Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2005

3rd annual Junior Eurovision Song Contest

The Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2005 was the third Junior Eurovision Song Contest for young singers aged 8 to 15. On 26 November 2005, the contest was held at the Ethias Arena in Hasselt, Belgium. It was broadcast live in a joint effort by the national broadcasters Vlaamse Radio- en Televisieomroep (VRT) and Radio télévision belge de la communauté française (RTBF), together with the European Broadcasting Union. Belgium won the right to hold the contest over five other countries including Croatian Radiotelevision (HRT) of Croatia and AVRO of the Netherlands.[1] Marcel Vanthilt and Maureen Louys hosted the event.

Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2005
"Let's Get Loud"
Dates
Final26 November 2005
Host
VenueEthias Arena, Hasselt, Belgium
Presenter(s)Marcel Vanthilt
Maureen Louys
Executive supervisorSvante Stockselius
Host broadcaster
Websitejunioreurovision.tv/event/hasselt-2005 Edit this at Wikidata
Participants
Number of entries16
Debuting countries Russia
 Serbia and Montenegro
Returning countriesNone
Non-returning countries Cyprus
 France
 Poland
  Switzerland
Vote
Voting systemEach country awards 1-8, 10, and 12 points to their 10 favourite songs
Winning song Belarus
"My vmeste"
2004 ← Junior Eurovision Song Contest → 2006

Results

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Draw Country Language Artist Song English translation Place Points
01   Greece Greek Alexandros and Kalli "Tora einai i seira mas" (Tώρα είναι η σειρά μας) It's our turn now 6 88
02   Denmark Danish Nicolai "Shake Shake Shake" 4 121
03   Croatia Croatian Lorena Jelusić "Rock Baby" 12 36
04   Romania Romanian Alina Eremia "Țurai!" Hey 5 89
05   United Kingdom English Joni Fuller "How Does It Feel?" 14 28
06   Sweden Swedish M+ "Gränslös kärlek" Borderless love 15 22
07   Russia Russian Vladislav Krutskikh "Doroga k solntsu" (Дорога к солнцу) Path to the sun 9 66
08   Macedonia Macedonian Denis Dimoski "Rodendeski baknež" (Родендески бакнеж) Birthday kiss 8 68
09   Netherlands Dutch Tess "Stupid" 7 82
10   Serbia and Montenegro Montenegrin Filip Vučić "Ljubav pa fudbal" (Љубав па фудбал) Love, than football 13 29
11   Latvia Latvian Kids4Rock "Es esmu maza jauka meitene" I'm a little lovely girl 11 50
12   Belgium French Lindsay "Mes rêves" My dreams 10 63
13   Malta English Thea & Friends "Make It Right!" 16 18
14   Norway Norwegian Malin Reitan "Sommer og skolefri"[2] Summer and no school 3 123
15   Spain Spanish Antonio José "Te traigo flores" I bring you flowers 2 146
16   Belarus Russian Ksenia Sitnik "My vmeste" (Мы вместе) We are together 1 149

Voting structure

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Televote 12, 10, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 points. The presenters started off by giving all contestants 12 points.

Score sheet

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Results
Total Score                                  
Contestants Greece 88 12 7 12 6 6 5 7 3 6 4 6 2
Denmark 121 6 7 8 3 1 10 6 12 7 5 6 8 7 12 7 4
Croatia 36 2 3 8 2 6 3
Romania 89 10 10 2 3 4 3 4 5 7 3 4 7 12 3
United Kingdom 28 3 1 1 2 2 5 2
Sweden 22 8 2
Russia 66 3 5 1 4 2 1 1 10 3 1 5 6 12
Macedonia 68 4 8 4 1 10 3 10 4 1 2 1 8
Netherlands 82 2 4 10 2 7 7 4 1 12 8 4 4 5
Serbia and Montenegro 29 1 6 10
Latvia 50 3 5 1 5 2 5 2 2 3 1 3 6
Belgium 63 4 2 1 7 12 7 4 8 5 1
Malta 18 1 5
Norway 123 5 6 12 3 5 8 12 2 5 10 3 8 7 10 8 7
Spain 146 8 12 4 7 12 12 8 8 6 8 12 5 10 6 6 10
Belarus 149 7 8 6 10 10 10 6 12 7 4 8 12 5 12 10 10
The table is ordered by appearance
All countries automatically receive 12 points
Cyprus was allowed to vote after withdrawing at a late stage

12 points

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Below is a summary of all 12 points received:

N. Recipient nation Voting nation
4   Spain Greece, Romania, Serbia and Montenegro, United Kingdom
3   Belarus Malta, Latvia, Russia
2   Denmark Republic of Macedonia, Norway
  Greece Croatia, Cyprus
  Norway Denmark, Sweden
1   Belgium Netherlands
  Netherlands Belgium
  Romania Spain
  Russia Belarus
  • All countries were given 12 points at the start of voting. This is so no country gets zero points.

Commentators

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References

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  1. Philips, Roel (2004-03-04). "Belgium organises Junior Eurovision Song Contest in 2005!". ESCToday. Archived from the original on 2004-12-14.
  2. The Norwegian song was written in a dialect of Norwegian, and originally had the title stated above (Sommer å Skolefri), however, when the Norwegian broadcaster submitted the song to the European Broadcasting Union, they gave the song title in the standard Norwegian form, Sommer og Skolefri, which is how it was displayed on screen.
  3. "Eurovision Song Contest". UKGameshows. Retrieved 2012-08-12.
  4. "Тімур Мірошниченко – український Террі Уоган". National Television Company of Ukraine (in Ukrainian). 29 April 2013. Archived from the original on 18 June 2013. Retrieved 20 May 2013.

Other websites

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Artists' sites

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