Misplaced Pages

talk:WikiProject Eurovision: Difference between revisions - Misplaced Pages

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editContent deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 18:59, 10 December 2014 editAlex Great (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users607 edits Scoreboard's files with J in the end of name← Previous edit Latest revision as of 14:04, 26 December 2024 edit undoMoscow Connection (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers61,712 edits Potential deletion of categories: typo 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Eurovision/Tab header}}
{{/Header}}{{User:MiszaBot/config
{{Talk header}}
{{WikiProject banner shell|
{{WikiProject Eurovision}}
}}
{{User:MiszaBot/config
|archiveheader = {{Talk archive navigation}} |archiveheader = {{Talk archive navigation}}
|maxarchivesize = 100K |maxarchivesize = 100K
|counter = 13 |counter = 33
|minthreadsleft = 5 |minthreadsleft = 5
|algo = old(56d) |algo = old(30d)
|archive = Misplaced Pages talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive %(counter)d |archive = Misplaced Pages talk:WikiProject Eurovision/Archive %(counter)d
}} }}
__ToC__
== Broadcaster in the infobox song contest national year ==


Hi. I don't know if this has ever been discussed before, but I'm wondering why the participating broadcaster is not in the ], when it is actually the one entering the contest. ] (]) 08:39, 18 August 2024 (UTC)
== On Notability of OGAE Contests ==
:Yeah, why is it not? — ] ] 08:40, 18 August 2024 (UTC)

:That's a really good question, it really should include that. ] '''❯❯❯''' ] 11:20, 18 August 2024 (UTC)
Hello! Has the notability of OGAE Contests--such as the ], ], and the OGAE Song Contest (results in a table on the ] page--been established? Each of the contests (and the main OGAE page, for that matter) are filled with Primary Sources with no secondary, neutral sources establishing notability, violating the ] guideline. <span style="font-family:Courier New, monospace; ">]|]</span> 01:57, 15 August 2014 (UTC)
:I hadn't considered this. I '''support''' changing the infobox to include this. ] (]) 16:08, 21 August 2024 (UTC)

:OK. Is four enough quorum? Anyway, I'm going to request the change on the talk page of the template. Let's see if some kind soul will listen to us. ] (]) 19:54, 23 August 2024 (UTC)
: As far as I'm aware, there has never been any discussion on the issue – the current pages are just the result of the slow expansion of OGAE related pages by various editors. On notability, yes at face value the pages do clearly fail ]. Though I'll be very surprised if the ] isn't notable at all, and a Google search does seem to indicate some third-party sources, the year-by-year articles though may be more debatable. ]<small><span style="font-weight:bold;">&nbsp;·</span>&#32;]</small> 17:14, 15 August 2014 (UTC)
::I oppose this. The infobox is not a in depth view of the participation's entire background for the year and in most cases, the broadcaster is a stable and the same each year. I'm not sure what adding this "adds" for the reader. ] (]) 20:57, 24 August 2024 (UTC)

:::The contest is a competition between broadcasters, adding the participating broadcaster is not a vision of depth but is one of the fundamental data of the article, which should also appear prominently in the lead section. Of course there are broadcasters that have been stable over the years, but there are cases where they have not been, such as in {{esccnty|France}}, {{esccnty|Belgium}}, {{esccnty|Germany}}, and {{esccnty|Russia}}, to give just a couple of examples of the seventeen that I have counted. ] (]) 21:21, 24 August 2024 (UTC)
:: Yeah, the yearly articles are definitely overkill, imo. That stuff should go into OGAE archives, not Misplaced Pages. Can you provide some examples of third-party Second Chance Contest sources though? I don't think Eurovision fansites would count as establishing notability though... <span style="font-family:Courier New, monospace; ">]|]</span> 00:18, 18 August 2014 (UTC)
::::The lead section is the prose, where this information is always presented prominently. The regular ''country in'' articles have the broadcaster in the infobox because those articles are about that country (and broadcaster's) overall participation efforts. The impact is not the same for the ''country in year'' articles where the broadcaster is certainly relevant information, but it is not particularly interesting to the reader and has no bearing on the quick-reference nature of an infobox. ] (]) 13:07, 25 August 2024 (UTC)

:::::Does it not? To me it feels like the broadcaster is even more relevant than the country — ] ] 13:13, 25 August 2024 (UTC)
:::Cooper did say a Google search indicates some third-party sources, so I would assume if one were to do a Google search, that one would find those sources without having to ask someone else to retrieve them for others to view. It's not that difficult to do the research for oneself. However to the discussion at hand, I seem to recall OGAE contests being mentioned briefly in a plethora of other threads (most of which are now in the archives). I, myself, have worked on expanding some of the articles but with slow caution. Yes, I found a lot of sources through Google searching; and still considering whether to merge them all into one main article or not. Notability is a grey area in all fairness. For something to be notable these days means it needs to be well-known and have received coverage on the internet by sources. The issue is what may be well-known to one person, may not be as well-known to another - without internet coverage or the curiosity to search for such information via the means of the internet. As Cooper has already established that some third-party sources can be ascertained if one were to do a Google search, highlights the fact that there are some coverage of these contests, thus some notability is out there, merely for the fact that some people know of the existence of these contests. An encyclopaedia is there to provide knowledge of information to those who may not have known of such information. I kow that notability is a major factor here, but it is becoming more commonly known that the average Joe Blogs tends to look to Misplaced Pages as a fountain of information, rather than searching on Google or other search engines. I have encountered many people who when asked the question about a random topic, come to Misplaced Pages first to find information, before thinking about searching on Google. Perhaps this Misplaced Pages is evolving in a way it never expected to evolve into? '''] ]''' 17:11, 18 August 2014 (UTC)
::::::It comes down to the audience of the article and the impact. It is through the national broadcaster (a government entity) that the country is represented, otherwise articles, press, viewers, etc. would be saying things like "BBC in the Eurovision Song Contest"; however, these articles are about the countries. The broadcaster is an important part of ''how'' the participation occurs, but it does not need to be that prominent for the quick-reference nature of the infobox. Do we have any sense of ''why'' the viewer would need to know the specific broadcaster as they scan the page for the results, which is the point of the infobox on these pages? The information is still in the body of the articles. To be blunt, I cannot figure out why someone would care what the broadcaster was at the high level overview. ] (]) 13:40, 25 August 2024 (UTC)

