Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2010

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Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2010
Dates
Final date 20 November 2010
Host
Venue Minsk Arena, Minsk, Belarus
Presenter(s) Denis Kourian,
Leila Ismailova[1]
Director Daniel Elenek[2]
Executive supervisor Svante Stockselius
Host broadcaster Belarusian Television and Radio Company (BTRC)
Opening act Ksenia Sitnik and Alexey Zhigalkovich singing "Hello, Eurovision"[4]
Interval act Alexander Rybak singing Europe's Skies
All participants and Dmitry Koldun singing A Day Without War[3] Winners of Junior Eurovision 2003-2009
Participants
Number of entries 14
Debuting countries  Moldova
Returning countries  Latvia
 Lithuania
Withdrawing countries  Cyprus
 Romania
Vote
Voting system Citizens of each participating country vote by telephone and SMS message, which counts for 50%. Each country's 10 favourites are awarded 1 to 8, 10 and 12 points based on the number of votes. Results 1-5 are automatically displayed on-screen, then each country announces 6-8, 10 and 12 points. A jury in each country also has a 50% say in the outcome.
Nul points All countries get 12 points from start
Winning song  Armenia
"Mama"
Junior Eurovision Song Contest
◄2009 2011►

The Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2010 was the eighth edition of Junior Eurovision Song Contest. It took place in Minsk, Belarus on 20 November 2010.[5] The contest was won by Vladimir Arzumanyan of Armenia with the song "Mama". This gave Armenia its first win at Junior Eurovision and its first win in any Eurovision contest, even though Sweden had been the betting favourite.

Final[change | change source]

Each country gave votes. Half of the votes were cast by a jury, while the other half came from the public who voted via telephone and text messages. The voters decided their top ten songs using the points 12, 10, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, and 1.

Draw Country Language Artist Song English translation Place Points
01  Lithuania Lithuanian Bartas "Oki Doki" 6 67
02  Moldova Romanian, English Ștefan Roșcovan "Ali Baba" 8 54
03  The Netherlands Dutch, English Anna & Senna "My Family" 9 52
04  Serbia Serbian Sonja Škorić "Čarobna noć" (Чаробна ноћ) Magical night 3 113
05  Ukraine Ukrainian Yulia Gurska "Miy litak" (Мій літак) My plane 14 28
06  Sweden Swedish Josefine Ridell "Allt jag vill ha" All I want [6] 11 48
07  Russia Russian, English Sasha Lazin & Liza Drozd "Boy and Girl" 2 119
08  Latvia Latvian Šarlote Lēnmane & Sea Stones "Viva la Dance" (Dejo tā) Long live dance (Dance like that) 10 51
09  Belgium Dutch, English Jill & Lauren "Get Up!" 7 61
10  Armenia Armenian Vladimir Arzumanyan "Mama" (Մամա) Mother 1 120
11  Malta English, Maltese Nicole Azzopardi "Knock Knock!….Boom! Boom!" 13 35
12  Belarus Russian Daniil Kozlov "Muzyki svet" (Музыки свет) Light of music 5 85
13  Georgia Imaginary Mariam Kakhelishvili "Mari Dari" 4 109
14  Macedonia Macedonian Anja Veterova "Eooo, Eooo" 12 38
  • The rules stated that the participants must sing in one of their national languages, however they were permitted to have a few lines in a different language, as seen in some entries.
  • This was the first time since 2000 that the Maltese language is used in a Eurovision event since "Desire" by Claudette Pace, the Maltese entry for the 2000 contest.[7]

Returning artists[change | change source]

Artist Country Previous year(s)
Sea Stones (aka C-Stones Junior)  Latvia 2004

Score sheet[change | change source]

Results
Total Score Lithuania Moldova Netherlands Serbia Ukraine Sweden Russia Latvia Belgium Armenia Malta Belarus Georgia (country) Republic of Macedonia
Contestants Lithuania 67 2 2 4 4 4 6 6 5 4 6 10 2
Moldova 54 1 1 2 5 2 6 7 10 2 6
Netherlands 52 2 7 1 3 3 10 5 1 8
Serbia 113 6 12 10 7 8 7 10 7 3 8 10 1 12
Ukraine 28 4 1 2 4 5
Sweden 48 3 4 2 3 2 4 8 2 1 4 3
Russia 119 10 7 8 8 8 10 8 4 12 12 12 7 1
Latvia 51 8 8 6 5 1 1 5 5
Belgium 61 5 3 12 5 6 1 4 3 2 8
Armenia 120 7 10 5 6 12 12 12 5 12 6 8 3 10
Malta 35 4 1 3 6 5 4
Belarus 85 4 6 3 6 10 12 10 3 12 7
Georgia 109 12 5 7 10 10 7 8 7 3 8 7 7 6
Macedonia 38 1 12 2 5 3 1 2
All countries automatically receive 12 points

12 points[change | change source]

Below is a summary of all 12 points received:

N. Recipient nation Voting nation
4 Armenia Ukraine, Sweden, Russia, Belgium
3 Russia Armenia, Malta, Belarus
2 Serbia Moldova, Macedonia
Belarus Latvia, Georgia
1 Belgium Netherlands
Georgia Lithuania
Macedonia Serbia
  • All countries were given 12 points at the start of voting. This is so no country gets zero points.
  • As a joke, the Executive Supervisor of the contest, Svante Stockselius, was given 12 points before the voting. This probably because he was scheduled to resign at the end of the year.

International broadcasts[change | change source]

Commentators[change | change source]

Spokespersons[change | change source]

References[change | change source]

  1. "Minsk 2010". junioreurovision.tv. Retrieved 29 March 2022.
  2. "Daniel Elenek, the Swedish multicamera director, visited Minsk for the first time". ESCKAZ.com. 2010-08-25. Retrieved 2010-08-25.
  3. "UNICEF partnership details". ESCKAZ.com. 2010-09-03. Retrieved 2010-09-03.
  4. "Three winners on stage in Minsk!". JuniorEurovision.tv. 2010-11-14. Retrieved 2010-11-14.
  5. "Exclusive Belarus to host Junior 2010". JuniorEurovision.tv. 2009-06-08. Retrieved 2009-06-08.
  6. Official English title: 'Reaching For The Stars'.
  7. "Nicole - Knock Knock! ... Boom Boom!". JuniorEurovision.tv. 8 October 2010. Retrieved 8 October 2010.

Other websites[change | change source]