Eurovision Song Contest 2022

The Eurovision Song Contest 2022 was the 66th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest. It took place in Turin, Italy, following the country's victory at the 2021 contest with the song "Zitti e buoni" by Måneskin. Organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and host broadcaster Radiotelevisione italiana (RAI), the contest was held at the PalaOlimpico, and consisted of two semi-finals on 10 and 12 May, and a final on 14 May 2022. The three live shows were presented by Italian television presenter Alessandro Cattelan, Italian singer Laura Pausini and Lebanese-born British-French singer Mika.

Eurovision Song Contest 2022
The Sound of Beauty
Dates
Semi-final 110 May 2022
Semi-final 212 May 2022
Final14 May 2022
Host
VenuePalaOlimpico
Turin, Italy
Presenter(s)
Directed by
  • Cristian Biondani
  • Duccio Forzano
Executive supervisorMartin Österdahl
Executive producer
  • Claudio Fasulo
  • Simona Martorelli
Host broadcasterRadiotelevisione italiana (RAI)
Websiteeurovision.tv/event/turin-2022 Edit this at Wikidata
Participants
Number of entries40
Number of finalists25
Debuting countriesNone
Returning countries
Non-returning countries Russia
  • A coloured map of the countries of EuropePortugal in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022San Marino in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022France in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022United Kingdom in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Ireland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Iceland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Belgium in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Netherlands in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Switzerland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Germany in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Denmark in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Malta in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Italy in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Norway in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Sweden in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Finland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Estonia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Latvia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Lithuania in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Slovakia in the Eurovision Song ContestAustria in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Slovenia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Hungary in the Eurovision Song ContestCroatia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Eurovision Song ContestMontenegro in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Serbia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Albania in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022North Macedonia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Greece in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Bulgaria in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Romania in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Moldova in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Ukraine in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Belarus in the Eurovision Song ContestAustralia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Russia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Georgia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Azerbaijan in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Turkey in the Eurovision Song ContestCyprus in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Israel in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Armenia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Morocco in the Eurovision Song ContestLiechtenstein in the Eurovision Song ContestAndorra in the Eurovision Song ContestMonaco in the Eurovision Song ContestPoland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Czech Republic in the Eurovision Song Contest 2022Luxembourg in the Eurovision Song ContestLebanon in the Eurovision Song ContestTunisia in the Eurovision Song Contest
         Finalist countries     Countries eliminated in the semi-finals     Countries that participated in the past but not in 2022
Vote
Voting systemEach country awards two sets of 12, 10, 8–1 points to ten songs.
Winning song Ukraine
"Stefania"
2021 ← Eurovision Song Contest → 2023

Forty countries participated in the contest, with Armenia and Montenegro returning after their absence from the previous edition. Russia had originally planned to participate, but was excluded due to its invasion of Ukraine.

The winner was Ukraine with the song "Stefania", performed by Kalush Orchestra and written by the group's members Ihor Didenchuk, Oleh Psiuk, Tymofii Muzychuk and Vitalii Duzhyk, along with Ivan Klymenko. The United Kingdom finished in second place for a record-extending sixteenth time, also achieving its best result since 1998. Spain, Sweden and Serbia rounded out the top five, with Spain achieving its best result since 1995. Ukraine won the televote with 439 points, the most received in the contest's history to date, and came fourth in the jury vote behind the United Kingdom, Sweden and Spain. "Stefania" is the first song sung entirely in Ukrainian and the first song with hip-hop elements to win the contest.[1]

The EBU reported that the contest had a television audience of 161 million viewers in 34 European markets, a decrease of 22 million viewers from the previous edition, however, it is noted that this is due to the exclusion of Russia and the lack of audience figures from Ukraine, with the overall figures up by 7 million viewers in a comparable market from 2021. An increase of three per cent in the 15–24 year old age range was also reported.[2] A total of 18 million viewers watched the contest online on YouTube and TikTok.[3]

Location

PalaOlimpico, Turin – host venue of the 2022 contest.
Location of host venue (red) and other contest-related sites and events (blue)

The 2022 contest took place in Turin, Italy, following the country's victory at the 2021 edition with the song "Zitti e buoni", performed by Måneskin. It was the third time that Italy had hosted the contest, having previously done so for the 1965 and 1991 contests, held in Naples and Rome respectively. The selected venue was the 13,300-seat PalaOlimpico, a multi-purpose indoor arena located in the Santa Rita district, which serves as a venue for events including concerts, exhibitions, trade fairs, conferences, and sports (mainly those requiring an ice rink, such as ice hockey and curling). PalaOlimpico had previously hosted the ice hockey events at the 2006 Winter Olympics, and the opening ceremonies of the 2007 Winter Universiade and will host the same event in 2025.[4][5]

The venue returned to its full capacity for the contest, after the previous edition in Rotterdam saw a limited audience of 3,500 people as a precaution against the COVID-19 pandemic.[6] However, the audience was required to wear masks at all times inside the venue, unlike in Rotterdam where mask-wearing was not enforced whenever the audience was seated.[7][8][9] Nearly all COVID-19 prevention measures for the contest were dropped by 11 May 2022, with testing only required whenever symptoms were exhibited.[10]

In addition to the main venue, the host city also organised side events in tandem with the contest. The Eurovision Village was the official Eurovision Song Contest fan and sponsors area during the event weeks, where it was possible to watch performances by contest participants and local artists, as well as the live shows broadcast from the main venue. It was located at Parco del Valentino and open from 7 to 14 May 2022.[11][12] The EuroClub, which took place across ten different locations in Turin, hosted the official after-parties and private performances by contest participants. Unlike in previous years, access to the EuroClub was not restricted to accredited fans, delegates and press.[13][14] The "Turquoise Carpet" and Opening Ceremony events, where the contestants and their delegations were presented before the accredited press and fans, took place at the Palace of Venaria on 8 May 2022.[15][16]

Bidding phase

Location of the selected host city (in blue), shortlisted cities (in green), other bidding cities (in red) and cities that expressed interest but ultimately did not bid (in grey)

Between 23 and 28 May 2021, many cities across Italy expressed interest in hosting the contest. Representatives from the cities of Bologna, Milan, Pesaro, Naples and Turin voiced their interest,[17][18][19] as well as the Mayor of Reggio Emilia, Luca Vecchi, who hoped to host the contest in the new RCF Arena [it], the largest open-air arena in Europe with a capacity of 100,000 spectators.[20] The mayors of Rome, Rimini and Florence soon after also expressed interest in hosting the contest[21][22][23] and were joined by Sanremo, Verona and Bari.[23][24][25] Marco Di Maio [it], member of the Italian Chamber of Deputies, also suggested that if Rimini were to host the contest, it should be a co-production with San Marino RTV.[26]

Host broadcaster RAI launched the bidding process on 7 July 2021.[27][28] In the first phase of this process, any interested cities were to present their bid through certified email by 12 July, after which RAI and the EBU would proceed to send all of them a bid book with more detailed requirements for the cities to submit their plans for review.[29]

On 9 July 2021, the city of Turin officially announced its bid.[30] On the same day, the city of Pesaro did the same, proposing the Vitrifrigo Arena as a possible venue to host the event.[31] They were followed by Bologna and Jesolo on 12 July,[32][33] and Rimini and Bertinoro (jointly with Forlì and Cesena) on 13 July.[34][35] On 13 July, RAI announced that 17 cities had submitted their bid for hosting the contest and would be provided the following day with the bid books. They had until 4 August to draft and submit their detailed plans, which 11 cities did.[36] On 24 August, it was reported that Bologna, Milan, Pesaro, Rimini and Turin would be the cities left in the running to host the contest.[37]

The choice among them was meant to be announced by the end of August;[38][39] however, this did not happen, and in mid-September Stefano Coletta [it], director of Rai 1, stated that the selection was behind time to ensure "transparency and precision".[40] On 8 October 2021, the EBU and RAI announced Turin as the host city, with the PalaOlimpico as the chosen venue for the contest.[4][41]