:::::::Why would the viewer need to know who composed the song since that's also featured in the infobox? Because it's relevant to the entry, and so is the competing broadcaster — ] ] 13:48, 25 August 2024 (UTC)
::::Well, while insightful, this isn't a discussion on what Misplaced Pages is (and I do disagree on some of your points); this is a discussion on whether the OGAE contests should be covered in such detail. I asked for links because my own Google-ing didn't find any third-party sources. They are all either the official OGAE pages or Eurovision sites. This alone does not establish notability as non-neutral sources (and by non-neutral I mean something not dedicated to Eurovision). I would really agree that they should all just be merged into one article. Each individual year needs to have notability established, which would be difficult. For example, the OGAE Second Chance contest from 2004 is never discussed outside the fan world, but Eurovision 1958 is. <span style="font-family:Courier New, monospace; ">]|]</span> 01:51, 21 August 2014 (UTC)
::::::::I completely disagree with that comparison. ] (]) 13:51, 25 August 2024 (UTC)

:::::::::@], I am sorry, but your reasoning is based on assumptions and general beliefs that are not true, rather than on actual facts.
::::: I disagree with that interpretation of ]. Content from the OGAE wouldn't count towards notability and articles shouldn't be built based on such sources, in the same way that content from the EBU wouldn't count towards notability in Eurovision articles. A Eurovision site can be used to establish notability as long as it is independent of the contest/issue in question and it's ]. for example meets both those criteria, and I see no reason why the use of such sources would't allow a ] compliant article to be built. I believe we also consider and to be reliable too. The contest has also featured in other tertiary sources such as the . Offline sources can be hard to get hard of but their use is allowed on Misplaced Pages and demonstrating that they cover a topic can count towards notability. ]<small><span style="font-weight:bold;">&nbsp;·</span>&#32;]</small> 14:37, 21 August 2014 (UTC)
:::::::::The EBU is an organisation of broadcasting companies with their own independent legal entity. The fact that they are publicly funded or state-owned does not make them a government entity. In fact, the EBU would not allow a government entity to be a member, as it requires a certain level of impartiality and independence for membership (a level that the Russian and Belarusian broadcasters do not meet, which is why they were expelled).

:::::::::The participating broadcaster enters the competition representing its country, meaning that it competes under the name of its country, for better identification in the international competition, and to give local viewers the feeling that the participation is theirs and not just that of the broadcaster. This does not mean that the country is the one that competes, and statements like "the broadcaster organizes the country's participation", "the broadcaster participates on behalf of the country", "the broadcaster selects the country's entry", and the like, which are all over Misplaced Pages, are all wrong. The broadcaster participates in the contest in its own right, and has full control over its participation. It is not just an important part of how the participation occurs, it is who really participate and who pay to do so.
:::::: The thing is that Eurovision fansites and news sites do not have a neutral point of view. They cover Eurovision, and therefore all the minutia that surround it. They are not ] as their coverage implies a bias towards Eurovision-related media. Also, the Encyclopedia of Icelandic Music is sourced from Misplaced Pages, according to the first page, which means it cannot help determine notability. However, there '''are''' independent, third-party sources that mention the Second Chance Contest (which in itself doesn't establish notability). I did already concede that the Second Chance Contest is most likely fine. It's all those individual years that may not be what Misplaced Pages is for. <span style="font-family:Courier New, monospace; ">]|]</span> 05:16, 23 August 2014 (UTC)
:::::::::The ESC is a television co-production (legal, financial, and technical) of the participating broadcasters, who elect the members of the committee that governs the event on behalf of all of them. The participating broadcaster is not only "responsible for choosing a song and broadcasting the event" (another wrong statement all around Misplaced Pages). The participating broadcaster is the one invited by the EBU to participate; the one who decides whether to participate or not; the one who pays the participation fee to finance the event; the one who selects a song freely at his discretion, organizing or not a national final that it can take into account or not; the one who secures the rights of the song from the songwriters; the one who hires the performer (and the conductor when there was an orchestra) for the live performance; the one who has to provide the EBU with all the legal and audiovisual documentation of its entry, including contracts, lyrics, the video-clip (in most cases produced by itself), music track (or sheet music for the orchestra), and the camerawork layout for the live broadcasting; the one who decides on the staging of the live performance; the one who appoints a head of delegation as its contact with the EBU, and the one responsible for its delegation at the event; the one who assembles the "national" jury for the competition (even when there was only televoting, since the jury was the backup); the one who hires the notary public to certify its jury's vote; the one who owns the broadcasting rights and the brand exploitation rights in the country (exclusively or shared with the other EBU members in the same country); the one who produces the broadcast for his local viewers with its own commentators and onscreen information; the one who produces and transmits the voting segment of its spokesperson for the international broadcast; the one who bears expenses of all this; the one who has to host the contest the following year in case of winning; and the one who takes all the criticism if the participation was not successful. (And I've probably left out some other things). The participating broadcaster is not only a fundamental data for an entrant but also for the event itself.

:::::::::The ''country in year'' articles are the most in-depth articles of this project with the most detailed information on a participation, and it is the place where it makes the most sense to have the information of the participating broadcaster, as it is an indispensable element of the participation, since it has the power over the song and the performer. @]'s feeling that the participating broadcaster is even more relevant than the country is correct, I would say that it is the most important piece of information of the participation. And you only have to look at ''country in year'' articles from old years to see that in many cases, it's not just that it's not in the lead section, it's that it's not even mentioned anywhere in the prose or it's mentioned as something totally secondary. There are even articles that have passed the GA review that talk about a wrong participating broadcaster.
::::::: I don't know any source that don't have a bias of some sort, whether that be coverage bias, viewpoint bias, or something else – though if I'm mistaken, please name some. Or to put it another way, a '']'' response to this argument is that nothing is ever notable because there is no such thing as a neutral source when one defines bias that broadly.
:::::::::The use in Misplaced Pages of the name of the country when speaking in general and in the ''country'' and ''country in year'' articles is also for better identification of the participant internationally, matching the way it is presented in the contest, and to group all the entrants that come from the same country in the same place and in the same way. In no way does it mean that it is the country that participates. And indeed, the local press throughout Europe talks extensively about the participation of the broadcaster in the contest ("BBC at the Eurovision Song Contest", for example).

