Big Brother house collapses – no survivors.
In other news, the nation’s average IQ doubles.
Archive for the Category "TV"
Big Brother house collapses – no survivors.
In other news, the nation’s average IQ doubles.
It’s the semi-final tonight (on BBC Three or watch the webcast), so time for my summary of this year’s entries. I apologise in advance for my inevitable overuse of the word “Europop”: there is a glut of blonde young ladies singing slightly dancy numbers and they all merge together eventually (the songs, not the young ladies). Save for a few exceptional cases, therefore, the job the songs this year have is to stand out from the crowd – and some of them really do, albeit not necessarily in a good way.
The Good
Six that aren’t too bad:
Honourable mentions too to Belarus (upbeat Kelly Clarkson thing with dancers from the 1990s), Bosnia & Herzogovina (gentle, pleasant music that gains little from the singing), Slovenia (camp singer with really bad hair performs pretty good Europop), Turkey (Pink does some more all right pop nonsense), Russia (mullet man with OK pop song), Estonia (ABBA-esque guitar intro turns into run-of-the-mill, OK Eurovision pop) and host’s Greece (Christina/Britney with a slightly stronger power ballad). It remains to be seen how many of these make it to the final.
The Bad
As always some of these are awful while some are, in true Eurovision spirit, so bad they’re good.
The Rest
I described Spain’s entry last year as being “pretty much Las Ketchup”. They’ve gone one better this year: it is Las Ketchup.
Romania have entered more dancy Europop, the sort of thing that could easily be a hit in “the clubs” in “Ibitza”. Switzerland;s entry has a nice, Beatlesy opening which, sadly, turns into a horribly cheesy “Let’s all make the world a better place” chorus. Shame. Sweden are often a talking point (who can forget “It Hurts”?), but alas this one gets lost in the mass of dancy Europop. Albania’s song features a polite young man, some traditional instruments and a dancy beat.
Malta try something different this year with a young man singing dancy Europop. It’s called “I Do”. Alas, the ABBA song “I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do” is five times better. Netherlands: they’ve learnt from Ukraine that lots of drums are a surefire winner. But not in this case.
And finally: Ireland. Dear, dear Ireland. Dear, dear. Give a man an Irish Eurovision entry, and he’ll be able to entertain his family for a year. But give him a guitar, and he can churn out dire folksy Eurovision entries for the rest of time. This song is called “Cry for Love”, but I can’t help thinking it’s a cry for help. No doubt we’ll give it douze points. Sigh.
There’s so much there isn’t room for here (Cyprus’s Whitney Houston sings a Disney theme tripe; France’s annual boring ballad) so why not watch the entries yourself? Well, OK, I know why not… Should you wish, it’s all on the Eurovision website. And you can read an alternative assessment from the BBC’s panel.
(Who fans should note that onces again the series has been moved for Eurovision. The Age of Steel will be on 6.35pm.)
BBC News get the wrong Guy. I’ll resist the temptation to ask whether a man off the street wouldn’t be better than some news channel “experts”…
How did I miss this? The Actor Toby Stephens – whom you may knowing from such TV series as Cambridge Spies and Waking the Dead, or as the villain in the awful Bond film Die Another Day – is the son of Maggie Smith and the late Robert Stephens.
Stephens, regardless of his other roles, was the evil Abner Brown in the BBC’s classic adapation of John Masefield’s The Box of Delights. And Smith, regardless of her other roles, was marvellous in Murder by Death.
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