing the performances later on Youtube?
Armenia 2023.
6. KEEPING JURERS AND CHANGING CRITERIA
So the current criteria being:
Vocal capacity of the artist(s)
Performance on stage
Composition and originality of the song
Overall impression of the act
Every year the entries outside of pop genre seem to be receiving less Jury love. Jurers should represent different genres and parts of the industry though to appreciate rock, rap entries for example. I wonder is the singing overly hyped in the criteria and should there be different guidelines for it because you can’t judge pop song singing and rock song singing in the same way.
7. KEEPING JURERS BUT MAKING THEM VOTE ALL THE ACTS
Croatia 2023.
Again to make the jury votes more even and less in favour for the big favourites only, would it help if they’d judge ALL the entries? Having limitations on how many 12 points etc you can give of course. This would also solve the zero points dilemma.
8. KEEPING JURIES BUT CHANGING TELEVOTING TO VOTE 3 ACTS WITH THE SAME PRICE
In Junior Eurovision public must choose 3 different acts I believe. Not sure how this would work but it would help diving the points instead of people voting for their one and only favourite. In years like these when we have such a strong televote favourites like Finland and Sweden, they tend to suck all the votes and there isn’t much left to anyone else. We saw the televote scores being quite small even for songs that were loved (Austria, Moldova, Czechia etc)
Portugal 2023.
9. KEEPING THE JURIES BUT CHANGING TELEVOTING FOR FREE
They do this in Melodiefestivalen I think. They’ve built up an app just for voting where voting is free. Again people wouldn’t just vote for the number 1 favourite but several acts and this would also perhaps prevent the unpleasent zero points situations.
What are your thoughts on the voting system in Eurovision and how would you change it?
Home sweet home.. when it was still summer :)
Tallinn in black and white..
I lived in the city of Montréal in French Canada for a year 2013-2014. Somewhat a month before my departure to back home I headed out to city’s Old Port at the crack of dawn to capture the morning light. This was before my Nikon time so these photos were taken with my regular Sony camera.
This was the Sunday morning when Formula 1 event was in town within 8 million tourists and there was not a soul apart from me, my friend and a couple of fishermen..
Not every song hits you on a first listen. Multiple songs this year didn’t give the best first impressions but along with these spring months my opinion of them is changing and probably keeps on changing as the rehearsals start.
ALBANIA - Eugent Bushpepa - Mall
AUSTRIA - César Sampson - Nobody but you
ARMENIA - Sevak Khangyan - Qami
BULGARIA - EQUINOX - Bones
ESTONIA - Elina Nechayeva - La forza
F.Y.R. MACEDONIA - Eye Cue - Lost and found
GREECE - Yianna Terzi - Oniro mou
ITALY - Ermal Meta e Fabrizio Moro - Non mi avete fatto niente
THE NETHERLANDS - Waylon - Outaw in ‘em
SWITZERLAND - ZIBBZ - Stones
UKRAINE - Melovin - Under the ladder
Finish photographer Mikko Lagerstedt's enchanting photo series highlights some of Finland's most extraordinary landscapes, by concentrating on the horizon and what comes above and below it.
So finally in CANADA!!
Toronto was huge and confusing with all of its different cultures. Didn’t see much of it though.. gotta go back someday and figure out what’s that city is all about.
Because of the flight stuff I also missed the orientation at the local SWAP office which was the reason why I decided in first place to stay for the couple of days in the city and not continue straight to Montréal. But the staff was really helpful and they gave me all the information afterwards. I stayed in a hostel called Backpackers Inn and it was comfortable just for the one night but I was glad to go to Montréal and have a proper home there.
Like I said I definetely didn’t see that much of Toronto, only bit of the downtown area. The only sight/attraction I saw was the city hall or halls since there are two of them. The most recent one built in 1960’s and it was actually designed by Finnish architect Viljo Revell – never heard of him before though but all the publicity is for good right? Oh and I did see the CN Tower of course but you can see it from pretty much everywhere.
I came to Montréal by train on Friday and I was super glad that I had the flat all worked out. I’m not a big fan of staying in temporary accommodations. The flat was as good as it sounded and most importantly not a false one! I like my room even though it’s small..but the size has obviously been taken account when decorating it.
Small things matter, I have a big mirror, trash can and a bedside table. I’ve never had those things in my room while living Spain. My roomies seem nice. All French! Don’t know anything about the rest of the people living the same building or in the flat downstairs where I’ll be moving in September.
I absolutely love the area of Mile End where I’m living. My home street is so pretty. There are lots of restaurants, cafés, grocery stores in the neighbourhood. The subway is at 15min walking distance and there are a lot of bus connections as well. I’ve got a bank around the corner and also Starbucks(!). It’s a small town of its own. The landmark of city, “the mountain” of Mount Royal is also close.
I’ve given myself these couple of weeks just to adapt the change, the city and the language around me. I won’t even try to look for the job yet. I’ve just been shopping (because all my clothes were in the lost luggage), getting canadian phone number, bank account and sightseeing. This goes for a full-time day job, you know :D No problems getting a sleep in the nights.
The challenging part with the French quebécois is that the language is very old. They have an accent of their own, some expressions which don’t go together with the European French. Québecois won’t have a problem understanding Europeans francophones but it doesn’t work the other way. So I’ll have a bit of work to do there.
Though they aren’t as unflexible as I had imagined. Lots of people seem to be quite comfortable in English and there are of course some English speaking natives as well in the city. I do try always to start at least in French even though I’d have to change the language along the way. There are lots of tourists as well whom they “have” to speak English naturally. But otherwise it’s very French here. The emergency exits, stop signs etc everything is just in French.
Things are different here than what I imagined but definitely not disappointing.
As excited I was year ago to book my flight to Canada... I am now even more sad to book my flight back home. July 28th.
International Women’s Day ♀
Finnish traveler. Experienced Montréal and la vie québecoise 2013-2014. Living in Lisbon, Portugal since July 2017. Into photographing, eurovision, pop music, ice cream, coffee and travelling. MASTERLIST
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