Key: †  Host venue ‡  Shortlisted  Presented the bid book

CityVenueNotesRef.
AcirealePalaTupparello[42]
AlessandriaCittadellaProposal was dependent on the construction of a roof to cover the area; would have needed renovation works.[43]
BertinoroPalaGalassiCandidacy supported by Forlì, Cesena and the Legislative Assembly of Emilia-Romagna.[35][44]
BolognaFiera di BolognaCandidacy supported by the Legislative Assembly of Emilia-Romagna.[44][45][46][47]
Unipol Arena
FlorenceNelson Mandela ForumCandidacy supported by the Regional Council of Tuscany.[48][49]
GenoaPalasport di GenovaWas undergoing renovation works.[50]
JesoloPalazzo del Turismo [it]Did not meet the EBU requirements of size.[33][51]
Piave Vecchia Lighthouse [it] areaProposal was dependent on the construction of a roof to cover the area.
MateraCava del SoleProposal was dependent on the construction of a roof to cover the area.[38][52]
MilanMediolanum ForumDid not meet the EBU requirements of size.Candidacy supported by the regional government of Lombardy.[53][54][55]
Palazzo delle Scintille [it]Would have needed adjustment works.
Palazzolo AcreideAd hoc arena to be builtWould have needed the cooperation of other municipalities in Syracuse.[56][57]
PesaroVitrifrigo Arena[58][59][60]
RiminiRimini FieraCandidacy supported by the Legislative Assembly of Emilia-Romagna.[44][61]
RomePalaLottomatica[21][62][63]
Fiera di Roma [it]Did not meet the EBU requirements of capacity.
SanremoMercato dei Fiori[64][65]
TriestePalaTriesteDid not meet the EBU requirements of size.[38][66]
Stadio Nereo RoccoProposal was dependent on the construction of a roof to cover the stadium.
TurinPalaOlimpicoHosted the ice hockey events at the 2006 Winter Olympics and the opening ceremony of the 2007 Winter Universiade; from 2021 to 2025, it will host the tennis ATP Finals.
Candidacy supported by the Turin city council and the Regional Council of Piedmont.
[67][68][69]
ViterboFiera di ViterboDid not meet the EBU requirements of size; would have needed renovation works.[70][71]

Participating countries

Eurovision Song Contest 2022 – Participation summaries by country

Eligibility for potential participation in the Eurovision Song Contest requires a national broadcaster with active EBU membership capable of receiving the contest via the Eurovision network and broadcasting it live nationwide. The EBU issued an invitation to participate in the contest to all active members. Associate member Australia did not need an invitation for the 2022 contest, as it had previously been granted permission to participate at least until 2023.[72]

On 20 October 2021, the EBU initially announced that 41 countries would participate in the 2022 contest. The list included all countries that participated in the 2021 contest, along with Armenia and Montenegro, both of which had last taken part in 2019 (Armenia was also set to compete in the cancelled 2020 edition).[73] On 25 February 2022, the EBU announced that Russia was excluded from the contest due to its invasion of Ukraine, thereby reducing the number of participating countries to 40.[74]

Participants of the Eurovision Song Contest 2022[73][75]
CountryBroadcasterArtistSongLanguageSongwriter(s)
 AlbaniaRTSHRonela Hajati"Sekret"Albanian, EnglishRonela Hajati
 ArmeniaAMPTVRosa Linn"Snap"English
 AustraliaSBSSheldon Riley"Not the Same"English
 AustriaORFLumix feat. Pia Maria"Halo"English
 AzerbaijanİTVNadir Rustamli"Fade to Black"English
 BelgiumRTBFJérémie Makiese"Miss You"English
 BulgariaBNTIntelligent Music Project"Intention"English
 CroatiaHRTMia Dimšić"Guilty Pleasure"English, Croatian
 CyprusCyBCAndromache"Ela" (Έλα)English, Greek
 Czech RepublicČTWe Are Domi"Lights Off"English
  • Einar Eriksen Kvaløy
  • Dominika Hašková
  • Casper Hatlestad
  • Abigail Frances Jones
  • Benjamin Rekstad
 DenmarkDRReddi"The Show"English
 EstoniaERRStefan"Hope"English
 FinlandYleThe Rasmus"Jezebel"English
 FranceFrance TélévisionsAlvan and Ahez"Fulenn"Breton
 GeorgiaGPBCircus Mircus"Lock Me In"EnglishCircus Mircus
 GermanyNDR[a]Malik Harris"Rockstars"English
 GreeceERTAmanda Georgiadi Tenfjord"Die Together"English
 IcelandRÚVSystur"Með hækkandi sól"IcelandicLovísa Elísabet Sigrúnardóttir
 IrelandRTÉBrooke"That's Rich"English
 IsraelIPBCMichael Ben David"I.M"English
 ItalyRAIMahmood and Blanco"Brividi"Italian
 LatviaLTVCiti Zēni"Eat Your Salad"English
  • Jānis "JJ Lush" Jačmenkins
  • Roberts Memmēns
  • Jānis Pētersons
  • Dagnis Roziņš
 LithuaniaLRTMonika Liu"Sentimentai"LithuanianMonika Liubinaitė
 MaltaPBSEmma Muscat"I Am What I Am"English
 MoldovaTRMZdob și Zdub and Advahov Brothers"Trenulețul"Romanian
 MontenegroRTCGVladana"Breathe"English, Italian
 NetherlandsAVROTROSS10"De diepte"Dutch
 North MacedoniaMRTAndrea"Circles"English
 NorwayNRKSubwoolfer"Give That Wolf a Banana"English
 PolandTVPOchman"River"English
 PortugalRTPMaro"Saudade, saudade"English, Portuguese
 RomaniaTVRWrs"Llámame"English, Spanish
 San MarinoSMRTVAchille Lauro"Stripper"Italian, English
  • Gregorio "Greg" Calculli
  • Matteo "Gow Tribe" Ciceroni
  • Mattia "Banf" Cutolo
  • Federico De Marinis
  • Lauro De Marinis
  • Daniele Dezi
  • Marco "Lancs" Lanciotti
  • Simon Pietro Manzari
  • Daniele Mungai
  • Davide Petrella
  • Francesco Viscovo
 SerbiaRTSKonstrakta"In corpore sano"Serbian, Latin
 SloveniaRTVSLOLPS"Disko"Slovene
  • Gašper Hlupič
  • Mark Semeja
  • Zala Velenšek
  • Filip Vidušin
  • Žiga Žvižej
 SpainRTVEChanel"SloMo"Spanish, English
 SwedenSVTCornelia Jakobs"Hold Me Closer"English
  SwitzerlandSRG SSRMarius Bear"Boys Do Cry"English
 UkraineUA:PBCKalush Orchestra"Stefania" (Стефанія)Ukrainian
 United KingdomBBCSam Ryder"Space Man"English

Returning artists

The contest featured five representatives who also previously performed as lead artists for the same country. Nika Kocharov, the guitarist of Circus Mircus, had previously represented Georgia in 2016 alongside Young Georgian Lolitaz;[77][b] Stoyan Yankoulov, a member of Intelligent Music Project, had represented Bulgaria in 2007 and 2013 alongside Elitsa Todorova;[78] Zdob și Zdub had represented Moldova in 2005 and 2011;[79] Mahmood had represented Italy in 2019;[80] and Ihor Didenchuk, a member of Kalush Orchestra, had previously represented Ukraine in 2021 as a member of Go_A.[81] In addition, Ihan Haydar, who had previously represented Denmark in 2012 as a member of Soluna Samay's backup band, returned as a member of Reddi.[82]

Other countries

Active EBU members

Active EBU member broadcasters in Andorra,[83] Bosnia and Herzegovina,[84] Luxembourg, Monaco and Slovakia confirmed non-participation prior to the announcement of the participants list by the EBU. Turkish national broadcaster TRT had been in talks with the EBU about a potential return to the contest in 2022,[85] but the country ultimately did not appear on the final list of participants.[73]

Non-EBU members

Belarus was excluded from participation in the 2022 contest on 1 July 2021, when the EBU Executive Board agreed to expel its national broadcaster BTRC as a result of its use as a propaganda tool,[86] losing the rights to broadcast and participate in any Eurovision event until 1 July 2024.[87] Conversely, Russia initially appeared on the list of participants; however, following its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 and subsequent protests from other participating countries, the EBU decided to exclude the country from the contest;[74] Russian member broadcasters, including VGTRK and Channel One, immediately responded by announcing their withdrawal from the union,[88][89][90] which was finalised on 26 May 2022 and resulted in Russia indefinitely losing broadcasting and participation rights for future Eurovision events.[91][92]

Liechtensteiner broadcaster 1 FL TV, despite previous attempts to become an EBU member, halted its plans after director Peter Kölbel's unexpected death, and did not resume them due to the lack of sufficient funds and of government support.[93]

Production

The Eurovision Song Contest 2022 was produced by the Italian public broadcaster Radiotelevisione italiana (RAI). Claudio Fasulo [it] and Simona Martorelli served as executive producers,[73] Cristian Biondani [it] and Duccio Forzano [it] served as directors of the three live shows,[94][95] Claudio Santucci served as head of show,[96] and Emanuele Cristofoli served as artistic director for the opening and interval acts.[97][98] Background music for the shows was composed by Maurizio Filardo [it].[99]

The Italian government allocated around 1.5 million as part of the budget needed to host the event, while the municipality of Turin and the regional government of Piedmont contributed around €10 million in total.[100][101] The preliminary total budget for the shows was €16.3 million.[102] The full costs was not officially published, but is estimated to be at approximately €22 million.[103]