:::::::::All this is not just me saying it, it is said by the EBU and the participating broadcasters in all their official documentation and communications, starting with the rules of the competition, an extract of which can be read .
::::::: While it is true that one of the ] is ensuring that it is possible to write a neutral article on a subject by having a sufficient range of third-party sources to draw from, rather than just relying on sources directly connected to the subject which are likely to be of only one viewpoint; it is not the case that third-party sources have to be "neutral" to count towards notability. Per ], the sources themselves can be as biased as they like; it is only Misplaced Pages itself that has to be neutral by giving appropriate ] to viewpoints based on their coverage in reliable sources – the community has judged that this cannot be done properly if there are no third-party sources to work with from the start. The definition of a ] is one that it is independent from the subject matter, with Misplaced Pages also requiring that such sources be ]. Note that independence and neutrality are different things, as are ] and neutrality. For example, a privately owned newspaper could publish a negative (i.e. biased) article about a politician, but still have such an article be factually accurate (i.e. reliable); yet it would still be considered an independent third-party source for an article on said politician. It's worth noting that neutrality and bias are not mentioned at all in the ] itself, because "neutral" sources are not required to establish notability, only independent and reliable ones are.
:::::::::And this has nothing to do with the audience of the article and the impact, this is not a blog, this is an encyclopedia, and it has to do with the presentation of the information and facts correctly, preferably in order of importance. And the participating broadcaster is, indeed, the foremost piece of information of an entry, whether you are interested in knowing it or not. ] (]) 22:18, 25 August 2024 (UTC)

:::::::::The problem is that the user seems to have forgotten that it's not a country entering, but "EBU member broadcaster from ''country''" — ] ] 07:50, 27 August 2024 (UTC)
::::::: It appears we do agree that the main ] article is notable, and while I'm pleased this is the case, I'm rather confused on how this came about. So far no satisfactory non-Eurovision sources on the Second Chance Contest have been presented. So how did you reach the conclusion that the Second Chance Contest is notable at all based on your interpretation of ]? ]<small><span style="font-weight:bold;">&nbsp;·</span>&#32;]</small> 18:50, 23 August 2014 (UTC)
::::::::::I'm still not convinced it makes sense. I don't recall seeing examples from reliable sources that place the broadcaster ahead of the country name for identification purposes. Let's remember that the infobox is for quick-reference information; it is not intended to be an exhaustive list nor even a full summary of the article. ] (]) 00:48, 2 September 2024 (UTC)

:::::::::::How do you explain the discrepancy between articles that overview a country's entire history at the contest (where the current broadcaster is prominently listed) and by year articles (where it is not) — ] ] 02:59, 2 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::::: Whoa late reply, sorry. But, anyway, I said the Second Chance Contest page is fine mostly because you said you did find some sources that talked about it. I haven't been able to find any, myself.
::::::::::::The ''country in'' articles are focused on the performance of a country overall throughout the years, for which the broadcaster is paramount as the organizing body. For ''country in year'' articles, the focus is on the entry itself (i.e. selection, song, artist, and performance), where those aspects are critical details and are therefore in the infobox. It's not a "discrepancy" as these are different types of articles. If we include every detail in every article, then we lose the whole point of detailed sub articles. ] (]) 13:09, 2 September 2024 (UTC)

:::::::: As for my rationale behind not using Eurovision news sites to establish notability, yeah, I meant independence and not neutrality. Sorry for the confusion. Eurovision news sites are, by definition, not independent from the topic of Eurovision. I'm looking through ] right now and OGAE contests by year do not check out. <span style="font-family:Courier New, monospace; ">]|]</span> 23:32, 5 September 2014 (UTC) :::::::::::::In this case the sub article is missing the detail, what now ] ] 14:21, 2 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::@], I honestly don't understand how you see the role of the participating broadcaster paramount in the ''country'' but not in the ''country in year''. The participating broadcaster is the actual entrant in the contest, as is the one invited by the EBU to participate that year and the one who has to fulfill all the obligations for it. In order to compete it selects the song, hire the artist/performer, and stage the performance. The participation is its and its alone as it has full control over it.

:::::::::::::We are not including every detail in the infobox. We want to include only the essential information: the entrant (the participating broadcaster), the name of the country under which it participates, the entry (song + songwriters), the artist/performer, the selection method, and the result. I don't think we are asking for anything unreasonable.
::::::::: I'm not following the logic that Eurovision news sites are not independent from the topic of Eurovision and I don't understand how one could interpret the ] in that way. Does that mean biological journals can't be used in biological articles because they are by definition not independent from the topic of biology? I don't think so. I'm not really seeing the relevance of ]. While Eurovision contests are technically events, this subject specific notability guideline (SNG) was written to deal with the problem with people creating articles on local events which receive a very short-term burst of localized news coverage, but lack any long-term significance, such as a traffic accident in a village. ] covers this but it is vague, hence the need for an additional guideline. Eurovision related contests were not what the drafters had in mind. In any case, SNGs only supplement the GNG by providing an alternative path to notability – an article is required to pass one or the other, not both. In other words, once the GNG is satisfied, the SNGs become irrelevant. ]<small><span style="font-weight:bold;">&nbsp;·</span>&#32;]</small> 20:02, 10 September 2014 (UTC)
:::::::::::::And this points out one thing that is wrong in the infobox, as the artist/performer is called the "entrant", something that is completely incorrect as this is a song contest between broadcasters, not a singer contest, so the artist cannot be the entrant in any way. ] (]) 18:38, 2 September 2024 (UTC)

::::::::::::::I'm warming to the broadcaster in the infobox (as it's abbreviation/acronym). I'm not sure I understand this new entrant comment now though? ] (]) 13:08, 5 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::: Consider that Eurovision fansites would of course report on every bit of Eurovision minutia, whether it would be notable on Misplaced Pages or not. Where Eurovision goes, they follow; ergo, not independent. See the ] portion of the Independent Sources Essay. This is essentially what my viewpoint is. This isn't policy, I know, but it is a viewpoint other editors do share. It's not that you can't USE them in articles as sources. You just can't use them to establish notability.
:::::::::::::::Well the entry into the contest is the song, not the performer. I imagine just a renaming of the value from "entrant" to "performer", as is the case in the tables — ] ] 13:18, 5 September 2024 (UTC)

:::::::::::::::Yes, that is the point. The entrant is the broadcaster and the entry is the song, so we should rename in the infobox the parameter "entrant" to "performer", or to "artist". (I say "artist", even though I don't like it, because that is what is used in the "Preselection" field when the song and performer are selected separately). I don't think we can change the parameter directly without causing a mess, but at least we can change the label displayed to "Selected performer" (or artist).
:::::::::: Also, It's not a hard science like biology; notability is incomparable (especially as there are separate guidelines for those topics).
:::::::::::::::And regarding the participating broadcaster in the infobox, I think it's better to show it with its full name followed by its abbreviation in parentheses, to match the way it's shown in the ''country'' infobox, and to avoid confusion as for example in the case of RTP, which the same abbreviation is used by "Rádio e Televisão de Portugal" and its predecessor "Radiotelevisão Portuguesa". ] (]) 19:16, 5 September 2024 (UTC)

:I '''support''' this change. It's important for countries which have changed broadcaster in the past (France, Israel, Netherlands), and especially important for countries that swap broadcaster on a regular basis (Belgium, Germany, Russia) ] (]) 21:34, 2 September 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::: Also, OGAE's yearly contests, individually, don't have long-term significance. It would be difficult to prove otherwise. We're not talking about Eurovision events at all here, but a fan club's event, hosted on the internet. There's no real show hosted in a host city, the artists are, most often, not personally involved, and it's only these fan club members who vote. It's pretty much a fan-run contest, occurring entirely within this group of fans, except it has an OGAE stamp on it. I admit, I am extremely interested in the results myself, as a fan of Eurovision, but I personally have serious doubt when it comes to whether these individual contests are notable for Misplaced Pages. <span style="font-family:Courier New, monospace; ">]|]</span> 03:09, 11 September 2014 (UTC)
:'''Your attention, please'''. I am pleased to announce that the participating broadcaster is now available in the ], by filling in the parameter "broadcaster". Thank to your support and the merge made by ].

