Sweden in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2010
Sweden will compete in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest in 2010, with Swedish broadcaster Sveriges Television (SVT) returning to organise the Swedish entry for the first time since 2006, after TV4 withdrew from the contest. An internal selection was used to select the 7th Swedish entry in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest, with Josefine Ridell being selected to sing "Allt jag vill ha" at the contest in Minsk, Belarus.
SVT returns
In July 2010 it was confirmed that SVT, the original Swedish organiser for the Junior Eurovision Song Contest from 2003 to 2005, would make a return to the contest after leaving the contest in 2005, along with Norwegian broadcaster NRK and Danish broadcaster DR to form the MGP Nordic contest. From 2006 to 2009 the Swedish presence in the contest was continued by commercial broadcaster TV4. In 2010 TV4 announced their withdrawal from Junior Eurovision, allowing SVT to re-enter after MGP Nordic took a year out in 2010.[1]
The EBU's coordinator of the contest, Svante Stockselius, has labelled SVT's return to the contest a big achievement in terms of negotiations with possible participants and expressed hope that other Scandinavian broadcasters may also return to the show.[2]
Artist and song selection
From 2003 and 2005 SVT had used Lilla Melodifestivalen to select their entries, and had continued to use the contest to select the Swedish entries for MGP Nordic. However in March 2010 SVT announced that all Junior projects, including Lilla Melodifestivalen and MGP Nordic, would be scrapped for 2010.[3] In August 2010 SVT announced that they would select their entry for Junior Eurovision internally, and would have a talent search to select the artist to represent Sweden in Belarus.[4]
On 1 October SVT revealed their entry for Minsk: 13-year-old Josefine Ridell was selected to represent Sweden with the song "Allt jag vill ha" (Everything I want), written by Josefine, four-time Eurovision songwriter Thomas G:son, 2009 Azeri contestant Arash, Robert Uhlmann and Johan Bejerholm.[5][6] Warner Music Sweden officially released the song on 5 October.[7]
Voting
Points awarded to Sweden
12 points |
10 points |
8 points |
7 points |
6 points |
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5 points |
4 points |
3 points |
2 points |
1 point |
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Points awarded by Sweden
References
External links
Sweden in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest |
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| | | | | Songs |
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| 2000s |
- "Stoppa mig!"
- "Varför jag?"
- "Gränslös kärlek"
- "Det finaste någon kan få"
- "Nu eller aldrig"
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2008
- "Du"
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| 2010s |
- "Allt jag vill ha"
- "Faller"
- "Mitt mod"
- "Det är dit vi ska"
- "Du är inte ensam"
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2015
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| | (Note: Entries scored out are when Sweden did not compete) |
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| | | | | Songs |
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| Final (by final results) |
- "Mama"
- "Boy and Girl"
- "Čarobna noć"
- "Mari Dari"
- "Muzyki svet"
- "Oki Doki"
- "Get Up!"
- "Ali Baba"
- "My Family"
- "Viva la Dance (Dejo tā)"
- "Allt jag vill ha"
- "Eooo, Eooo"
- "Knock Knock!....Boom! Boom!"
- "Miy litak"
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| | (Note: "Withdrawn" refers to entries that withdrew after applying to enter) |
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