Visual design

The theme art and slogan for the contest, "The Sound of Beauty", was unveiled on 21 January 2022.[104] Designed by Rome-based studio Flopicco, the artwork was built around the symmetrical structure and patterns of cymatics to convey the visual properties of sound, which also reflects Italian garden design, while the typography, Arsenica, was inspired by early-20th century Italian poster art; the colours were drawn from those of the Italian flag.[105]

Stage design

Stage and green room in the arena

The stage design for the 2022 contest was revealed on 18 February 2022.[106] Designed by Rome-based stage designer Francesca Montinaro [it] and dubbed "The Sun Within", the stage design was based around the movements and light of a kinetic sun, with the intended ability to showcase theatrical motion. The design also featured a working water cascade and a green room modelled after an Italian garden.[107][108] Montinaro had previous experience in stage design, having done so for the Sanremo Music Festival in 2013 and 2019.[109] This marked the first time since 2016 that German stage designer Florian Wieder did not design the Eurovision stage.[110][111]

Postcards

The "postcards" were 40-second video introductions shown on television whilst the stage is being prepared for the next contestant to perform their entry. Filmed between February and April, and directed by Matteo Lanzi, each postcard for 2022 showcased a different locale in Italy adorned by pictures and various artistic elements related to the acts, while the participating artists themselves appeared via footage superimposed through chroma keying, guided by a drone named "Leo".[112][113][114][115][116] The following locations were used for each participating country:[117][118]

Presenters

Alessandro Cattelan, Laura Pausini and Mika, presenters of the 2022 contest

Television presenter Alessandro Cattelan and singers Laura Pausini and Mika were the presenters of the 2022 contest. They had already been named as likely hosts by Italian news agency Adnkronos and TV magazine TV Sorrisi e Canzoni; and were officially confirmed during the second night of the Sanremo Music Festival 2022 on 2 February, after appearing on that show as special guests.[119][120][121]

The "Turquoise Carpet" and Opening Ceremony events were hosted by Gabriele Corsi [it], Carolina Di Domenico, Mario Acampa [it] and Laura Carusino [it].[122][123] Acampa, Carusino and Di Domenico also moderated the contest's press conferences.[124][125]

Format

Entries

For the second year in a row, delegations had the option to use pre-recorded backing vocals, though each delegation could still use backing singers – whether on or off stage – or a combination of live and recorded backing vocals. However, all lead vocals performing the melody of the song must still be live.[126][127] The EBU also required all national broadcasters to create a 'live-on-tape' backup recording prior to the contest which could be used if a participant was unable to travel to Turin, or subjected to quarantine on arrival.[128][129][130][131] The 2022 contest also saw a tightening of the rules around song eligibility. Previously, the rules stated that the competing songs must not have been commercially released prior to 1 September of the previous year, now, a song may be ineligible to compete if it has been released to the public in any way, including live performances, before 1 September of the previous year. Enforcement of the rule was subject to the responsibility of the participating broadcasters.[132]

With all participating artists having performed live in Turin, the majority of the 'live-on-tape' performances were released on the contest's official YouTube channel over a period of ten days, from 14 to 23 June 2022.[133] Australia, Azerbaijan, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Georgia, Italy, Moldova, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, and the United Kingdom opted not to release their performances, while Ukraine was exempted from the obligation to record its own, and Armenia and Austria removed theirs after release for unknown reasons.[134][135] Despite Montenegro not releasing its performance to the contest's official channel, it was nonetheless made available on the channel of the country's representative Vladana.[136]

The 2022 contest was the first edition to not feature any competing song with lyrics in French.[137]

Semi-final allocation draw

Palazzo Madama, host venue for the allocation draw of the 2022 contest
Results of the semi-final allocation draw
  Participating countries in the first semi-final[c]
  Pre-qualified for the final but also voting in the first semi-final
  Participating countries in the second semi-final
  Pre-qualified for the final but also voting in the second semi-final

The draw to determine the participating countries' semi-finals took place on 25 January 2022 at 12:00 CET, at Palazzo Madama.[138][139] The thirty-six semi-finalists were divided over six pots, based on historical voting patterns as calculated by the contest's official televoting partner Digame. The purpose of drawing from different pots was to reduce the chance of "bloc voting" and to increase suspense in the semi-finals. The draw also determined which semi-final each of the five automatic qualifiers – "Big Five" countries France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom – would broadcast and vote in. The ceremony was hosted by Carolina Di Domenico and Mario Acampa, with Acampa replacing Gabriele Corsi who tested positive for COVID-19.[140] It included the passing of the host city insignia from Ahmed Aboutaleb, the mayor of previous host city Rotterdam, to Stefano Lo Russo, the mayor of Turin.

Pot 1Pot 2Pot 3Pot 4Pot 5Pot 6

Contest overview

Semi-final 1

The first semi-final took place on 10 May 2022 at 21:00 (CEST).[4] Seventeen countries participated in this semi-final, with the running order published on 29 March 2022.[141] Ukraine won the most points, followed by the Netherlands, Greece, Portugal, Armenia, Norway, Lithuania, Moldova, Switzerland, and Iceland. The countries that failed to reach the final were Croatia, Albania, Denmark, Latvia, Austria, Bulgaria, and Slovenia. All the countries competing in this semi-final were eligible to vote, plus France and Italy.[142] Russia was originally allocated to participate in the second half of this semi-final, but was excluded from the contest due to its invasion of Ukraine.[74]

This semi-final was opened by a performance showcasing Italian ingenuity and creativity, accompanied by the official anthem of the contest, "The Sound of Beauty", performed by Sherol Dos Santos,[143][144] while the interval featured a medley of "Horizon in Your Eyes", "Satisfaction" and "Golden Nights [it]" performed by Dardust, Benny Benassi and Sophie and the Giants with conductor Sylvia Catasta,[145][146] a brief homage to Raffaella Carrà by the contest presenters,[147] and Diodato performing "Fai rumore".[148] The French and Italian artists were then interviewed, and clips of their competing songs were played.

  Qualifiers
Participants and results of the first semi-final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2022[149]
R/OCountryArtistSongPointsPlace
1  AlbaniaRonela Hajati"Sekret"5812
2  LatviaCiti Zēni"Eat Your Salad"5514
3  LithuaniaMonika Liu"Sentimentai"1597
4   SwitzerlandMarius Bear"Boys Do Cry"1189
5  SloveniaLPS"Disko"1517
6  UkraineKalush Orchestra"Stefania"3371
7  BulgariaIntelligent Music Project"Intention"2916
8  NetherlandsS10"De diepte"2212
9  MoldovaZdob și Zdub and Advahov Brothers"Trenulețul"1548
10  PortugalMaro"Saudade, saudade"2084
11  CroatiaMia Dimšić"Guilty Pleasure"7511
12  DenmarkReddi"The Show"5513
13  AustriaLumix feat. Pia Maria"Halo"4215
14  IcelandSystur"Með hækkandi sól"10310
15  GreeceAmanda Georgiadi Tenfjord"Die Together"2113
16  NorwaySubwoolfer"Give That Wolf a Banana"1776
17  ArmeniaRosa Linn"Snap"1875

Semi-final 2

Il Volo performed as an interval act in the second semi-final.

The second semi-final took place on 12 May 2022 at 21:00 (CEST).[4] Eighteen countries participated in this semi-final, with the running order published on 29 March 2022.[141] Sweden won the most points, followed by Australia, Serbia, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Poland, Finland, Belgium, Romania, and Azerbaijan. The countries that failed to reach the final were North Macedonia, Cyprus, Israel, San Marino, Ireland, Malta, Montenegro, and Georgia. All the countries competing in this semi-final were eligible to vote, plus Germany, Spain and the United Kingdom.[142]

This semi-final was opened by "The Italian Way", an act built around Italian improvisation performed by co-presenter Alessandro Cattelan,[150] while the interval featured a medley of "Fragile" and "People Have the Power" performed by co-presenters Laura Pausini and Mika,[151] and Il Volo performing a new version of "Grande amore".[d][154] The British, German, and Spanish artists were then interviewed, and clips of their competing songs were played.