:Please, make sure that the full name of the broadcaster is correct for the year and country when filling it in, with the correct spelling, and that it matches the one that appears in the prose, in the ''country'' article, in that year's ''contest'' article, and in the ''list of countries'' article, so that we have consistency throughout.
::::::::::: The ] is universal and applies to everything, and while there are subtle differences to how notability is applied to different topic areas, comparisons can certainly be made. As I've stated above, SNGs establish an alternative path to notability in addition to the GNG. Note that I used the term "Eurovision contests" broadly as being any event related to the Eurovision topic area, and I stand by my position that ] isn't really relevant here, as it was not written for these sorts of articles.
:I encourage everyone to take the opportunity to review the prose of the article when filling in the parameter, and to complete the lead section in cases where information is missing. I have already done for Spain and 20th-century Portugal in the ESC, and I have unified their introduction with something like this:

:<code><nowiki>Spain was represented at the ] with the song "]", composed by ], with lyrics by ], and performed by ]. The Spanish participating broadcaster {{lang|xx|]|i=no}} (XX) selected its entry through ...</nowiki></code> ] (]) 17:03, 24 September 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::: Per my earlier explanations, policies and guidelines are clear that independence means separation from the topic itself; it has nothing to do with what the sources specialize in. For Eurovision contests, this means sources which are independent of broadcasters, the EBU, and in this case, the OGAE. For a topic in biology, that would mean sources independent of the person conducting the experiment or similar. Even if one is to accept ], it is actually saying that such sources ''are'' independent, they're just indiscriminate. So it looks like we've jumped from Eurovision sources not being usable for notability because they're not neutral, to them not being usable because they're not independent, to now them not being usable because they're indiscriminate. I don't accept this new position any more than the previous ones. For starters, different Eurovision sources cover things differently, so treating them all as the same is inappropriate. It's also clear that they don't cover every fan-made contest on the internet; they choose to cover OGAE especially. Furthermore, they're coverage also goes beyond simply announcing the dates, the results etc. and gives critical and extensive coverage which is exactly what's needed to satisfy the GNG.
::Thanks for the update. I think we need a better wording for the intro though that avoids that run-on sentence. Suggest: <code><nowiki>Spain was represented at the ] with the song "]", performed by ]. The song, composed by ], with lyrics by ], was selected through... The event saw ## contestants compete..."</nowiki></code> ] (]) 18:58, 24 September 2024 (UTC)

:::Yes, that is another discussion, the wording I used is improvable. I didn't make it up, I copied it from the best written articles of this kind out there (not written by me).
::::::::::: If Eurovision sources are not accepted as counting towards notability, as it stands, all OGAE Second Chance Contest articles will probably be deleted as being non-notable. It will also make a large number of other articles which fall under this project vulnerable as well. Fortunately, I'm confident that if taken to AfD, the extensive coverage of a variety of Eurovision sources will be accepted as making the ] article notable for inclusion. Whether there is extensive enough coverage for each year, I'm much more doubtful, simply because coverage is thin, even including Eurovision sources. ]<small><span style="font-weight:bold;">&nbsp;·</span>&#32;]</small> 15:11, 11 September 2014 (UTC)
:::What I made on purpose was to use the straightforward sentence: "The ''broadcaster'' selected its entry" avoiding the use of the "was selected", as the participating broadcaster, as the entrant, is who selected the entry, and its role has to be highlighted as soon as possible in the prose. ] (]) 19:27, 24 September 2024 (UTC)

::I know I'm probably a bit late to the game on this one. Just back from a Wiki-break and I noticed this change. I'm pretty content with the discussion above, and happy to support the change to add the broadcaster to the infobox. However I do feel it's a bit strange to place the broadcaster above the country in the order of the infobox. In almost every context it is the country that is shown to be participating in the contest, not the broadcaster; i.e. it's the UK entry, not the BBC entry. Graphics, reporting, even the list the country above the broadcaster. Yes it may be a competition of public service broadcasters, but I still believe that within these infoboxes the country should still take precedence over the broadcaster. ] (]) 18:48, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
{{outdent|::::::::::::}}
:::Hi ], welcome back.

:::I'm sorry, but in the "official list of participating broadcasters" page you linked, I don't see that "the country is shown to be participating in the contest" or that it "list the country above the broadcaster". I see a page that is titled "37 broadcasters head to Malmö". I see a prose that begins with "Public broadcasters from 37 countries will take part in the Eurovision...". I see a list titled "Participating broadcasters" that lists them alphabetically by country of origin. And I see also the sentence "A total of 35 broadcasters will return from Liverpool 2023". On that page it is clearly stated that the entrant in the contest is a broadcaster, as it is clearly stated in every formal document and in every formal communication, beginning with the rules of the event.
Well, if you really want to establish that these Eurovision fan and news sites are independent of OGAE, it will be difficult. ESCToday, for one, collaborates with OGAE International. (And a good chunk of writers from every other site out there are members of an OGAE Club.) The main problem here, and what I've been saying all along, is that the current articles rely exclusively on OGAE's official sites, and these articles haven't established notability yet because of these.
:::As I said above, the use of the name of the country and the flag, for better identification of the entrant in the international competition, however widespread it may be, does not really make the country a participant, specifically speaking. ("A lie repeated a thousand times does not become the truth"). It is okay to use the name of the country when speaking in general, but when speaking specifically about the entrant we should always make it clear who is participating in the contest, avoiding unnecessary ambiguity and inaccurate statements. The entrant/participant in the contest is a broadcaster who is a "EBU member", who is "from a country", who "participates representing its country", and who "selects its entry". Statements like "the broadcaster organizes the country's participation", "the broadcaster participates on behalf of the country", "the broadcaster selects the country's entry", "the broadcaster is responsible for choosing a song" (as if the country had delegated responsibility on it), and the like, are wrong for all the reasons I said above, and we should avoid them. Just because some of these claims have passed a GA review doesn't make them correct, as the reviewers may not have been aware of everything said and have only looked at grammar, style, reliability of references, etc.

