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The Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2014 was the 12th edition of the annual Junior Eurovision Song Contest, and took place, for the first time, in Malta. This was the third time that the contest was hosted by the previous year's winning country. Maltese national broadcaster PBS was the host broadcaster for the event. The final took place on 15 November 2014 and was in the Malta Shipbuilding in Marsa, near Valletta. Moira Delia, a Maltese television personality, hosted the show, marking the first time in Junior Eurovision history that there was only one presenter of the show.

Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2014
#Together
Dates
Final15 November 2014
Host
VenueMalta Shipbuilding, Marsa, Malta
Presenter(s)Moira Delia
Directed byGordon Bonello
Executive supervisorVladislav Yakovlev
Executive producerAnton Attard
Host broadcasterPublic Broadcasting Services (PBS)
Interval actGaia Cauchi
La Voix Academy feat. Andy Shaw and Veronica Rotin
Websitejunioreurovision.tv/event/valletta-2014
Participants
Number of entries16
Debuting countries
  •  Italy
  •  Montenegro
  •  Slovenia
Returning countries
  •  Bulgaria
  •  Croatia
  •  Cyprus
  •  Serbia
Non-returning countries
  •  Azerbaijan
  •  Macedonia
  •  Moldova
Participation map
  • frameless}}
    frameless}}
         Participating countries     Countries that participated in the past but not in 2014
Vote
Voting systemEach country awards 12, 10, 8–1 points to their 10 favourite songs.
Winning song Italy
"Tu primo grande amore"
2013 Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2015

A total of sixteen countries participated, with Italy, Montenegro and Slovenia making their debuts. The winner of the contest was Vincenzo Cantiello, who represented Italy with the song "Tu primo grande amore". Bulgaria and Armenia finished in second and third place, respectively. This was Italy's first victory in a Eurovision competition since the last edition of Jeux Sans Frontières in 1999, and also marked the first time since the inaugural 2003 contest that a country had won in its débutante year.


Location


Marsa
The venue for the contest was Malta Shipbuilding in Marsa

On 18 December 2013, the Maltese national broadcaster Public Broadcasting Services (PBS) and the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) announced that the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2014 would take place in Malta. During the winner's press conference, representatives of the Maltese broadcaster showed their desire to host the event, following the Malta victory at the 2013 contest. Vladislav Yakovlev, the executive supervisor for the Junior Eurovision Song Contest, announced that there would be no host city for the contest, but that the island of Malta would be a host island instead. This was the first time Malta had hosted any of the Eurovision-related events.[1]

On 16 June 2014, the EBU confirmed that the 2014 contest would be held at three large former shipbuilding sheds of Malta Shipbuilding. The middle shed would be the main audience area and stage, while the two side sheds would be used as audience entrances and exits, restrooms, and refreshment stalls. In total, there was capacity for 4,000–4,500 people inside the buildings.[2]


Format



Graphic design


On 9 May 2014, Anton Attard, CEO of the host broadcaster, revealed the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2014 logo and slogan.[3] The slogan was "#together", while the logo was inspired by the Maltese cross.[3] Each of its coloured segments represented a feature of Malta: Sand, Sea, Stone, Grass, Sky, Dusk and Sunset.[3] The postcards included a theme of "extreme sports", and were partially filmed at the SmartCity Malta complex.[4]

The stage design was presented during the Heads of Delegations meeting held on 30 September 2014.[5] Gio'Forma, a Milan-based design company, was given the task of designing the stage for the 2014 contest. The stage used an origami-like appearance, inspired by the triangle-shaped 2014 Junior Eurovision logo.[5] The venue itself was approximately 30,000 m2 (320,000 sq ft) in size, and the production team moved into the venue on 21 October.[5]


Host


On 10 September 2014, it was announced that Moira Delia would host the 2014 contest. She is known in Malta for presenting editions of Malta Eurovision Song Contest, Malta's national selection for the Eurovision Song Contest. She was the first presenter to host the contest single-handedly.[6]