  Qualifiers
Participants and results of the second semi-final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2022[155]
R/OCountryArtistSongPointsPlace
1  FinlandThe Rasmus"Jezebel"1627
2  IsraelMichael Ben David"I.M"6113
3  SerbiaKonstrakta"In corpore sano"2373
4  AzerbaijanNadir Rustamli"Fade to Black"9610
5  GeorgiaCircus Mircus"Lock Me In"2218
6  MaltaEmma Muscat"I Am What I Am"4716
7  San MarinoAchille Lauro"Stripper"5014
8  AustraliaSheldon Riley"Not the Same"2432
9  CyprusAndromache"Ela"6312
10  IrelandBrooke"That's Rich"4715
11  North MacedoniaAndrea"Circles"7611
12  EstoniaStefan"Hope"2095
13  RomaniaWrs"Llámame"1189
14  PolandOchman"River"1986
15  MontenegroVladana"Breathe"3317
16  BelgiumJérémie Makiese"Miss You"1518
17  SwedenCornelia Jakobs"Hold Me Closer"3961
18  Czech RepublicWe Are Domi"Lights Off"2274

Final

The final took place on 14 May 2022 at 21:00 (CEST).[4] Twenty-five countries participated in the final, with all forty participating countries eligible to vote. The running order for the final was published on 13 May 2022.[156] Ukraine won with 631 points, also winning the televote. The United Kingdom came second with 466 points and won the jury vote, with Spain, Sweden, Serbia, Italy, Moldova, Greece, Portugal, and Norway completing the top ten. Finland, the Czech Republic, Iceland, France, and Germany occupied the bottom five positions.[157]

The final was opened by the Rockin'1000 performing "Give Peace a Chance" and co-presenter Laura Pausini performing a medley of "Benvenuto", "Io canto", "La solitudine", "Le cose che vivi" and "Scatola [it]", followed by the traditional flag parade, introducing all twenty-five finalists.[158] The interval acts included Måneskin performing their new single "Supermodel" and "If I Can Dream",[159][158] Gigliola Cinquetti performing her winning song "Non ho l'età",[160] and co-presenter Mika performing a medley of "Love Today", "Grace Kelly", his new single "Yo Yo" and "Happy Ending".[161] Astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti also appeared in a pre-recorded message from the International Space Station.[162]

Participants and results of the final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2022[157]
R/OCountryArtistSongPointsPlace
1  Czech RepublicWe Are Domi"Lights Off"3822[e]
2  RomaniaWrs"Llámame"6518
3  PortugalMaro"Saudade, saudade"2079
4  FinlandThe Rasmus"Jezebel"3821[e]
5   SwitzerlandMarius Bear"Boys Do Cry"7817
6  FranceAlvan and Ahez"Fulenn"1724
7  NorwaySubwoolfer"Give That Wolf a Banana"18210
8  ArmeniaRosa Linn"Snap"6120
9  ItalyMahmood and Blanco"Brividi"2686
10  SpainChanel"SloMo"4593
11  NetherlandsS10"De diepte"17111
12  UkraineKalush Orchestra"Stefania"6311
13  GermanyMalik Harris"Rockstars"625
14  LithuaniaMonika Liu"Sentimentai"12814
15  AzerbaijanNadir Rustamli"Fade to Black"10616
16  BelgiumJérémie Makiese"Miss You"6419
17  GreeceAmanda Georgiadi Tenfjord"Die Together"2158
18  IcelandSystur"Með hækkandi sól"2023
19  MoldovaZdob și Zdub and Advahov Brothers"Trenulețul"2537
20  SwedenCornelia Jakobs"Hold Me Closer"4384
21  AustraliaSheldon Riley"Not the Same"12515
22  United KingdomSam Ryder"Space Man"4662
23  PolandOchman"River"15112
24  SerbiaKonstrakta"In corpore sano"3125
25  EstoniaStefan"Hope"14113

Spokespersons

The spokespersons announced the 12-point score from their respective country's national jury in the following order:[163][164][165]

  1.  Netherlands – Jeangu Macrooy
  2.  San Marino – Labiuse
  3.  North Macedonia – Jana Burčeska
  4.  Malta – Aidan
  5.  Ukraine – Kateryna Pavlenko
  6.  Albania – Andri Xhahu
  7.  Estonia – Tanel Padar
  8.  Azerbaijan – None[f]
  9.  Portugal – Pedro Tatanka
  10.  Germany – Barbara Schöneberger
  11.  Belgium – David Jeanmotte [fr]
  12.  Norway – Tix
  13.  Israel – Daniel Styopin [he]
  14.  Poland – Ida Nowakowska
  15.  Greece – Stefania
  16.  Moldova – Elena Băncilă
  17.  Bulgaria – Janan Dural
  18.  Serbia – Dragana Kosjerina
  19.  Iceland – Árný Fjóla Ásmundsdóttir
  20.  Cyprus – Loukas Hamatsos
  21.  Latvia – Samanta Tīna
  22.  Spain – Nieves Álvarez
  23.   Switzerland – Julie Berthollet
  24.  Denmark – Tina Müller
  25.  France – Élodie Gossuin
  26.  Armenia – Garik Papoyan
  27.  Montenegro – Andrijana Vešović
  28.  Romania – None[g]
  29.  Ireland – Linda Martin
  30.  Slovenia – Lorella Flego
  31.  Georgia – None[h]
  32.  Croatia – Ivan Dorian Molnar
  33.  Lithuania – Vaidotas Valiukevičius
  34.  Austria – Philipp Hansa
  35.  Finland – Aksel
  36.  United Kingdom – AJ Odudu
  37.  Sweden – Dotter
  38.  Australia – Courtney Act
  39.  Czech Republic – Taťána Kuchařová
  40.  Italy – Carolina Di Domenico

Detailed voting results

Semi-final 1

  Qualifiers
Split results of semi-final 1
PlaceCombinedJuryTelevoting
CountryPointsCountryPointsCountryPoints
1  Ukraine337  Greece151  Ukraine202
2  Netherlands221  Netherlands142  Moldova135
3  Greece211  Ukraine135  Armenia105
4  Portugal208  Portugal121  Norway104
5  Armenia187   Switzerland107  Lithuania103
6  Norway177  Armenia82  Portugal87
7  Lithuania159  Norway73  Netherlands79
8  Moldova154  Iceland64  Greece60
9   Switzerland118  Lithuania56  Albania46
10  Iceland103  Croatia42  Iceland39
11  Croatia75  Latvia39  Austria36
12  Albania58  Denmark35  Croatia33
13  Denmark55[i]  Moldova19  Denmark20
14  Latvia55[i]  Albania12  Bulgaria18
15  Austria42  Bulgaria11  Latvia16
16  Bulgaria29  Slovenia7   Switzerland11
17  Slovenia15  Austria6  Slovenia8

The ten qualifiers from the first semi-final were determined by televoting and/or SMS-voting (50%) and five-member juries (50%).[166] All seventeen countries competing in the first semi-final voted, alongside France and Italy.[141] The ten qualifying countries were announced in no particular order, and the full results of how each country voted was published after the final had been held.

Detailed jury voting results of semi-final 1
  • Voting procedure used:
  •   100% televoting
  •   100% jury vote
Total score
Jury score
Televoting score
Jury vote
Albania
Latvia
Lithuania
Switzerland
Slovenia
Ukraine
Bulgaria
Netherlands
Moldova
Portugal
Croatia
Denmark
Austria
Iceland
Greece
Norway
Armenia
France
Italy
Contestants
Albania58124612
Latvia5539162233412114421
Lithuania159561031312261058522
Switzerland1181071164104612710466754556
Slovenia1578115
Ukraine3371352021212128781277710367107
Bulgaria291118110
Netherlands221142791038121012428212876812810
Moldova1541913512117115
Portugal208121874574685105128106510106
Croatia754233383633844
Denmark553520655523513
Austria42636213
Iceland1036439584645310442234
Greece2111516081061057101285810621281212
Norway1777310427372176723412163
Armenia18782105721110846312123778
Detailed televoting results of semi-final 1
  • Voting procedure used:
  •   100% televoting
  •   100% jury vote
Total score
Jury score
Televoting score
Televote
Albania
Latvia
Lithuania
Switzerland
Slovenia
Ukraine
Bulgaria
Netherlands
Moldova
Portugal
Croatia
Denmark
Austria
Iceland
Greece
Norway
Armenia
France
Italy
Contestants
Albania5812468612212258
Latvia5539161051
Lithuania1595610311035125566684558761
Switzerland11810711321311
Slovenia15788
Ukraine33713520281212101012121212121212121010121012
Bulgaria2911181251
Netherlands22114279336236388345841444
Moldova1541913587771081010106107666710
Portugal208121875681224664131232886
Croatia7542336612216
Denmark5535202113364
Austria42636414324242352
Iceland1036439521842773
Greece2111516010817314121013
Norway1777310427547471077107107325
Armenia187821057445210875558385127

12 points

Below is a summary of all 12 points received in the first semi-final. In the jury vote, Greece, the Netherlands, and Ukraine each received the maximum score of 12 points from four countries, while Albania, Armenia, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, Portugal, and Switzerland were each awarded one set of 12 points. In the public vote, Ukraine received the maximum score of 12 points from twelve countries, with Albania, Armenia, Bulgaria, Croatia, Greece, Lithuania, and Portugal each receiving one set of 12 points.[149]