:::The ''country in year'' articles are the most in-depth articles of this project, and it is the place where it makes the most sense to be accurate with the entrant. In this context, giving precedence to the country over the broadcaster in the infobox only serves to continue giving the false impression that it is the country that is participating rather than the broadcaster, and gives the latter a secondary role. ] (]) 07:48, 25 October 2024 (UTC)
What other articles are you concerned about regarding the establishment of notability? All the contests are notable, as well as all the artists who are chosen to participate in each year, as well as the song they perform, not because they're in news articles, but because of the sheer international scale of this contest.
::::I understand your viewpoint, but I think it really falls down when you actually consider the bigger picture with participants in Eurovision. Yes it may be a contest in which public service broadcasters send entries, but there is only one entry allowed per country, and only one broadcaster from a given country may participate; therefore the country is just as relevant to the participation as the broadcaster, because it's not just the BBC entry for Eurovision, it's the UK's, because the BBC participating prevents ITV or Channel 4, which are also UK EBU members, from participating.

::::Additionally, while the 2024 participants release listed it as broadcasters, most likely to downplay the significance of an Israeli entry given the ongoing controversy around that, in all other years it was the countries that received the top billing (albeit with the caveat occasionally that public broadcasters were the ones actually entering the contest; see , , , ).
(] says "Some sources, while apparently independent, are indiscriminate." Which implies that they may not be independent or reliable. But this is a moot point; we can argue forever about the interpretation of policy.) <span style="font-family:Courier New, monospace; ">]|]</span> 17:27, 11 September 2014 (UTC)
::::I really disagree with your assertion that we would be somehow "lying" by listing the country ahead of the broadcaster in these infoboxes; I think they are just as important as the other. Broadcasters can only join the EBU if the countries they broadcast from are within the ], or are member states of the ], therefore I believe the geography is just as important to a broadcaster participating as any other aspect. All the infographics at each contest, not to mention the , go by country more than broadcaster. If we also look at other events where "countries" compete and see what Misplaced Pages does there, e.g. the Olympics, where an athlete can only compete with the backing of the respective ], is listed the country first and then the NOC (see ] as an example). With all this in mind I just think it's sorta counter-intuitive to keep the country below the broadcaster; as if you're almost trying to bend-over-backwards to make a point that it's a contest where broadcasters compete (just my opinion).

::::Two other points: I really don't understand why the country name was taken out of the infobox title; surely this should match the article title? And regardless of where the broadcaster is place, I think it looks super weird to keep the flag against the "second" entry within the infobox, and right now this could potentially be a ] violation. I think the flag should either be more prominent, e.g. included in the infobox header, or it should be gotten rid of completely from these infoboxes. ] (]) 10:26, 25 October 2024 (UTC)
: It's been known by this project for years that ESCToday has links with the EBU (and others), though that knowledge has not resulted in any consensus that they're not a third-party source or lack editorial independence. Having a writer who is an OGAE member is a trivial matter – writers are often members of a large number of organizations and still operate independently. Ultimately, I'm not very interested in what ] says or doesn't say as it is an essay, and it is policies and guidelines which dictate what is and isn't included in the encyclopedia, but as I've already explained above, I don't regard it as relevant in this case because Eurovision sources are not "indiscriminate" in their coverage of OGAE contests.
:::::Your viewpoint falls down when you realise that the ESC is a television co-production of the participating broadcasters, who themselves co-produce the event in which they participate. Only one entry is allowed per country, and only one broadcaster from a given country may participate, just to ensure fairness in the competition with the broadcasters from other countries. The point is not that two broadcasters are from the same country, is that they both share the broadcasting area and viewers, and allowing both to participate would unbalance the competition and make it difficult to identify them internationally. Your UK example only reinforces the fact that an entry is just a BBC entry, as the other UK EBU members have no say in the matter.

:::::The country is not as important to participation as the broadcaster, for the simple fact that without a broadcaster there is no participation. A country is not an entity that can participate on its own, nor does it have any right to do so. I am not trying to bend-over-anything, the ESC is a own owned competition between the broadcasters, something that the Olyimics are not. Yes, geography is important to join the EBU, but only in terms of broadcasting area, broadcasting license, broadcasting rights, coverage, public service, laws, etc., that fall within each country; geography gives the country nothing to say in the participation. And again, using the country name to identify the participant speaking in general is fine, even to bring together all the entries that have come from the same country on the official page, but this does not make the country a participant, nor does it diminish the primary importance of the broadcaster.
: "Sheer international scale" does not make something notable, nor does being "local" make something non-notable. There have been many attempts to include geographic scope into notability considerations but there has never been community consensus for it, with the exemption of ], which does apply it to topics with very short bursts of localized news coverage. Regardless, the OGAE and it's activities are as international as Eurovision itself, but that doesn't make it notable. Reliable and third-party source coverage of its activities is what makes it notable.
:::::In the examples of previous years you linked, I still see that the articles start with the sentence in bold: "Public broadcasters from XX countries will take part in the Eurovision.."; and I see sentences like "Fans of the Contest will welcome back ARMTV from Armenia and RTCG from Montenegro" in 2022 or "After the cancellation of the ESC2020 nearly half of the broadcasters already confirmed their participants for 2021.", which makes your Israeli theory collapse. In addition, if you check the official performance videos of recent years, you will see the participating broadcaster billed at the end of the video, and If you go back much further in time you will even see the broadcaster logo in the voting sequence of its spokesperson, just to give a couple of easily visible examples.