Running order


During the Heads of Delegations meeting in Malta on 30 September 2014, the broadcaster PBS along with the production team sought permission to change the running order rule, which was to allow the artists to randomly select their position number (a system used in 2013).[7] The agreed change was for the host country, Malta, to pick their position at random, followed by countries that were to open and close the show to be picked randomly. The remaining countries would then select at random whether they were to perform in the first or second half of the show. This draw took place during the opening ceremony, at the Verdala Palace on 9 November 2013.[8] A pre-draw to decide the order in which countries would select their running order halves, took place on 7 November 2014, hosted by Moira Delia, Vladislav Yakovlev, and Gaia Cauchi.[9] PBS and the production team then decided the running order so that they could avoid similar entries performing consecutively. This method has been used in the senior contests since 2013. The Executive Supervisor along with the Steering Group presented the finalised running order shortly after the opening ceremony.[7]


Rehearsals


The national broadcaster, PBS, decided at the Heads of Delegations meeting on 30 September 2014, that all participating countries would not have their rehearsals in running order; allowing for school visits and personal trips of the participants to be carried out uninterruptedly, something which had not been done in previous years.[7]


Voting


The voting system for 2014 was reverted to a system previously used in both the Junior and Senior contests prior to 2013. Both the national juries and televoting awarded 1 to 8 points, 10 and then the maximum 12 points to their ten favourite songs. The way the votes were to be announced remained unchanged, the first seven points appeared on screen; whilst spokespersons from each of the participating countries read out their top three points (8, 10, and 12).[7]

On 30 October 2014, the EBU announced that a new online voting system would be introduced for the 2014 contest, to allow countries from around the world to vote for their favourite entry. The votes were not used in the official voting results, but the country who received the most online votes was presented with the new "Online Voting Winner" award, during the winners presentation conference after the show. In order to prevent vote-rigging, the online results were published via the Junior Eurovision website, after the show has concluded.[10] Due to the website crashing the online voting award was not awarded.[11]


Participating countries


On 30 September 2014, it was confirmed that sixteen countries would be taking part in the contest.[12] This was the highest number of entries since 2007. Débutante countries included, Italy, Montenegro, and Slovenia.[13][14][15] Four countries returned to the contest, including Croatia after a seven-year absence,[16] Cyprus who last took part in 2009,[17] Serbia and Bulgaria after a three and two year absences respectively.[18][19]


Participants and results


R/O[20] Country[20] Artist[20] Song[20] Language Points[21] Place[21]
1  Belarus Nadezhda Misyakova "Sokal" (Сокал) Belarusian 71 7
2  Bulgaria Krisia, Hasan and Ibrahim "Planet of the Children" Bulgarian 147 2
3  San Marino The Peppermints "Breaking My Heart" Italian, English 21 15
4  Croatia Josie "Game Over" Croatian, English 13 16
5  Cyprus Sophia Patsalides "I pio omorfi mera" (Η πιο όμορφη μέρα) Greek, English 69 9
6  Georgia Lizi Pop "Happy Day" Georgian, English 54 11
7  Sweden Julia Kedhammar "Du är inte ensam" Swedish, English 28 13
8  Ukraine Sympho-Nick "Spring Will Come" Ukrainian, English 74 6
9  Slovenia Ula Ložar "Nisi sam (Your Light)" Slovene, English 29 12
10  Montenegro Maša Vujadinović and Lejla Vulić "Budi dijete na jedan dan" (Буди дијете на један дан) Montenegrin, English 24 14
11  Italy Vincenzo Cantiello "Tu primo grande amore" Italian, English 159 1
12  Armenia Betty "People of the Sun" Armenian, English 146 3
13  Russia Alisa Kozhikina "Dreamer" Russian, English 96 5
14  Serbia Emilija Đonin "Svet u mojim očima" (Свет у мојим очима) Serbian 61 10
15  Malta Federica Falzon "Diamonds" English 116 4
16  Netherlands Julia van Bergen "Around" Dutch, English 70 8

Detailed voting results


Vincenzo Cantiello who represented Italy with the song "Tu primo grande amore", was declared the winner after all the votes had been cast from all of the sixteen participating countries and the kids jury.[22] Below is a full breakdown of how the votes were cast.[23]