12 points awarded by juries
#RecipientCountries giving 12 points
4  Netherlands  Armenia,  Denmark,   Switzerland,  Ukraine
 Ukraine  Albania,  Latvia,  Lithuania,  Moldova
 Greece  France,  Italy,  Netherlands,  Norway
1  Albania  Greece
 Armenia  Austria
 Latvia  Portugal
 Lithuania  Slovenia
 Norway  Iceland
 Portugal  Croatia
  Switzerland  Bulgaria
12 points awarded by televoting
#RecipientCountries giving 12 points
12  Ukraine  Austria,  Armenia,  Bulgaria,  Croatia,  Denmark,  Iceland,  Italy,  Latvia,  Lithuania,  Moldova,  Netherlands,  Portugal
1  Albania  Greece
 Armenia  France
 Bulgaria  Albania
 Croatia  Slovenia
 Greece  Norway
 Lithuania  Ukraine
 Portugal   Switzerland

Semi-final 2

  Qualifiers
Split results of semi-final 2
PlaceCombinedJuryTelevoting
CountryPointsCountryPointsCountryPoints
1  Sweden396  Sweden222  Sweden174[j]
2  Australia243  Australia169  Serbia174[j]
3  Serbia237  Estonia113  Czech Republic125
4  Czech Republic227  Belgium105  Poland114
5  Estonia209  Czech Republic102  Romania100
6  Poland198  Azerbaijan96  Finland99
7  Finland162  Poland84  Estonia96
8  Belgium151  Finland63[k]  Australia74
9  Romania118  Serbia63[k]  Cyprus54
10  Azerbaijan96  North Macedonia56  Belgium46
11  North Macedonia76  Israel34  Ireland35
12  Cyprus63  Malta27  San Marino29
13  Israel61  San Marino21  Israel27
14  San Marino50  Romania18  Montenegro22
15  Ireland47[l]  Georgia13  Malta20[m]
16  Malta47[l]  Ireland12  North Macedonia20[m]
17  Montenegro33  Montenegro11  Georgia9
18  Georgia22  Cyprus9  Azerbaijan0

The ten qualifiers from the second semi-final were determined by televoting and/or SMS-voting (50%) and five-member juries (50%).[166] All eighteen countries competing in the second semi-final voted, alongside Germany, Spain, and the United Kingdom.[141] The ten qualifying countries were announced in no particular order, and the full results of how each country voted was published after the final had been held.

Detailed jury voting results of semi-final 2
  • Voting procedure used:
  •   100% televoting
  •   100% jury vote
Total score
Jury score
Televoting score
Jury vote
Finland
Israel
Serbia
Azerbaijan
Georgia
Malta
San Marino
Australia
Cyprus
Ireland
North Macedonia
Estonia
Romania
Poland
Montenegro
Belgium
Sweden
Czech Republic
Germany
Spain
United Kingdom
Contestants
Finland162639955433324844454212
Israel613427121031173231
Serbia2376317481322457127255
Azerbaijan9696078444361633535410128
Georgia2213911353
Malta472720221166171
San Marino50212952212
Australia24316974101021010101010551010101081286103
Cyprus63954342
Ireland4712356141
North Macedonia7656202157155110127
Estonia2091139643107787578277610744
Romania118181004284
Poland19884114183886888361376
Montenegro331122731
Belgium151105467655583210566886582
Sweden3962221741212121212121212121271212121210127612
Czech Republic2271021256646676241078824610
Detailed televoting results of semi-final 2
  • Voting procedure used:
  •   100% televoting
  •   100% jury vote
Total score
Jury score
Televoting score
Televote
Finland
Israel
Serbia
Azerbaijan
Georgia
Malta
San Marino
Australia
Cyprus
Ireland
North Macedonia
Estonia
Romania
Poland
Montenegro
Belgium
Sweden
Czech Republic
Germany
Spain
United Kingdom
Contestants
Finland1626399156632218124641210764
Israel6134271010232
Serbia23763174881212121212412410712610121056
Azerbaijan96960
Georgia221392511
Malta472720231333122
San Marino5021294852433
Australia243169746672774753233453
Cyprus6395410121145738111
Ireland47123533811712
North Macedonia7656208102
Estonia209113961244733618107788422
Romania1181810032665584105258345127
Poland1988411457134568122612127712410
Montenegro3311221210
Belgium1511054611341624751551
Sweden396222174101258810101071071012126106885
Czech Republic2271021257107242675868684566108

12 points

Below is a summary of all 12 points received in the second semi-final. In the jury vote, Sweden received the maximum score of 12 points from sixteen countries, while Australia, Azerbaijan, North Macedonia, San Marino, and Serbia were each awarded one set of 12 points. In the public vote, Serbia received the maximum score of 12 points from eight countries, with Poland and Sweden receiving three sets of 12 points. Finland were awarded two sets of 12 points, and Cyprus, Estonia, Ireland, Montenegro, and Romania were each awarded one set of 12 points.[155]

12 points awarded by juries
#RecipientCountries giving 12 points
16  Sweden  Australia,  Azerbaijan,  Cyprus,  Czech Republic,  Estonia,  Finland,  Georgia,  Ireland,  Israel,  Malta,  Montenegro,  Poland,  Romania,  San Marino,  Serbia,  United Kingdom
1  Australia  Sweden
 Azerbaijan  Spain
 North Macedonia  Germany
 San Marino  Belgium
 Serbia  North Macedonia
12 points awarded by televoting
#RecipientCountries giving 12 points
8  Serbia  Australia,  Cyprus,  Czech Republic,  Georgia,  Malta,  Montenegro,  North Macedonia,  San Marino
3  Poland  Belgium,  Germany,  Ireland
 Sweden  Israel,  Poland,  Romania
2  Finland  Estonia,  Sweden
1  Cyprus  Azerbaijan
 Estonia  Finland
 Ireland  United Kingdom
 Montenegro  Serbia
 Romania  Spain

Final

  Winner
Split results of the final
PlaceCombinedJuryTelevoting
CountryPointsCountryPointsCountryPoints
1  Ukraine631  United Kingdom283  Ukraine439
2  United Kingdom466  Sweden258  Moldova239
3  Spain459  Spain231  Spain228
4  Sweden438  Ukraine192  Serbia225
5  Serbia312  Portugal171  United Kingdom183
6  Italy268  Greece158[n]  Sweden180
7  Moldova253  Italy158[n]  Norway146
8  Greece215  Netherlands129  Italy110
9  Portugal207  Australia123  Poland105
10  Norway182  Azerbaijan103  Estonia98
11  Netherlands171  Serbia87  Lithuania93
12  Poland151   Switzerland78  Greece57
13  Estonia141  Belgium59  Romania53
14  Lithuania128  Poland46  Netherlands42
15  Australia125  Estonia43  Portugal36
16  Azerbaijan106  Armenia40  Finland26
17   Switzerland78  Norway36  Armenia21
18  Romania65  Lithuania35  Iceland10
19  Belgium64  Czech Republic33  France8
20  Armenia61  Moldova14  Germany6
21  Finland38[e]  Romania12[o]  Belgium5[p]
22  Czech Republic38[e]  Finland12[o]  Czech Republic5[p]
23  Iceland20  Iceland10  Azerbaijan3
24  France17  France9  Australia2
25  Germany6  Germany0   Switzerland0

The results of the final were determined by televoting and jury voting in all forty participating countries.[166] The announcement of the jury points was conducted by each country individually, with the country's spokesperson announcing their jury's favourite entry that received 12 points, with the remaining points shown on screen. Following the completion of the jury points announcement, the public points were announced as an aggregate by the contest hosts in ascending order starting from the country which received the fewest points from the jury.