:::::My assertion about "lying" had more to do with ignoring or underestimating the role of the broadcaster because the belief that the participant is the country is so widespread.
: As for other Eurovision articles, the main contest articles could get enough non-Eurovision source coverage to establish notability, but others such as the "C in the Eurovision Song Contest YYYY" articles, might struggle in places if Eurovision sources were arbitrary excluded from counting towards notability. Certainly any current ''de facto'' presumptions that that all entries in every year deserve their own article would have to end. I'm not very concerned at this point though, as I believe policies, guidelines and community consensus are on the side of reliable third-party Eurovision sources counting towards notability. However, I'm happy to ask for a ] if necessary. ]<small><span style="font-weight:bold;">&nbsp;·</span>&#32;]</small> 18:56, 11 September 2014 (UTC)
:::::Regarding the last two points about the infobox, I don't have the slightest idea. ] (]) 16:13, 25 October 2024 (UTC)
::Yeah, at this point, I think a third opinion could help clear things up. I cannot foresee much agreement if it's just the two of us going back and forth. <span style="font-family:Courier New, monospace; ">]|]</span> 03:58, 14 September 2014 (UTC)
::::::If all you say is true, then why are you not pushing for us to rename the articles entirely to remove the country names and list the broadcasters in their place? If you believe that the broadcasters are the most important thing here, then why is it not "BBC in Eurovision" or "SVT in Eurovision"? Also, with this in mind, should we then be splitting the history of each participating country based on the broadcaster? Belgium has two broadcasters that split responsibility for competing in the contest, should we have a "VRT in Eurovision" and a "RTBF in Eurovision" article then? Obviously these suggestions are ridiculous, because by all known criteria of the average viewer and the average reader of Misplaced Pages, it's the country that matters, not the broadcaster. I absolutely believe that we should be informing people with our articles, but not at the sake of doing things illogically just to make a point. I do believe that the broadcaster is an important part of each country's participation, and has a place within the infoboxes, but placing them ahead of the country just doesn't make logical sense to me, given the article titles reference the country and not the broadcaster, and the official website even reference the country more in the and the . ] (]) 16:29, 25 October 2024 (UTC)
:::You may wish to hold off on the third opinion, as I have added a section in the latest edition of the newsletter (scheduled to be mailed out in a day or two). Hopefully that will get some additional members to take part. And if that fails, then I suppose a 3O would be next. '''] ]''' 06:45, 14 September 2014 (UTC)
:::::::I didn't see anything wrong with the way we used to list and refer to the participants as it aligned very well with the convention seen in ]. While I finally caved to agreeing to giving more prominence to the broadcaster's role (which let me be clear, is set by the media and contest producers, not Misplaced Pages editors), I would agree with Sims2aholic8 in that rewriting articles in Ferclopedio's way is misleading, and I feel it does not reflect reality. To continue down this path with further "broadcaster is first" changes would be ]. There are certainly articles that talk about how the broadcaster is running its process, but it's the country itself that supports that effort as it's the body that created and funds the broadcaster. It is not our role to 'correct' how sources (including the contest itself) refer to things. If we take a step back, it's important to remember that this contest is an exhibition of national pride and artistic abilities; it's not merely a television show to see which channel can produce the best programming. Even if we can't see eye-to-eye on this, I believe Sims2aholic8's request was just to swap the order of country and broadcaster in the infobox, not to omit broadcaster. I find that to be a very reasonable suggestion that better aligns with how the public actually view this event. ] (]) 17:00, 25 October 2024 (UTC)
:::: I wouldn't say this discussion has been unproductive, but I'm not seeing agreement forming either, so some further input would be welcome. There are some additional points I could make on a few issues, but I'll leave that for now. ]<small><span style="font-weight:bold;">&nbsp;·</span>&#32;]</small> 14:30, 15 September 2014 (UTC)
:::::::Yes, of course everything I say is true, I wouldn't be here arguing if it weren't. Have you ever read the contest rules?
::::: Oh, definitely not unproductive at all. If anything I've learned a lot about Misplaced Pages policy on notability and sourcing, and the other side of the argument from mine. It's extremely productive, but agreement ''has'' been difficult to reach. <span style="font-family:Courier New, monospace; ">]|]</span> 07:43, 16 September 2014 (UTC)
:::::::And for the third or fourth time I say this, I think it's fine to talk about the country when we talk in general terms, or to group all the entries from the same country in the same place (the ''country'' articles). At no time have I said that this should change, it would be overkill.

:::::::What I'm trying to push is to refer accurately to who the participant is when talking specifically about the entrant (the participating broadcaster), and to avoid statements like "the broadcaster is an important part of each country's participation", that suggests that the country is an entity that participates (I would get into a loop if I started refuting that same sentence again, I have already given sufficient reasons against it above). ] (]) 18:31, 25 October 2024 (UTC)
Yo! :) Any updates on this? I'd rather not have this productive discussion go to waste. :( <span style="font-family:Courier New, monospace; ">]|]</span> 01:04, 26 October 2014 (UTC)

: I think we're going to have to agree to disagree on the finer points of notability. However, there seems to be a consensus that the current collection of OGAE articles needs to be trimmed down significantly. ]<small><span style="font-weight:bold;">&nbsp;·</span>&#32;]</small> 15:20, 7 December 2014 (UTC)

:: Hey, I thought I'd give contribute my views on this, since you seem to be in need for more opinions. I think the Second Chance Contest is definitely notable, as you had previously agreed upon, and I think all of the OGAE contests do have some notability, but may not be notable enough to require their own pages. I would suggest merging the Video Contest winners onto the main OGAE page, since as an OGAE contest it is notable but not to the degree that the Second Chance contest is. In terms of the yearly Second Chance pages, I would agree that they could be trimmed back, and I think that a discussion on which contests would be deemed notable would be beneficial.

:: On whether reliable third-party Eurovision sources count towards notability, I would have to say that they do. Not every fan contest is covered by these sites, but far from it, as I believe OGAE contests are the only ones they cover, therefore I think by that they're undoubtedly notable. Eurovision websites cover Eurovision news, but I believe they don't cover every single facet of the fan side of things, for example the results of fan contests at OGAE galas in different countries. On whether every single annual Second Chance page is notable needs to be discussed, and they could be trimmed back if the necessary notability isn't found. ] (]) 17:16, 7 December 2014 (UTC)

== Expert attention ==

This is a notice about ], which might be of interest to your WikiProject. It will take a while before the category is populated.<!-- Template:Expert-category-notice --> ] (]) 06:25, 19 October 2014 (UTC)

== Underage Performers ==

Thanks for removing the Speedy deletes yesterday, after placing the one on the Betty page I noticed these were all Junior Eurovision performers. Because of the BLP issues they appear on the Cleanup Listing for WikiProject Musicians. The serious issue of having a page for an underage performer with BLP issues had me implement the ]. It does appear however that none of these articles have any significant 3rd party sources attributed to them, only the EBU bio's. I would question the need to have individual pages for each performer under ]. And while the contest is notable, the performers have yet to achieve any notability under WP:MUSIC. I would strongly suggest merging these, but will leave them considering you are the admin mostly dealing with them. ] (]) 08:10, 17 October 2014 (UTC)
:{{U|Karst}}, the merging of these articles is something that generally does happen after the contest - depending of course on specific factors. The fact that these performers have won a national preselection in order to represent their country at Junior Eurovision (JESC) makes them notable in their respective countries. The articles then get generated for those who have a keen interest in JESC. Once the contest is over and the top-3 performers are known, then the remainder tend to get merged into their respective in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest article. Another issue however that I found is in the past, ] are not as eager in making articles for these younger performers, unless of course they already hold substantial notability. But for bizarre reasons these last 2 contests, a small group of users are haphazardly creating new articles for both artist and song, and not taking into account the ] and of course the ] guidance you pointed out above. This may be a matter worth raising again at ] for broader input. '''] ]''' 12:14, 17 October 2014 (UTC)
:: Thanks, have put ] on my watch list and will help when required. Peace. ] (]) 12:57, 17 October 2014 (UTC)
::: {{U|Karst}}, I've copy/paste this entire thread onto this project talk page, then people have a better idea and not need to visit my talk page to see the initial discussion. '''] ]''' 22:43, 19 October 2014 (UTC)

