Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2015

The Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2015 was the thirteenth edition of the annual Junior Eurovision Song Contest, and took place, for the first time, in Bulgaria. The Bulgarian national broadcaster BNT was the host broadcaster for the event. The final took place on 21 November 2015 and was held at the Arena Armeec in Sofia. Poli Genova, a Bulgarian singer and former representative of Bulgaria in the Eurovision Song Contest 2011 and the Eurovision Song Contest 2016, hosted the show. A total of seventeen countries participated, with Australia and Ireland making their debuts. Albania and Macedonia returned after being absent since the 2012 and 2013 contests, respectively. Croatia and Cyprus withdrew after returning in the 2014 edition, while Sweden withdrew for the first time since 2008.

Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2015
#Discover
Dates
Grand final21 November 2015
Host
VenueArena Armeec, Sofia, Bulgaria
Presenter(s)Poli Genova
Directed byChristian Biondani
Gordon Bornello
Executive supervisorVladislav Yakovlev
Executive producerJoana Levieva-Sawyer
Host broadcasterBulgarian National Television (BNT)
Interval actKrisia, Hasan & Ibrahim
Vincenzo Cantiello
All participants performing "Discover"
Websitejunioreurovision.tv/event/sofia-2015
Participants
Number of entries17
Debuting countries
Returning countries
Non-returning countries
Vote
Voting systemEach country/jury awards 12, 10, 8–1 points to their 10 favourite songs.
Winning song Malta
"Not My Soul"

The winner of the contest was Destiny Chukunyere, who represented Malta with the song "Not My Soul". Armenia and Slovenia finished in second and third place, respectively. This was Malta's second victory in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest, having won previously in 2013. This contest marked the second time a country won twice in a three-year period (following Belarus winning twice in a period of three years between 2005 and 2007). Malta's 185-point victory also achieved the highest number of points received by any entry in the history of the contest, beating Spain's record of 171 points set during the 2004 edition. This contest also set new records for the highest number of points for a non-winning entry with Armenia's 176 points and the highest placing and score achieved by a country without earning any 12-point scores with Slovenia's third place and 112 points.

Location

Locations of the bidding countries. The eliminated countries are marked in red. The chosen host country is marked in blue.
Arena Armeec, in Sofia. Venue for the 2015 Junior Eurovision.

Bidding phase

Following Italy's win at the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2014, the European Broadcasting Union had given the Italian broadcaster RAI the first refusal to host the 2015 contest.[1] However, on 15 January 2015, RAI declined the right to host the contest. The Executive Supervisor for the Junior Eurovision Song Contest, Vladislav Yakovlev, praised the Italian broadcaster RAI for their time looking into the possibilities of hosting, even though they made their debut appearance in 2014, and further explained how the EBU were in a lucky position to have received bids from two countries.[2]

The EBU announced later that day that they had received bids from two countries to host the contest; those countries being Bulgaria and last year host Malta,[3] who finished in second and fourth places respectively in 2014.[4] Bulgarian broadcaster BNT confirmed on 15 January they had submitted a bid to host the 2015 contest.[5] The national broadcaster for Malta, Public Broadcasting Services (PBS), stated prior to the 2014 contest that they would host again if they won.[6]

On 26 January 2015, it was announced that Bulgaria had been chosen to host the 2015 edition, which took place on 21 November 2015.[7] It was the first time that the nation organised any Eurovision event.[8] In March 2015, it was confirmed that Sofia would be the host city, with the Arena Armeec being the host venue.[7]

Format

Graphic design

Arena Armeec stage during the 2015 Junior Eurovision.

On 22 May 2015, a press conference devoted to the Junior Eurovision Song Contest was held in Vienna during the organisation of the Eurovision Song Contest 2015. At the press conference, the slogan for the 2015 Junior contest was revealed to be #Discover. The slogan was selected to signify how the Junior Eurovision Song Contest endeavours to find new melodies, explore new people and create links between individuals.[9]

On 23 June 2015, the EBU in conjunction with the host broadcaster BNT, presented the official logo for the 2015 edition, during the Steering Group meeting held in Sofia.[10] Viara Ankova, the Director General of the host broadcaster explained that the logo's concept was inspired behind the idea of a seeded head of a dandelion being blown, "something that everyone has done as a child".[10]

The logo shows how Bulgaria’s young people are the seeds of the future; venturing out from the safety of tradition to explore and discover a new future for themselves and for us all.