Detailed jury voting results of the final
  • Voting procedure used:
  •   100% televoting
  •   100% jury vote
Total score
Jury score
Televoting score
Jury vote
Netherlands
San Marino
North Macedonia
Malta
Ukraine
Albania
Estonia
Azerbaijan
Portugal
Germany
Belgium
Norway
Israel
Poland
Greece
Moldova
Bulgaria
Serbia
Iceland
Cyprus
Latvia
Spain
Switzerland
Denmark
France
Armenia
Montenegro
Romania
Ireland
Slovenia
Georgia
Croatia
Lithuania
Austria
Finland
United Kingdom
Sweden
Australia
Czech Republic
Italy
Contestants
Czech Republic3833531222322754
Romania651253174
Portugal20717136810177510732475658184743710810365
Finland381226561
Switzerland787801011622157731255171263
France1798171
Norway182361463328515432
Armenia6140212414576128
Italy2681581103771210108841161102101046121044323
Spain45923122851212125512810731538436845128112156521012127
Netherlands171129428614745134441010443374268512
Ukraine6311924392768106371212107123510661238681274
Germany606
Lithuania128359325221132107
Azerbaijan106103374253363121312101213772
Belgium645956324468256157
Greece215158571210176341221212721212322433464310
Iceland2010106112
Moldova253142392615
Sweden438258180156104812877812108512510777571010853712121010
Australia1251232765638515686828462861012
United Kingdom46628318348881210412101212610810101738366125882121012108126
Poland151461054242610828
Serbia31287225103446125612171484
Estonia1414398551035618
Detailed televoting results of the final
  • Voting procedure used:
  •   100% televoting
  •   100% jury vote
Total score
Jury score
Televoting score
Televote
Netherlands
San Marino
North Macedonia
Malta
Ukraine
Albania
Estonia
Azerbaijan
Portugal
Germany
Belgium
Norway
Israel
Poland
Greece
Moldova
Bulgaria
Serbia
Iceland
Cyprus
Latvia
Spain
Switzerland
Denmark
France
Armenia
Montenegro
Romania
Ireland
Slovenia
Georgia
Croatia
Lithuania
Austria
Finland
United Kingdom
Sweden
Australia
Czech Republic
Italy
Contestants
Czech Republic383355
Romania65125313210454101238
Portugal20717136114764571
Finland38122614281271
Switzerland78780
France1798122111
Norway1823614652242472144661810538224352566101034
Armenia61402151510
Italy268158110561085334372455836466331
Spain45923122871010717110102618612881038461788854676135266
Netherlands171129423634410251112
Ukraine631192439121288101212121212121212101212712121212101212101010121012101212121212121212
Germany606222
Lithuania1283593110711024322107282532732
Azerbaijan10610333
Belgium6459541
Greece2151585771237610381
Iceland20101082
Moldova2531423910476168108467371267745105712778857584810
Sweden4382581802345104755851045186631071635410684555
Australia12512322
United Kingdom466283183861274586636103533763856213644846726
Poland151461056212187514311444104105373
Serbia31287225381263657237581017221286127112712107188107
Estonia1414398135528768312352810244

12 points

Below is a summary of all 12 points received in the final. In the jury vote, Spain and the United Kingdom each received the maximum score of 12 points from eight countries, with Greece receiving six sets of 12 points. Sweden and Ukraine received the maximum score from five countries, while Azerbaijan received three sets of 12 points. Italy and Serbia were awarded two sets of 12 points each, and the Netherlands was awarded one set of 12 points.

In the public vote, Ukraine received the maximum score of 12 points from a record-breaking twenty-eight countries.[167] Serbia received the maximum score from five countries, Moldova were awarded two sets of 12 points, and Estonia, Greece, Poland, Spain, and the United Kingdom were each awarded one set of 12 points.[157]

12 points awarded by juries
N.ContestantNation(s) giving 12 points
8  Spain  Armenia,  Australia,  Ireland,  Malta,  North Macedonia,  Portugal,  San Marino,  Sweden
 United Kingdom  Austria,  Azerbaijan,  Belgium,  Czech Republic,  France,  Georgia,  Germany,  Ukraine
6  Greece  Bulgaria,  Cyprus,  Denmark,  Netherlands,  Norway,   Switzerland
5  Sweden  Estonia,  Finland,  Iceland,  Israel,  United Kingdom
 Ukraine  Latvia,  Lithuania,  Moldova,  Poland,  Romania
3  Azerbaijan  Greece,  Serbia,  Spain
2  Italy  Albania,  Slovenia
 Serbia  Croatia,  Montenegro
1  Netherlands  Italy
12 points awarded by televoting
N.ContestantNation(s) giving 12 points
28  Ukraine  Australia,  Austria,  Azerbaijan,  Belgium,  Bulgaria,  Cyprus,  Czech Republic,  Denmark,  Estonia,  Finland,  France,  Georgia,  Germany,  Iceland,  Ireland,  Israel,  Italy,  Latvia,  Lithuania,  Moldova,  Netherlands,  Norway,  Poland,  Portugal,  San Marino,  Spain,  Sweden,  United Kingdom
5  Serbia  Croatia,  Montenegro,  North Macedonia,  Slovenia,   Switzerland
2  Moldova  Romania,  Serbia
1  Estonia  Armenia
 Greece  Albania
 Poland  Ukraine
 Spain  Greece
 United Kingdom  Malta

Broadcasts

All participating broadcasters may choose to have on-site or remote commentators providing an insight about the show and voting information to their local audience. While they must broadcast at least the semi-final they are voting in and the final, most broadcasters air all three shows with different programming plans. Similarly, some non-participating broadcasters may still want to air the contest.

The European Broadcasting Union provided international live streams of both semi-finals and the final through their official YouTube channel with no commentary, and through their official TikTok channel with an additional backstage feed.[168] The YouTube live streams were geo-blocked to viewers in the Czech Republic, Greece, United Kingdom and the United States. After the live broadcasts, all three shows were made available for every country listed above except the United States.[169]

For the first time in the contest's history, RAI trialled the broadcasts of the event in 4K UHD.[170][171] The contest was aired on Rai 4K [it] as an upscaled version of the HD feed, as RAI had yet to be fully equipped for broadcast of native 4K content.[172]

Broadcasters and commentators in participating countries
CountryBroadcasterChannel(s)Show(s)Commentator(s)Ref(s)
 AlbaniaRTSHRTSH, RTSH Muzikë, Radio TiranaAll showsAndri Xhahu[173][174]
 ArmeniaAMPTVArmenia 1All showsGarik Papoyan and Hrachuhi Utmazyan [hy][175][176]
Public RadioUnknown
 AustraliaSBSSBSAll showsMyf Warhurst and Joel Creasey[177][178]
 AustriaORFORF 1All showsAndi Knoll[179][180][181]
FM4FinalKurdwin Ayub, Florian Alexander, Hannes Duscher and Roland Gratzer[182]
 AzerbaijanİTVAll showsMurad Arif[183][184]
 BelgiumRTBFLa Une, VivaCitéAll showsJean-Louis Lahaye [fr] and Maureen Louys[185][186][187]
VRTéénPeter Van de Veire[188]
 BulgariaBNTBNT 1, BNT 4All showsElena Rosberg and Petko Kralev[189]
 CroatiaHRTHRT 1All showsDuško Ćurlić[190][191]
HR 2Zlatko Turkalj [hr]
 CyprusCyBCRIK 1, RIK HD, RIK SatAll showsMelina Karageorgiou and Alexandros Taramountas[192]
 Czech RepublicČTČT2All showsJan Maxián [cs][193][194][195][196]
 DenmarkDRDR1All showsHenrik Milling [da] and Nicolai Molbech[197][198]
 EstoniaERRETVAll showsMarko Reikop[199]
ETV+Aleksandr Hobotov and Julia Kalenda[200][201]
 FinlandYleYle TV1, Yle Areena [fi]All shows
  • Finnish: Mikko Silvennoinen
  • Swedish: Eva Frantz [fi] and Johan Lindroos
  • Russian: Levan Tvaltvadze
  • Inari Sami: Heli Huovinen
  • Northern Sami: Aslak Paltto [fi]
[202]
Yle Radio SuomiSanna Pirkkalainen and Toni Laaksonen [fi][203][204][205]
Yle X3MEva Frantz and Johan Lindroos
 FranceFrance TélévisionsCultureboxSemi-finalsLaurence Boccolini[206][207]
France 2FinalStéphane Bern and Laurence Boccolini
France 3 BretagneGoulwena an Henaff [fr], Yann-Herle, Thelo Mell and Mael Gwenneg[208][209]
 GeorgiaGPB1TVAll showsNika Lobiladze[210][211][212]
 GermanyARD/NDROneAll showsPeter Urban[213][214][215][216]
Das ErsteFinal
Deutsche Welle
Radio Eins [de]Amelie Ernst [de] and Max Spallek [de][217]
 GreeceERTERT1All showsMaria Kozakou and Giorgos Kapoutzidis[218]
Deftero Programma, Voice of GreeceDimitris Meidanis[219]
 IcelandRÚVRÚV, RÚV 2All showsGísli Marteinn Baldursson[220][221]
Rás 2Final
 IrelandRTÉRTÉ2Semi-finalsMarty Whelan[222][223][224]
RTÉ OneFinal
RTÉ Radio 1SF2/FinalNeil Doherty and Zbyszek Zalinski[225][226]
 IsraelIPBCKan 11, Kan Tarbut [he]All showsAsaf Liberman [he] and Akiva Novick [he][227]
 ItalyRAIRai 1, Rai 4K [it], Rai ItaliaAll showsGabriele Corsi [it], Cristiano Malgioglio and Carolina Di Domenico[228][229][170][230]
Rai Radio 2Ema Stokholma [it], Gino Castaldo [it] and Saverio Raimondo [it][231][232]
RaiPlayThe Jackal [it][233]
 LatviaLTVLTV1All showsToms Grēviņš [lv] and Lauris Reiniks[234][235]
 LithuaniaLRTLRT televizija, LRT RadijasAll showsRamūnas Zilnys [lt][236][237]
 MaltaPBSTVMAll showsNo commentary[238]
 MoldovaTRMMoldova 1, Radio MoldovaAll showsIon Jalbă and Daniela Crudu[239]
 MontenegroRTCGTVCG 1, TVCG SATAll showsDražen Bauković and Tijana Mišković[240]
 NetherlandsNPO/AVROTROSNPO 1, BVNAll showsCornald Maas and Jan Smit[241][242][243]
NPO Radio 2FinalFrank van 't Hof [nl] and Jeroen Kijk in de Vegte
 North MacedoniaMRTMRT 1, MRT 2All showsEli Tanaskovska[244][245]
 NorwayNRKNRK1All showsMarte Stokstad [no][246][247][248][249]
NRK P1FinalJon Marius Hyttebakk and Marit Sofie Strand
 PolandTVPTVP1, TVP PoloniaAll showsAleksander Sikora [pl] and Marek Sierocki [pl][250]
 PortugalRTPRTP1, RTP Internacional, RTP ÁfricaAll shows[q]Nuno Galopim[251][252][253][254]
 RomaniaTVRTVR 1, TVRiSF1Bogdan Stănescu[255][256][257][258]
SF2/FinalBogdan Stănescu and Kyrie Mendél
 San MarinoSMRTVSan Marino RTV, Radio San MarinoAll showsLia Fiorio and Gigi Restivo[259][260][261]
 SerbiaRTSRTS 1, RTS Planeta, RTS SvetSF1Silvana Grujić[262][263][264][265]
SF2/FinalDuška Vučinić
 SloveniaRTVSLOTV SLO 2 [sl]Semi-finalsAndrej Hofer [sl][266][267][268]
TV SLO 1 [sl]Final
Radio Val 202, Radio Maribor [sl]SF1/FinalMaruša Kerec [sl]
 SpainRTVELa 1, TVE InternacionalAll showsTony Aguilar and Julia Varela[269][270][271][272]
Radio NacionalFinalImanol Durán, Sara Calvo and David Asensio[273][274]
 SwedenSVTSVT1Semi-finalsEdward af Sillén[275][276][277]
FinalEdward af Sillén and Linnea Henriksson
SVT 24All showsAnnika Lundin[278]
SRSR P4Carolina Norén[279]
  SwitzerlandSRG SSRSRF zweiSemi-finalsSven Epiney[280][281][282][283][284]
SRF infoSF2
SRF 1Final
RTS 2Semi-finalsJean-Marc Richard and Nicolas Tanner[285][286][287]
RTS 1FinalJean-Marc Richard and Gjon's Tears
RSI La 2SF1Clarissa Tami [it] and Francesca Margiotta[288][289][290]
SF2Clarissa Tami and Boris Piffaretti
RSI La 1FinalClarissa Tami, Francesca Margiotta and Boris Piffaretti
 UkraineUA:PBCUA:KulturaAll showsTimur Miroshnychenko[291][292][293][294][295]
UA:Radio Promin [uk]Semi-finals[r]
FinalAnna Zakletska and Dmytro Zakharchenko
 United KingdomBBCBBC ThreeSemi-finalsScott Mills and Rylan Clark[296]
BBC OneFinalGraham Norton
BBC Radio 2Ken Bruce
Broadcasters and commentators in non-participating countries
CountryBroadcasterChannel(s)Show(s)Commentator(s)Ref(s)
 French PolynesiaFrance TélévisionsPolynésie la 1èreFinalLaurence Boccolini and Stéphane Bern[297]
 KosovoRTKUnknownAll showsUnknown[298]
 Saint Pierre and MiquelonFrance TélévisionsSaint-Pierre and Miquelon la 1ère [fr]Final[s]Laurence Boccolini and Stéphane Bern[299]
 United StatesNBCPeacockAll showsJohnny Weir[300][301][302]
WJFD-FMFinalEwan Spence and Alesia Michelle[303]

