Eurovision 2017! When Kyiv shined
The Kyiv Post classic from May 12, 2017, brings back a happier time of when Ukraine hosted the Eurovision contest. Good luck tonight to Ukrainian contestants Alyona Alyona & Jerry Heil.
This is how Kyiv Post editor-in-chief Brian Bonner promoted the May 12, 2017 edition:
The front page is done provisionally, but the newspaper is not at the printer. We watched the Eurovision Song Contest live and waited until all the 26 finalists were known before we finished the newspaper. The other 10 winners competing for the Eurovision title on May 13, making 26 in all, should be known by midnight.
Besides Eurovision coverage, two themes dominate this newspaper.
One is the explosive documentary called "Killing Pavel," in which investigative journalists expose official obstruction, incompetence, or indifference in the investigation of the July 20 assassination of journalist Pavel Sheremet. But worst of all, the documentary exposes the possible involvement of a current or former state law enforcement agent -- the State Security Service issued a hurried statement confirming that Ihor Ustymenko, parked for hours outside Sheremet's house on the night of the murder, worked for the agency until 2014. We hope the findings are taken seriously and stimulate society to action -- and to demand answers. Until the murder of Sheremet and others are solved, no one is safe in #Ukraine.
You can watch the documentary here:
The other major focus is World in Ukraine: China, a six-page special section exploring all the economic, political, and social ties between Ukraine and the world's most populous nation. The upshot is that Ukraine is missing out on Chinese investment and tourism going to other nations. However, in some sectors, namely agriculture, the ties are stronger.
We will have all the Eurovision results online and delivered in print on Friday, May 12. Stay tuned -- the Kyiv Post never sleeps.
Here are Ukraineβs Eurovision 2024 contestants Alyona Alyona & Jerry Heil performing βTeresa & Maria.β
Here is the list of all Eurovision winners. Ukraine has won three times: Ruslana in 2004, Jamala in 2016, and Kalush Orchestra in 2022.
This is the experience of one of the Two Grumpy Old Menβs with Eurovision from May 4, 2017, in the Kyiv Post that he led from 2008-2021:
Brian Bonner: How this American came to love Eurovision
Eurovision 2017 is in town, and I havenβt been this excited since Euro 2012 came to Ukraine.
I canβt figure out why.
Like the Euro 2012 football championships, I knew little about and didnβt follow the Eurovision Song Contest.
As an American, the Eurovision Song Contest didnβt register with me until I moved back to Ukraine in 2008. Iβm not sure I had heard of it, but I am sure I never noticed it while stateside.
Truth be told, while I love my music, I am more of a connoisseur of newspapers.
I edited the stories in the Kyiv Post about the 42 national participants, but I had never heard of most of them β O. Torvald, Ukraineβs entry, perhaps the lone exception. Iβve even seen the group perform live at this yearβs YUNA Music Awards contest.
Emotionally, I am having deja vu from Euro 2012, which Ukraine hosted successfully, to the pride of all of us.
But then, as now, I could not name a single football player, had no idea about the relative strengths of each participating nation, and had no idea why I was so excited other than seeing the new stadiums, airports, and roads built for the occasion.
Just like Euro 2012, it didnβt hit me what a gigantic industry this whole Eurovision phenomenon is until we started covering Kyivβs plans to host the event this year, the first time itβs had the honor since 2005.
In the run-up to the main event on May 13, when the 2017 winner will be crowned among 26 finalists, there have been hundreds if not thousands of stories written about every conceivable aspect and more about this song contest, with 42 participating (mainly European) nations. Itβs hard to keep up with the avalanche of stories that, while entertaining and diversionary, are about nothing consequential in the grand scheme.
And maybe thatβs the whole point of Eurovision.
Some of the questions posed by articles I came across: What will be the effect of Brexit on the United Kingdomβs chances of winning? Will the U.K. break its 20-year drought in the winnerβs circle? Will Portugal ever win? Why isnβt there an Amerivision? (Apparently, there was one once, in 2013, among 18 North and South American nations.)
And my question, which I canβt find the answer to: Why isnβt America in Eurovision? After all, the United States is part of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe.
And why is Australia in Eurovision? Its first appearance was in 2015. It doesnβt strike me as fair that America is out and Australia is in, but maybe my country doesnβt want to be in Eurovision. I donβt know.
But in the articles Iβve read, Iβve learned that itβs a very political contest β the Telegraph of London even had a great infographic on May 3 showing how nations voted in history. Ex-Soviet republics favored each other, with Ukraine being no exception, at least before Russia launched its war in 2014.
I learned that Eurovision started in 1956.
I learned that voting procedures and rules have changed over time.
I learned that Eurovision used to require artists to perform songs in their official national language, but now most performances are in English.
I learned that most winners donβt go on to outstanding musical careers, Abba in 1974 and Celine Dion in 1988 being among the major exceptions.
One journalist even wrote a Eurovision primer for βdumb Americans,β which I appreciated greatly.
Anyway, I have never watched a Eurovision final before, but I will try to stay up and do so this year. I tried to buy tickets, with no luck. I let my better-informed Ukrainian colleagues take our media accreditations.
Maybe I will hang out in the fan zone. Ah, the return of the fan zones! Fan zones bring back such warm memories of Euro 2012, of locals mixing with visiting fans, drinking, and socializing in peace and harmony. Sports and music are the twin uniters.
In any case, Iβm as happy about Eurovision being in Kyiv as I was about Euro 2012 being in Ukraine, despite my ignorance, which can, indeed, be bliss sometimes.
Itβs May in Kyiv. The temperature and hryvnia are up. The sun is out. Tourists are supposedly flocking to Kyiv by the thousands β always a good sight. All, except the street robbers, perhaps, are inΒ great moods and on their best behavior.
So, like in Euro 2012, which provided a welcome break from the corruption of ex-President Viktor Yanukovych that toppled him two years later, letβs party on.
Eurovision is a fleeting break from the even more serious problems confronting Ukraine today. Letβs bask in it.