Viara Ankova, General Director of BNT[10]

The postcards used to introduce each competing nation during the show were built around the concept of selfies.[11] The postcards featured the competing artists sending their selfie to a group of three teenagers in Bulgaria, which would then inspire their adventures. Different sights and cities were showcased with the teenagers documenting their journey through their own selfies and sending them to the competing artist.[11]

Host

Poli Genova, host

Bulgarian singer Poli Genova was announced as the host of the competition on 21 October 2015.[12] Genova had previously represented Bulgaria at the Eurovision Song Contest in 2011. In addition, the running order draw and opening ceremonies were hosted by Bulgarian singer Joanna Dragneva, who had also previously represented Bulgaria at the Eurovision Song Contest in 2008 as part of Deep Zone Project.[13]

Participating countries

On 7 October 2015, it was confirmed that seventeen countries would take part in the contest. Australia and Ireland made their debut, Albania returned after a two-year absence and Macedonia returned after a one-year absence. Croatia and Cyprus withdrew after returning in the 2014 edition, while Sweden withdrew for the first time since 2008. It was the first time since 2007, that 17 countries would take part.[14]

Results

Draw[15] Country[16] Artist[16] Song[16] Language Place[17] Points[17]
01  Serbia Lena Stamenković "Lenina pesma" (Ленина песма) Serbian 7 79
02  Georgia The Virus "Gabede" (გაბედე) Georgian 10 51
03  Slovenia Lina Kuduzović "Prva ljubezen" Slovene, English1 3 112
04  Italy Chiara & Martina "Viva" Italian2 16 34
05  Netherlands Shalisa "Million Lights" Dutch, English 15 35
06  Australia Bella Paige "My Girls" English 8 64
07  Ireland Aimee Banks "Réalta na Mara" Irish3 12 36
08  Russia Mikhail Smirnov "Mechta (Dream)" (Мечта) Russian, English 6 80
09  Macedonia Ivana Petkovska & Magdalena Aleksovska "Pletenka – Braid of Love" (Плетенка) Macedonian2 17 26
10  Belarus Ruslan Aslanov "Volshebstvo (Magic)" (Волшебство) Russian, English[18] 4 105
11  Armenia Mika "Love" Armenian, English 2 176
12  Ukraine Anna Trincher "Pochny z sebe - Start with Yourself" (Почни з себе) Ukrainian, English 11 38
13  Bulgaria Gabriela Yordanova & Ivan Stoyanov "Colour of Hope" Bulgarian 9 62
14  San Marino Kamilla Ismailova "Mirror" Italian, English 14 36
15  Malta Destiny Chukunyere "Not My Soul" English 1 185
16  Albania Mishela Rapo "Dambaje" Albanian, English4, Imaginary5 5 93
17  Montenegro Jana Mirković "Oluja" Montenegrin 13 36

Notes

1.^ Contains one phrase in Italian.
2.^ Contains one phrase in English.
3.^ Contains one phrase in Latin.
4.^ Contains phrases in Turkish, Italian, German, French and Serbian.[19]
5.^ The Dambaje is an imaginary word

Scoreboard

Destiny Chukunyere who represented Malta with the song "Not My Soul", was declared the winner after all the votes had been cast from all of the seventeen participating countries and the kids' jury.[20] Below is a full breakdown of how the votes were cast.[17]