Incidents

Impact of the Russian invasion of Ukraine

Ukrainian artist replacement

Following the controversy surrounding the Ukrainian national selection in 2019, which led to the country withdrawing from the contest that year, a new rule was introduced starting from 2020 which bars artists who have performed in Russia since 2014 or have entered Crimea "in violation of the legislation of Ukraine" from entering the selection.[304] The 2022 Ukrainian national selection was won by Alina Pash with the song "Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors".[305] On 14 February 2022, two days after the selection, activist and video blogger Serhii Sternenko alleged that Pash had entered Crimea from Russian territory in 2015, and counterfeited her travel documentation with her team in order to take part in the selection.[306] The Ukrainian broadcaster UA:PBC subsequently stated that they would request the Ukrainian State Border Guard Service to verify if the documentation is forged, and that Pash would not officially be the Ukrainian representative at the contest "until the verification and clarification of the facts is completed".[307] After it was discovered that a representative of Pash's team had handed in falsified documentation to UA:PBC,[308][309][310] on 16 February, Pash announced that she would withdraw her candidacy as the Ukrainian representative at the contest.[311][312] Runner-up of the selection, Kalush Orchestra with the song "Stefania", were given an offer to represent Ukraine in Pash's place on 17 February.[313][314][315][316] On 22 February, UA:PBC confirmed that Kalush Orchestra had accepted the offer.[317]

Exclusion of Russia

In the wake of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, which began on 24 February 2022, UA:PBC appealed to suspend Russian EBU member broadcasters VGTRK and Channel One from the union, and to exclude Russia from competing in the contest. The appeal alleged that since the beginning of the Russian military intervention in Ukraine in 2014, VGTRK and Channel One have been a mouthpiece for the Russian government and a key tool of political propaganda financed from the Russian state budget. The EBU initially stated that Russia as well as Ukraine would still be allowed to participate in the contest, citing the non-political nature of the event.[318][319][320]

Several broadcasters expressed their concern at the decision and issued statements calling for the removal of Russia from the contest. In addition to Ukraine's UA:PBC, nine other countries' broadcasters requested the EBU to change the decision: Denmark's DR, Estonia's ERR, Finland's Yle, Iceland's RÚV, Lithuania's LRT, the Netherlands' AVROTROS, Norway's NRK, Poland's TVP and Sweden's SVT.[321] Yle also stated that they would withdraw their participation if Russia were not excluded from the contest.[322] This was followed by a similar announcement from ERR.[323] Latvian representatives Citi Zēni also urged the EBU to reconsider Russian participation.[324] On 25 February 2022, the EBU announced that Russia would not compete at the contest, stating that "in light of the unprecedented crisis in Ukraine, the inclusion of a Russian entry in this year's Contest would bring the competition into disrepute."[74] The following day, all EBU members from Russia, including VGTRK and Channel One, announced their withdrawal from the union, according to a statement released by Russian state media.[88] Russia had not publicly announced an artist or song before being excluded.

Ukrainian preparations

Following the start of the invasion, UA:PBC and Kalush Orchestra had yet to formally comment on whether their participation in the contest would continue.[325][326] On 14 March 2022, Claudio Fasulo and Simona Martorelli, executive producers of the 2022 contest, confirmed that Ukraine would still be competing; this was later reaffirmed by UA:PBC on 19 March via a post on its social media pages.[327][328][329] They added that work would commence on the Ukrainian 'live-on-tape' backup performance, which was planned to be recorded in Lviv and used in the event that the delegation cannot travel to Turin,[330][331] however, the delegation was later exempted from the requirement to do so.[332] On 2 April, UA:PBC confirmed that Kalush Orchestra and the rest of the delegation was given permission to travel to Turin for the contest, adding that the group would also take part in promotional events across Europe to raise donations for war relief efforts.[333][334][335]

Attempted cyber attacks

On 11 May 2022, pro-Russia hacker group Killnet carried out an attack on numerous Italian institutional websites, including those of the Ministry of Defense, the Senate, the National Health Institute and the Automobile Club d'Italia.[336][337] The official website of the Eurovision Song Contest was later revealed to be among those that were targeted, in addition to the platform on which the contest's voting system is based. Additional attacks were reported to have taken place during the first semi-final and the final.[338][339] The attacks were ultimately unsuccessful, and there were no disruptions to either the website or the voting platform.[340][341]

On-stage statements

During the broadcast of the final, after Kalush Orchestra had finished their performance, the group's frontman Oleh Psiuk shouted onstage: "I ask all of you, please help Ukraine, Mariupol. Help Azovstal, right now!"[342] The contest's rules precludes promoting political statements and messages, and several commentators noted that Psiuk's statement could be in breach of the rules.[343] However, the EBU deemed the statement to be "humanitarian rather than political in nature”.[344] The German and Icelandic representatives, Malik Harris and Systur respectively, also showed support for Ukraine onstage after finishing their performances.[345]

Rehearsal stage malfunction

The 'kinetic sun' component of the stage in its static form.