  Winner
Split results[24]
Place Combined Jury Televoting[lower-alpha 1]
Country Points Country Points Country Points
1  Italy 159  Italy 143  Bulgaria 143
2  Bulgaria 147  Armenia 124  Armenia 114
3  Armenia 146  Malta 113  Ukraine 100
4  Malta 116  Bulgaria 86  Italy 100
5  Russia 96  Cyprus 73  Russia 89
6  Ukraine 74  Russia 72  Netherlands 69
7  Belarus 71  Serbia 65  Malta 64
8  Netherlands 70  Belarus 62  Belarus 58
9  Cyprus 69  Netherlands 44  Cyprus 42
10  Serbia 61  Georgia 44  Georgia 41
11  Georgia 54  Sweden 39  Slovenia 39
12  Slovenia 29  Ukraine 24  Serbia 34
13  Sweden 28  Montenegro 21  San Marino 11
14  Montenegro 24  Slovenia 14  Montenegro 10
15  San Marino 21  San Marino 11  Sweden 3
16  Croatia 13  Croatia 3  Croatia 1
Detailed voting results[25]
Voting procedure used:
  50% jury and televote
  100% jury vote
Total score
Kids Jury
Belarus
Bulgaria
San Marino
Croatia
Cyprus
Georgia
Sweden
Ukraine
Slovenia
Montenegro
Italy
Armenia
Russia
Serbia
Malta
Netherlands
Contestants
Belarus 7181321656213867
Bulgaria 1474712128108108107712812
San Marino 2181
Croatia 131
Cyprus 6963884644536
Georgia 541422132125172
Sweden 28213415
Ukraine 7464747110344543
Slovenia 291323224
Montenegro 24345
Italy 15912210121010107101212868108
Armenia 14671212766128128221261210
Russia 9651075583157510103
Serbia 613668345761
Malta 1161085107547661261071
Netherlands 702534452121175232

12 points


Below is a summary of all 12 points received. All countries were given 12 points at the start of voting to ensure that no country finished with nul points.

N. Contestant Nation(s) giving 12 points
6  Armenia Belarus,  Bulgaria,  Georgia,  Malta,  Russia,  Ukraine
4  Bulgaria Croatia,  Cyprus,  Netherlands,  Serbia
 Italy Kids Jury,  Montenegro,  San Marino,  Slovenia
1  Georgia Armenia
 Malta Italy
 Netherlands Sweden

Spokespersons


The order in which each country announces their votes was in the order of performance. Details of the running order were published by the EBU after the 'Welcome Reception' on 9 November 2014.[7] The spokespersons are shown below alongside each participating country. Gaia Cauchi announced the points from the 'Kids Jury.'

  1.  Kids Jury  Gaia Cauchi[26][better source needed]
  2.  Belarus  Katerina Taperkina[27][better source needed]
  3.  Bulgaria  Ina Angelova[27]
  4.  San Marino  Clara[26]
  5.  Croatia  Sarah[26]
  6.  Cyprus  Paris Nicolaou[27]
  7.  Georgia  Mariam Khunjgurua[27]
  8.  Sweden  Elias Elffors Elfström[28]
  9.  Ukraine  Sofia Tarasova[29]
  10.  Slovenia  Gal Fajon[27]
  11.  Montenegro  Aleksandra[26]
  12.  Italy  Geordie Schembri[26]
  13.  Armenia  Monica Avanesyan[30]
  14.  Russia  Maria Kareeva[27]
  15.  Serbia  Tamara Vasović[27]
  16.  Malta  Julian Pulis[26]
  17.  Netherlands  Mylène and Rosanne[31]

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.[32] It is unknown whether the EBU issue invitations of participation to all 56 active members like they do for the Eurovision Song Contest.[32] Sixteen countries confirmed their participation in the 2014 contest. The following EBU active members announced their decisions as shown below.


Active EBU Members



Non-active EBU Members


In August 2014, executive supervisor Yakolev said that he was investigating the possibility of allowing commercial networks, who are not members of the EBU, to field contestants.[52]


Broadcasts


Most countries sent commentators to Malta, while others commentated from their own country, in order to add insight to the participants and, where necessary, provision of voting information.[56]

Broadcasters and commentators in participating countries
Country Broadcaster(s) Commentator(s) Ref.
 Armenia Armenia 1 Avet Barseghyan
 Belarus Belarus 1 and Belarus 24 Anatoliy Lipetskiy
 Bulgaria BNT 1 and BNT HD Georgy Kushvaliev and Elena Rosberg
 Croatia HRT 2 Ivan Planinić and Aljoša Šerić
 Cyprus CyBC 2 and CyBC HD Kyriacos Pastides
 Georgia GPB 1TV Mero Chikashvili and Temo Kvirkvelia
 Italy Rai Gulp Simone Lijoi and Antonella Clerici
 Malta TVM Daniel Chircop
 Montenegro TVCG 2 Dražen Bauković and Tamara Ivanković [57]
 Netherlands NPO 3 Jan Smit
 Russia Karousel Olga Shelest and Alexander Gurevich [57]
 San Marino SMRTV Lia Fiorio and Gilberto Gattei
 Serbia RTS 2 Silvana Grujić
 Slovenia TV SLO 1 Bernarda Žarn
 Sweden SVT Barnkanalen Edward af Sillén and Ylva Hällen
 Ukraine Pershyi Natsionalnyi Timur Miroshnychenko

