Urthvision Songfestival
The Urthvision Songfestival, sometimes abbreviated as USF or more famous as Urthvision, is an international song competition organised annually by the UVSF which features 5 nations (as for now) being Blueacia, Morstaybishlia, New Leganés, Peregrinia and Tavaris. Each participating country submits an original song to be performed on live television and radio, transmitted to national broadcasters via the public broadcaster which joined the competition, with competing countries then casting votes for the other countries' songs to determine a winner.
Eurovision Song Contest | |
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The current Eurovision Song Contest logo, in use since 2015 | |
Also known as |
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Genre | Music competition |
Created by | European Broadcasting Union |
Based on | Sanremo Music Festival |
Presented by | Various presenters |
Theme music composer | Marc-Antoine Charpentier |
Opening theme | Prelude to Te Deum, H. 146 |
Country of origin | Various participating countries |
Original languages | English and French |
No. of episodes |
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Production | |
Production locations | Various host cities (in 2022, TBD, Italy) |
Running time |
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Production companies | European Broadcasting Union Various national broadcasters (in 2022, RAI) |
Distributor | Eurovision |
Release | |
Picture format | |
Original release | 24 May 1956 |
Chronology | |
Related shows |
Origins and history
Naming
Format
Selection
Participation
Hosting
Eurovision logo and theme
Preparations
Rules
Song eligibility and languages
Artist eligibility and performances
Running order
Votin
Presentation of the votes
Broadcasting
Expansion of the contest
Pre-selections and relegation
The "Big Four" and "Big Five"
Introduction of semi-finals
Winners
Entries and participants
Interval acts and guest appearances
Criticism and controversy
The contest has been the subject of considerable criticism regarding both its musical content and what has been reported to be a political element to the event, and several controversial moments have been witnessed over the course of its history.[2]
Musical style and presentation
Political controversies
Political and geographical voting
LGBT visibility
Cultural influence
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- ↑ Robinson, Frances (3 May 2017). "13 times Eurovision got super political". Politico. Retrieved 8 July 2020.