== 60th anniversary show ==

A discussion started over on my talk page recently in regards to the announcement of the 60th Anniversary Show for Eurovision, along with the selection of the host venue, location, and presenters. However, the dates of the show, along with what the show's title will be are unknown. So to prevent speculative guessing of article titles, and potential page move wars over personal preferences, I've made a start drafting an article ''']''' which members are welcome to help contribute towards. This way we are able to keep adding sources somewhere, as well as keep on building the article, until we know what the show will be call, so that we can then move the draft into main article space under its official show name (which should be known in the next coming weeks or months). <span style="font-family:Corbel;background:#CB5;border:solid 1px;border-radius:7px;box-shadow:#03F 0px 2px 4px;">&nbsp;&nbsp;]&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;]&nbsp;</span> 00:45, 23 October 2014 (UTC)

== ESC 2014 ==
The ] article has just passed the GA-review. I want to take out some time to say excellent job all project members who worked on the article. Keep rollin' :) ] (]) 22:56, 6 November 2014 (UTC)
:{{ping|Jonas Vinther}} I've added it to the ], so that it will get a mention in the next edition of Project News. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 01:13, 7 November 2014 (UTC)

== Composer and lyricist information ==

Hi guys!
I have a suggestion. Since the participating songwriters of each participating country is quite vital information, the names ought to be included on wikipedia in a nice and neat way that makes the information easy to find for the readers. As they are technically participants, and are featured in the on-screen credits in the Eurovision Song Contest graphics, it's information that is highly relevant. Yet, articles are often lacking when it comes to this.
It would probably be too inconvenient and difficult to present the names of all composers and lyricists on the main article of each Eurovision year. There are simply too many names, and it would mess up the look of the entry tables. However, my suggestion is to instead make sure to include that information in the separate article for each national entry. (e.g. in "Finland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2015" and so on). Right now the names of the songwriters representing the country are sometimes mentioned in the main text of the articles, and sometimes not. I would suggest to include the names in the article's info box of the entry/participation, and/or at least in the article's main text.
What do you think about that idea? ] (]) 22:40, 16 November 2014 (UTC)
:'''Against:''' Composers are listed in the articles but putting them in the infobox would clutter it up (some songs can have a bunch of composers) and also they're not exactly vital enough to ''have'' to include in the infobox which focuses on the main points of each country's participation (artist, song, national selection, etc.) 02:25, 17 November 2014 (UTC)

Composers within the main Eurovision by year articles would be too zealous and as {{U|Zouki08}} noted, would make them look cluttered. However the composer and lyricists are mentioned in the respective articles such as " in the Eurovision Song Contest " - with some just being mentioned in the respective song article itself. I don't see why such data couldn't be added to the infobox - after all is is a "box of information" is it not? <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 08:58, 17 November 2014 (UTC)
:Exactly. As you say, it's what an info box is for. And I don't think it would look too cluttered. Especially not if grouping them all under "Songwriters" or so, rather than doing composers and lyricists separately (which in many cases would mean repeating the same names twice). ] (]) 11:19, 17 November 2014 (UTC)
::{{ping|Zouki08}} hang on a second. We are still discussing the inclusion of such content '''only''' within articles such as ], and '''not''' in articles such as ]? The latter '''''would''''' make the article cluttered and may cause confusion to the general reader. If someone wanted to know who wrote the song, then they can easily click on the link for the respective country's page and/or the song article. Adding a full list of composers and lyricists within the main Eurovision article would be overzealous. Also as was ''']''', a consensus was reached for articles such as ], which resulted in a ''']''', that project members are using. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 12:09, 17 November 2014 (UTC)
::: Yes. Sorry if what I wrote above was confusing. Only in pages such as ], not in ]. (In theory it would be nice to be able to have such info on those pages too, of course. But with the current format there just isn't room for it anywhere, so it would require too much of a re-design. Which wouldn't be a good idea). So I don't propose any change to the main Eurovision article. What I mean is simply to include "Selected songwriter(s)" in the info box, underneath "Selected singer" and "Selected song". And there add both the composers and lyricists of that entry, rather than having a separate field for "composer" and "lyricist". ] (]) 12:42, 17 November 2014 (UTC)
:::::Ah I see. Yes, on country articles within the infobox - that is a good idea. {{ping|CT Cooper}} this could be something worth looking into and discussing at a RfC for in the Eurovision Song Contest . Unless if the project community at large does not object to such an improvement to the infobox, then I'd be more than happy to looking into updating the template. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 13:11, 17 November 2014 (UTC)
:::::: OK, let's wait a bit more and see if there's more feedback regarding this. ] (]) 15:45, 17 November 2014 (UTC)
:::::::Is there any way we can see an example of what an infobox would look like with this extra field? In particular, I'd like to see an example with an entry that has many writers credited in order to see what it looks like. Other than that, composers are always at the very least mentioned in the table of entries for the national finals or in the actual text for internal selections. An alternative to the infobox could be something that Jjj1238 has done in ] article where writers of the selected entry are also emphasized in the lead of the article. ] (]) 16:25, 17 November 2014 (UTC)
{{od}}
I don't think there is a physical way to show an example without having to edit/save the actual template. And to create a "prototype" just for viewing purpose, and then it not be used, would mean more work for whoever has to delete it all. Although I could try and use my sandbox(s) and see if I can get round it that way. Alternatively we could add a new field, and also make sure we use the {{t|Collapsible list}} within that field, so if there are multiple names, that we're giving the option to view them by collapsing the list into view (if that makes sense). <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 16:29, 17 November 2014 (UTC)

:{{ping|Zouki08}} and {{U|Pickette}} Er folks! I've just gone to copy the syntax from the template and have discovered that the template has already got a writers field and has done for some time. We add <code><nowiki>| Writer =</nowiki></code> under the "song" parameter - I've used ] as an example of how the field is suppose to be used. Why isn't this documented on the template document itself? <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 16:39, 17 November 2014 (UTC)

:Correction, it hasn't been done for some time. {{U|Zouki08}} updated the template by adding a new field on '''''', without gaining a clear consensus that it needed to be updated first. Easy mistake to make, but we do need to make sure we seek consensus, especially when it comes to templates that are used across so many articles. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 16:42, 17 November 2014 (UTC)