Destiny Chukunyere, winner, performing during the contest for Malta
Second placed Mika performing during the contest for Armenia
Third placed Lina Kuduzović performing during the contest for Slovenia
Voting procedure used:
  50% Jury & televote
  100% Jury vote
Results
Total score
Kids Jury
Serbia
Georgia
Slovenia
Italy
Netherlands
Australia
Ireland
Russia
Macedonia
Belarus
Armenia
Ukraine
Bulgaria
San Marino
Malta
Albania
Montenegro
Contestants
Serbia 7947423512445512
Georgia 51341585184
Slovenia 112665786681810108632
Italy 34231241
Netherlands 351651442
Australia 64773323211231053
Ireland 3624252216
Russia 805764613774783
Macedonia 261175
Belarus 10585832777104573746
Armenia 17610101210612108121012810107107
Ukraine 3823531462
Bulgaria 621185126386
San Marino 3673212
Malta 1851212101210101210651012612121210
Albania 9334481218572616428
Montenegro 3682851
All countries automatically receive 12 points

12 points

N. Contestant Nation(s) giving 12 points
8  Malta  Albania
 Armenia
 Australia
 Bulgaria
Kids Jury
 San Marino
 Serbia
 Slovenia
4  Armenia  Belarus
 Georgia
 Netherlands
 Russia
N. Contestant Nation(s) giving 12 points
2  Serbia  Macedonia
 Montenegro
1  Albania  Italy
 Bulgaria  Ireland
 Italy  Malta
 San Marino  Ukraine

Below is a summary of the split 12 points, from respectively each country's jury and televote (save for Australia, San Marino, and the Kids' Jury).

  • All countries were given 12 points at the start of voting. This was so no country got nul points.

Press vote

At the press center during the contest, members of the press were allowed to vote for their favourite acts. Below is the top five overall results, after all the votes had been cast.

Country Song Performer(s) Result
 Malta "Not My Soul" Destiny Chukunyere 759
 Australia "My Girls" Bella Paige 642
 Armenia "Love" Michael Varosyan 543
 Russia "Mechta (Dream)" Mikhail Smirnov 520
 Serbia "Lenina pesma" Lena Stamenković 499

Other countries

For a country to be eligible for potential participation in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest, it needs to be an active member of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU).[22] It is unknown whether the EBU issue invitations of participation to all 56 active members like they do for the Eurovision Song Contest.[22] The EBU Active Members listed below have made the announcements regards their decisions.[16]

Active EBU members

  •  Cyprus – On 29 June 2015, the national broadcaster of Cyprus, Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation (CyBC), revealed that they would not participate in the 2015 contest due to lack of funds.[23]
  •  FranceFrance 2 announced on 24 June 2015 that they had no plans to return to the contest, however the broadcaster sent a delegation to Bulgaria in order to observe the 2015 edition.[24][25]
  •  GermanyZweites Deutsches Fernsehen (ZDF) were observers at last year's contest.[26] On 2 June 2015, Norddeutscher Rundfunk (NDR) stated that they had not ruled out a début in the 2015 contest.[26] On 1 July 2015, ARD consortium member NDR launched an online poll to decide whether or not Germany should participate in Junior Eurovision, which would be broadcast on their children's station, KiKa (which is a joint venture of ARD and ZDF).[27] Germany was originally on the list of participants for the inaugural contest[28] and again in 2004 but later withdrew.[29] The debut of the country in the competition didn't materialize. However, on 4 November 2015, it was announced that NDR would broadcast a livestream of the contest on their Eurovision website for the first time.[30]
  •  GreeceHellenic Broadcasting Corporation (ERT) stated on 11 June 2015 that they were undecided about returning to the Junior contest but are "willing to examine interesting projects".[31] However, the country was not among the 2015 edition's list of participants.
  •  Romania – On 4 June 2015, Televisiunea Românâ (TVR) revealed that due to lack of interest, Romania's participation in the 2015 contest would be unlikely.[32]
  •  Spain – Several media outlets reported that Televisión Española (TVE) was working on returning to the contest in 2015. However, these claims were not confirmed by the broadcaster.[33][34] Ultimately the country was not among the 2015 edition's list of participants.
  •  SwedenSveriges Television (SVT) announced on 29 June 2015 that the broadcaster would withdraw from the contest for one year to focus on new youth-focused projects and hosting the Eurovision Song Contest 2016.[35]

The following broadcasters publicly declined to participate in the contest without providing any further explanations:

Non-active EBU members

In August 2014, executive supervisor Vladislav Yakovlev said that they are working on finding a way to allow commercial networks to participate in the contest, although they are not EBU members.[47][48]

  •  Spain – Because Spanish broadcaster EBU member, Televisión Española (TVE), has declined invitations to participate since 2007, the European Broadcasting Union TV Committee will discuss in the coming months the possibility to allow commercial channels to take part in the contest.[49] If the final decision is yes, they will continue negotiating with Spanish private TV channels to bring back Spain to the contest.[50]

International broadcasts and voting

Voting and spokespersons

The order in which each country announced their votes was the same as the running order of the performances. Details of the running order were published by the EBU on 15 November 2015.[15] The spokespersons are shown below alongside each participating country.[51]

  1. Kids JuryKrisia Todorova (Bulgarian representative in the 2014 contest)
  2.  Serbia – Dunja Jeličić (Serbian representativein the 2016 contest)
  3.  Georgia – Lizi Pop (Georgian representative in the 2014 contest)
  4.  Slovenia – Nikola Petek
  5.  Italy – Vincenzo Cantiello (Italian representative and winner of the 2014 contest)
  6.  Netherlands – Julia van Bergen (Dutch representative in the 2014 contest)
  7.  Australia – Ellie Blackwell
  8.  Ireland – Anna Banks
  9.  Russia – Sofia Dolganova
  10.  Macedonia – Aleksandrija Čaliovski
  11.  Belarus – Valeria Drobyshevskaya
  12.  Armenia – Betty (Armenian representative in the 2014 contest)
  13.  Ukraine – Sofia Kutsenko (Ukrainian representative in the 2014 contest as part of Sympho-Nick)
  14.  Bulgaria – Vladimir Petkov (Member of Bon-Bon - Bulgarian representatives in the 2007 contest)
  15.  San Marino – Arianna Ulivi (Sammarinese representative in the 2014 contest as part of The Peppermints)
  16.  Malta – Federica Falzon (Maltese representative in the 2014 contest)
  17.  Albania – Majda Bejzade
  18.  Montenegro – Lejla Vulić (Montenegrin representative in the 2014 contest with Maša Vujadinović)

Commentators

The contest was broadcast online worldwide through the official Junior Eurovision Song Contest website junioreurovision.tv and YouTube. The online broadcasts featured commentary in English by junioreurovision.tv editor Luke Fisher and 2011 Bulgarian Junior Eurovision Song Contest entrant Ivan Ivanov.[52]

Participating countries

Non-participating countries

The following non-participating countries also sent commentators to Bulgaria for radio, television and online broadcasts of the contest.

  •  Germany — Thomas Mohr (NDR website)[65]
  •  New Zealand – Ewan Spence (World FM)[66]
  •  Singapore – Ewan Spence (247 Music Radio)[66]
  •  United Kingdom – Ewan Spence (Cotswold FM, Fun Kids, Oystermouth Radio, Radio Six International and Shore Radio)[66]
  •  United States – Ewan Spence (WUSB)[66]

Official album

Junior Eurovision Song Contest Bulgaria 2015
Compilation album by
Released13 November 2015
GenrePop
Length49:59
LabelUniversal
Junior Eurovision Song Contest chronology
Junior Eurovision Song Contest Malta 2014
(2014)
Junior Eurovision Song Contest Bulgaria 2015
(2015)
Junior Eurovision Song Contest Valletta 2016
(2016)

Junior Eurovision Song Contest Bulgaria 2015, is a compilation album put together by the European Broadcasting Union, and was released by Universal Music Group on 13 November 2015. The album features all the songs from the 2015 contest.[67][68] This is the first since the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2005 not to include karaoke versions of all the songs.

References

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Media related to Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2015 at Wikimedia Commons

See also:

ABU Radio Song Festival 2015 | ABU TV Song Festival 2015 | Bala Turkvision Song Contest 2015 | Eurovision Song Contest 2015 | Eurovision Young Dancers 2015 | Turkvision Song Contest 2015 |

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