ESC United Mod Team
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- February 10, 2021
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You better ask Ireland why they never send anything in Irish.When did the UK send a song sung in Welsh or Scotts Gaelic the last time?
Don't think that would be a great choice. I don't know if she is still popular in the UK but outside of Britain she is a one-hit-wonder with murder on the dancefloor and that song is over 20 years old. Kids of today outside Britain have no idea who she is and women in their 40's rarely get good results in ESC (Loreen and Linda Martin excluded).
A one-hit-wonder is what they are actually looking for... Established artists rarely come to Eurovision. Uk had Blue in 2011, but they were far from their past glory, they had Bonnie Tyler thirty years after her peak... They even had Katrina, which was herself a one-hit-wonder before Eurovision with Walking on sunshine.
Mae deserved much better, after seeing it live and it the context I didn't have super high hopes though but for sure bottom was undeserving.
I have no idea who would even wanna go for UK now, they did put an effort and flopped big time but if Mae can at least manage to have a local hit, maybe it's not all lost and they will keep up the good work for 2024.
Mae deserved much better, after seeing it live and it the context I didn't have super high hopes though but for sure bottom was undeserving.
I have no idea who would even wanna go for UK now, they did put an effort and flopped big time but if Mae can at least manage to have a local hit, maybe it's not all lost and they will keep up the good work for 2024.
Mae came bottom and got a top 10 hit with the song-I don't think all is lost!
It has been played frequently on the radio since it came out. I think it even got on Radio 1's A-List which means in was in heavy rotation up until the contest. Getting that kind of airplay for a song can be difficult even for more established artists. And given it has been out for almost three months of course it is going to drop off. And getting into the top ten for a song that largely flopped at the contest isn't to be sniffed at. As it is rare for a UK Eurovision entry to even chart let alone end up in the top ten. With Sam Ryder being the exception.
I really don't think that Mae's results make it any more or less likely that other (more) well-known artists would represent the UK. Even if she somehow won the damage done to the contest's reputation over the past twenty years is still healing. And it is going to take time yet for that to change. And to be brutally honest any professional artists looking at Mae's performance and her results is unlikely to turn around and go "She was robbed! Politics! Politics!" when she was performing so poorly on the night.
In the end, it is all in the hands of the BBC and who they pick to do it in '24 and if they are selecting it themselves, with TaP, another record label. Or if it will be purely internal, internal with the song voted on, or a National Final.
Ok but it's already out of the top. 10 after just one week, and did any radios playlist it? Seems there is no longevity at all...
It has been played frequently on the radio since it came out. I think it even got on Radio 1's A-List which means in was in heavy rotation up until the contest. Getting that kind of airplay for a song can be difficult even for more established artists. And given it has been out for almost three months of course it is going to drop off. And getting into the top ten for a song that largely flopped at the contest isn't to be sniffed at. As it is rare for a UK Eurovision entry to even chart let alone end up in the top ten. With Sam Ryder being the exception.
I really don't think that Mae's results make it any more or less likely that other (more) well-known artists would represent the UK. Even if she somehow won the damage done to the contest's reputation over the past twenty years is still healing. And it is going to take time yet for that to change. And to be brutally honest any professional artists looking at Mae's performance and her results is unlikely to turn around and go "She was robbed! Politics! Politics!" when she was performing so poorly on the night.
In the end, it is all in the hands of the BBC and who they pick to do it in '24 and if they are selecting it themselves, with TaP, another record label. Or if it will be purely internal, internal with the song voted on, or a National Final.
With no intention of disrespect, is there a possibility of the delegation/public being... white-centric? The last time a person of color represented the UK was with Blue in 2011.
When it comes to casting a national final, they have been very good at trying to represent inclusivity, but I have yet to see a person of color being selected and representing in the end.
I want to see someone like Sinead Harnett, Rina Sawayama, or Lianne La Havas representing the UK, but it seems out of reach now.
Or maybe, in the U.K. the 90.9% of the population is actually white... It has nothing to do with racism or discrimitation, you know. It is a question of probabilities.
Or maybe, in the U.K. the 90.9% of the population is actually white... It has nothing to do with racism or discrimitation, you know. It is a question of probabilities.
It is a song contest not jury duty, one person (or six) is never going to represent everyone that lives in a country82% according to the 2021 census. Which mean that almost every fifth ESC-entry could be performed by a person of colour if represented statistically accurate.