During the first day of rehearsals in Turin on 30 April 2022, Italian newspapers La Repubblica and La Stampa reported technical difficulties with the 'kinetic sun' component of the stage, with its arches not being able to move as freely as expected. The papers also reported that the malfunction could not be completely fixed in time for the live shows.[346][347] Several delegations, among them those from Belgium,[348] Denmark,[349] Estonia,[350] Finland[351] and Lithuania,[352] were forced to revise their staging plans, having been informed of the malfunction a few days prior. La Stampa later reported the following day that a compromise was reached, in which the arches would stay static for the competing entries' performances, while for the opening and interval acts, the arches would be permitted to move dynamically.[353] This was later confirmed by the EBU in a statement issued to Danish broadcaster DR on 2 May.[349]

Macedonian flag incident

During the "Turquoise Carpet" event on 8 May 2022, the Macedonian representative Andrea was seen lightly tossing the Macedonian flag on the ground before posing for the press. The Macedonian broadcaster MRT later published a statement condemning her action, describing it as "desecration of a national symbol, which is punishable by Macedonian law". In the same statement, the broadcaster stated that it was considering withdrawing Andrea from the contest, and that people in the delegation that are deemed responsible for the incident would be sanctioned.[354][355] Andrea herself issued an apology later that day.[356] MRT later stated on 11 May that it would take all disciplinary measures after the delegation returned from Turin, while also raising the possibility that it would not return for the 2023 contest, because of the negative publicity caused by the incident.[357] MRT eventually confirmed its non-participation in the 2023 contest, citing financial difficulties, instead.[358]

Jury vote irregularities

In a statement released during the broadcast of the final, the EBU revealed that during the jury show of the second semi-final on 11 May 2022, six national juries, namely those of Azerbaijan, Georgia, Montenegro, Poland, Romania and San Marino, were found to have had irregular voting patterns. As a result, these six countries were given substitute aggregated jury results for the second semi-final and the final based on countries with similar voting patterns, as determined by the pots that the countries were put into for the semi-final allocation draw in January.[359][360] The Flemish broadcaster VRT later reported that the juries of the countries involved had made agreements to vote for each other.[361]

During the announcement of the jury votes in the final, Azerbaijan, Romania and Georgia had their votes announced by Martin Österdahl, the contest's executive supervisor.[362] This was stated to have been due to technical difficulties in establishing connection with those countries' designated spokespersons. The spokespersons who would have announced them were Narmin Salmanova, Eda Marcus and Helen Kalandadze respectively.[164] A press release from the Romanian broadcaster TVR on 20 May revealed that the reason for Österdahl's intervention on behalf of the Romanian spokesperson was due to TVR's refusal to accept the aggregate scores calculated by the EBU.[363]

The day after the final, TVR accused the EBU of "changing the rules" and requested further clarification of the incident. In their original decision, the Romanian jury awarded 12 points to Moldova.[364][365] The Georgian broadcaster GPB and the Azerbaijani broadcaster İTV also requested a more detailed statement on the jury vote issues, disclosing that their juries' 12 points were originally awarded to Ukraine.[366][367][368] The Montenegrin broadcaster RTCG and the Polish broadcaster TVP also requested more clarification on the issue.[369][370] In addition, TVR and İTV claimed that no technical difficulties had occurred during the jury voting segment of the final.[371][372]

On 19 May 2022, the EBU released the full breakdown of the nullified jury votes from the second semi-final.[373] RTCG, TVR and the Sammarinese broadcaster SMRTV denied any wrongdoing on their part, with the former two claiming that other irregular voting patterns existed but were not detected.[374][363][375] TVR also threatened to withdraw from the contest for 2023 and future editions, while also planning to take legal action against the EBU in response.[376] However, it was reported by Romanian news outlet Impact.ro on 29 July that TVR had dropped all of its objections,[377] and on 26 August, TVR confirmed its participation in the 2023 contest.[378]

Reception

Following the 2022 contest, three entries entered the Billboard Global 200 chart dated 28 May 2022: Ukraine's winning entry "Stefania" at number 85, the United Kingdom's "Space Man" at number 93, and Spain's "SloMo" at number 151. On the Billboard Global Excl. US chart also dated 28 May 2022, the three aforementioned entries entered at numbers 39, 37 and 79, respectively, followed by Italy's "Brividi" at number 194. "Brividi" had previously peaked at number seven on the Global Excl. US chart and at number 15 on the Global 200 chart following its win at the Sanremo Music Festival 2022, which also doubled as the Italian national final.[379][380]

By the end of June 2022, Armenia's entry "Snap" had begun to gain traction on video sharing service TikTok, and subsequently gained viral success on the platform; it had featured in almost 360,000 clips on the service by July of that year.[381] As a result, the song experienced a surge in streams and downloads, and went on to chart in multiple countries.[382] It topped the charts in the Flanders region of Belgium, reached the top ten in ten countries, and charted in a further 23 countries, including peaking at number 21 on the UK Singles Chart and at number 67 on the US Billboard Hot 100.[383] The latter achievement also made "Snap" the second Eurovision song of the 21st century to enter the Billboard Hot 100, after the 2019 winning entry "Arcade".[384]

Other awards

In addition to the main winner's trophy, the Marcel Bezençon Awards and the You're a Vision Award were contested during the Eurovision Song Contest 2022. The OGAE, "General Organisation of Eurovision Fans" voting poll also took place before the contest.

Marcel Bezençon Awards

The Marcel Bezençon Awards, organised since 2002 by Sweden's then-Head of Delegation and 1992 representative Christer Björkman, and winner of the 1984 contest Richard Herrey, honours songs in the contest's final.[385] The awards are divided into three categories: the Artistic Award, the Composers Award, and the Press Award.[386] The winners were revealed shortly before the Eurovision final on 14 May.[387]

CategoryCountrySongPerformer(s)Songwriter(s)
Artistic Award  Serbia"In corpore sano"Konstrakta
Composers Award  Sweden"Hold Me Closer"Cornelia Jakobs
Press Award  United Kingdom"Space Man"Sam Ryder

OGAE

OGAE, an organisation of over forty Eurovision Song Contest fan clubs across Europe and beyond, conducts an annual voting poll first held in 2002 as the Marcel Bezençon Fan Award. After all votes were cast, the top-ranked entry in the 2022 poll was Sweden's "Hold Me Closer" performed by Cornelia Jakobs; the top five results are shown below.[388][389][390]

CountryPerformer(s)SongOGAE result
 SwedenCornelia Jakobs"Hold Me Closer"393
 ItalyMahmood and Blanco"Brividi"387
 SpainChanel"SloMo"294
 NetherlandsS10"De diepte"218
 United KingdomSam Ryder"Space Man"204

You're a Vision Award

2022 saw the first edition of the You're a Vision Award (a word play of "Eurovision"), ran by the fansite Songfestival.be. Following the cancellation of the Barbara Dex Award due to its associated negative connotations, the You're a Vision Award was established with the aim to "celebrate the creativity and diversity that embody the Eurovision spirit", with the winner being the one with the most notable outfit. Australia's Sheldon Riley won the award, with Spain's Chanel, Norway's Subwoolfer, and San Marino's Achille Lauro completing the top four.[391]

PlaceCountryPerformer(s)
1  AustraliaSheldon Riley
2  SpainChanel
3  NorwaySubwoolfer
4  San MarinoAchille Lauro

Eurovision Awards

The second edition of the Eurovision Awards saw the competing acts of 2022 celebrated across ten categories. Shortlists were determined by major Eurovision fansites and podcasts, with editors and presenters nominating their favourites in each category; the final result was determined by followers of the official Eurovision Instagram channel who cast votes for their favourite act.[392]

Winners are listed first and highlighted in boldface.

Most Innovative StagingBest Vocals
Most Iconic PropBest Non-Qualifier
Best LyricsBest Look
Best HairBest Official Video
Best ChoreographyBest Moment

Official album

Cover art of the official album

Eurovision Song Contest: Turin 2022 is the official compilation album of the contest, put together by the European Broadcasting Union and released by Universal Music Group digitally on 8 April 2022, in CD format on 22 April 2022, and in cassette and vinyl formats on 6 May 2022.[394][395][396][397] The album features all 40 entries including the semi-finalists that failed to qualify for the final.

Charts

Weekly charts

Weekly chart performance for Eurovision Song Contest: Turin 2022
Chart (2022)Peak
position
Australian Albums (ARIA)[398]11
Austrian Compilation Albums (Ö3 Austria)[399]1
German Compilation Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[400]1
Dutch Compilation Albums (Compilation Top 30)[401]1
Irish Compilation Albums (IRMA)[402]4
Italian Albums (FIMI)[403]47
Lithuanian Albums (AGATA)[404]93
Polish Albums (ZPAV)[405]47
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[406]1
UK Compilation Albums (OCC)[407]1

Year-end charts

Year-end chart performance for Eurovision Song Contest: Turin 2022
Chart (2022)Position
Swiss Compilation Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[408]7

See also

Notes

References

External links

Media related to Eurovision Song Contest 2022 at Wikimedia Commons