The following non-participating countries also sent commentators to Malta for radio and television broadcasts of the contest.[58][59]

Broadcasters and commentators in non-participating countries
Country Broadcaster(s) Commentator(s) Ref.
 Argentina Radio WU Victor Barrera [60]
 Australia SBS2 Georgia McCarthy and Andre Nookadu
 Ireland 92.5 Phoenix FM Ewan Spence [61]
 New Zealand World FM
 Singapore 247 Music Radio
 United Kingdom 103 The Eye, K107, Oystermouth Radio, Radio Six International and Shore Radio
 United States KCGW (Williams Life Radio), WXDR (Delgado’s Dolphin Radio)

Other awards



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.[62]

Country Song Performer(s) Result[62]
 Bulgaria "Planet of the Children" Krisia, Hasan and Ibrahim 300
 Italy "Tu primo grande amore" Vincenzo Cantiello 229
 Malta "Diamonds" Federica Falzon 221
 Cyprus "I pio omorfi mera" Sophia Patsalides 205
 Netherlands "Around" Julia 155

Official album


Cover art of the official album
Cover art of the official album

Junior Eurovision Song Contest Malta 2014, is a compilation album put together by the European Broadcasting Union, and was released by Universal Music Group on 3 November 2014. The album features all the songs from the 2014 contest, along with karaoke versions.[63][64][65]


Notes and references



Notes


  1. Including the juries of Slovenia and San Marino.

References


  1. Fisher, Luke James (18 December 2013). "Malta to host Junior Eurovision 2014". JuniorEurovision.tv. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  2. Fisher, Luke (16 June 2014). "The Venue: Malta ShipbuildMarsaing". JuniorEurovision.tv. Retrieved 18 June 2014.[permanent dead link]
  3. Fisher, Luke James (9 May 2014). "Junior Eurovision 2014: #together in Malta!". Junioreurovision.tv. EBU. Archived from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
  4. Zarb, Noel (26 August 2014). "Singers take flight? Junior Eurovision 2014 postcards to feature extreme sports". wiwibloggs.com. wiwibloggs. Archived from the original on 8 July 2015. Retrieved 26 August 2014.
  5. Fisher, Luke James (30 September 2014). "Presenting... the stage". junioreurovision.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 13 October 2014. Retrieved 30 September 2014.
  6. Fisher, Luke James (10 September 2014). "Moira Delia to host Junior Eurovision 2014". JuniorEurovision.tv. Archived from the original on 31 October 2014. Retrieved 10 September 2014.
  7. Fisher, Luke James (1 October 2014). "What happened at today's Heads of Delegation Meeting?". junioreurovision.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 24 March 2015. Retrieved 2 October 2014.
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  9. Fisher, Luke James (8 November 2014). "The draw before the draw". junioreurovision.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 8 November 2014. Retrieved 9 November 2014.
  10. Fisher, Luke James (30 October 2014). "Online voting introduced for international audience". junioreurovision.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 30 October 2014. Retrieved 30 October 2014.
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Media related to Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2014 at Wikimedia Commons

See also:

ABU Radio Song Festival 2014 | European Broadcasting Union | Eurovision Song Contest 2014 | Eurovision Young Musicians 2014 | Junior Eurovision Song Contest | Turkvision Song Contest 2014 |


На других языках


- [en] Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2014

[ru] Детское Евровидение — 2014

Детский конкурс песни Евровидение 2014 (англ. Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2014, мальт. Festival tal-Eurovision taż-Żgħar 2014) — 12-й детский конкурс песни Евровидение, который состоялся 15 ноября 2014 года[1][6] на острове Мальта, в небольшом городе Марса[7], находящемся недалеко от Валлетты[8]. Это был первый конкурс песни Евровидение, которой прошёл на Мальте. Кроме того, мероприятие третий раз в истории детского Евровидения прошло в стране-победительнице конкурса: в 2013 году на конкурсе в Киеве первое место заняла мальтийка Гайи Кауки с песней «The Start».



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