:: Oh! Sorry. I indeed did change it a couple of days ago, before I posted this suggestion, to test how/if it would in thge infoboxes on the national pages (and it indeed worked just fine, just like what you did for the Macedonia 2015 page just now). I thought I had undone the revision since then, but seems I didn't. I apologize, I realise now I should have waited for a concensus. I've been editing articles on wikipedia for quite some time, but not on this level for long, and am still learning how it all works. :-) ] (]) 17:32, 17 November 2014 (UTC)
:::Don't worry about it. In a way it helped to provide an example (as pointed out with Macedonia 2015). I think if we used the writers field and also the {{t|Collapsible list}} within that field, then it could just work, and would note that the composer/lyricists are of the selected entry for that country. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 17:36, 17 November 2014 (UTC)
:::: I'm not entirely sure about the {{t|Collapsible list}}. Maybe just for cases where the number of writers are too many to fit into the info box in a nice and neat way? Because I suspect that if people need to click an extra time to see it, they usually won't. To me, it looks quite fine without the collapsible list. Check out ] for an example. ] (]) 17:42, 17 November 2014 (UTC)
::::: The use of {{t|Collapsible list}} is optional and would only be used if there is a long list of names that would just make the infbox look hideously untidy. It is just a useful template to help "neaten" things up. Of course if there is only one, maybe two maximum names then the collapsed list would not be required. It would just be down to common-sense when to implement its usage. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 18:00, 17 November 2014 (UTC)
:::::: OK. Agree completely. ] (]) 18:30, 17 November 2014 (UTC)
:::::::I think if there are more than 2-3 names the collapsible list should be used. Also I prefer when each name is on its own line instead of the names being added as a continuous list separated with commas. Before anything is agreed to however, changes to all articles that use this infobox should be considered. There are many articles so it's a lot of work. ] (]) 02:08, 18 November 2014 (UTC)
{{od}}
I agree with the non-use of comma separation, {{U|Pickette}}. Vertical list, seeing as the template name "collapsible list" is a bit of a give-away (although I can think of one user right now who would just ignore that and do things their way just to get the rest of the project to "clean-up" after them... long story, but it is giving me a headache how many times they have to be told about ], ], ]; and still violate them and not even be blocked by now). Anyhow, yes it would also be hard work as there are well over 1000 ESC articles that would need the modification, not to mention the JESC ones too. But I'm sure if a small group of us worked together on this, we'd get them updated in no time. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 02:40, 18 November 2014 (UTC)
: I agree. Vertical list would look much better than comma separation. How is that best done, when the names are not part of a collapsible list? I tried it, but it ended up showing only the top name. And yes, this is a lot of work. But indeed, it shouldn't take too much time especially if we are a group of people doing it.] (]) 09:40, 18 November 2014 (UTC)
::You'd do it like this, {{U|Zouki08}}.
<pre style="font-size:95%;overflow:auto;">
{{Collapsible list
| title = Composer/Lyricists
| Person 1
| Person 2
| Person 3
| and so on
}}
</pre>
::Hope this helps. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 13:27, 18 November 2014 (UTC)
::: Thanks {{U|Wesley Mouse}}. However, what I meant was; how is it done for names listed when they're *not* listed as a collapsible list? So that e.g. two names will still be vertically listed and not separated by commas. Although maybe you and {{U|Pickette}} only meant that it should be done for the collapsible lists, and not otherwise? ] (]) 14:26, 18 November 2014 (UTC)
::::You could either use {{t|unbulleted list}} or line break (<code><nowiki><br/></nowiki></code>). <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 14:45, 18 November 2014 (UTC)
::::: Great. Thanks for all the help! I'm ready to start editing as soon as this change has been proper agreed upon. ] (]) 23:54, 18 November 2014 (UTC)
:::::: Sine there's been no more objections to this... Shall we begin inplementing this in the existing and upcoming articles now? ] (]) 13:01, 23 November 2014 (UTC)
::::::: {{Ping|Zouki08}} 7 days is generally too soon to decide that all will be ok. I'd give it another week or two, especially now that I've gotten everyone's attention in the ] thread. After all ]. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 15:28, 23 November 2014 (UTC)
:::::::: Hey guys! Now ] has caught my attention, I thought I'd give my views too. I pretty much agree with everything that you've come up with on this, and the example on ] looks great! I suppose if collapsible lists were to be used it's therefore feasible that you could have separate lists for composers and lyricists, depending if there's consensus on this of course. But overall I think it's a great idea. ] (]) 17:41, 24 November 2014 (UTC)
::::::::: Doing separate ones for composers and lyricists would indeed make sense, as that's how it's credited on-screen in Eurovision. But then the question is, would it be separate ones for all articles, including songs where the composers and lyricists are the same people? It would mean repeating the same name twice, which would just mean there's more need to use collapsible lists where it would otherwise end up being too much text in the info box. And I think we should avoid using collapsible lists for this as much as possible, and only use it where it's necessary. ] (]) 11:41, 30 November 2014 (UTC)
{{od}}
How about putting (C) and (L) next to the names to show composer and lyricist. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 16:14, 30 November 2014 (UTC)
:That could be a nice, if it looks good. Maybe we should try it out. And (CL) for those who are credited for both music and lyrics?] (]) 00:31, 1 December 2014 (UTC)
::In those cases we would simply put (C/L). <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 11:07, 1 December 2014 (UTC)
:::Some people might not know what these letters mean though. How will you explain what (C/L), (C) and (L) mean in that box? Maybe the field "Selected songwriters" should be split into "Selected Composer(s)" and "Selected Lyricist(s)" and any list of names that exceeds more than two for each category can be collapsed. Or for songs that have the same names for both lyricists and composers can use the field "Selected songwriters" while others that differ can use the other two (if that makes sense). ] (]) 18:57, 2 December 2014 (UTC)
::::{{t|Abbr}} --&nbsp;'''<nowiki>]]]'''&nbsp;<nowiki>]]</nowiki>''' 19:50, 2 December 2014 (UTC)
::::: ], I agree, it would possibly be confusing. Personally I agree that splitting it into "Selected Composer(s)" and "Selected Lyricist(s)" would be fine. (And a joint one for entries where it's the same people credited on both, or when the split isn't known, as you just suggested). I would also prefer this because it would mean that less articles would need collapsible lists. (Since in many cases there would be less names in each field, when they're split up). As long as people don't think the info box becomes too crowded then? With separate fields for composers and lyricists, and by allowing up to two names for each without the use of collapsible lists, then there could be four visible names in total. (Which, in my opinion, is not a bad thing). Although then one might as well also allow up two four visible names even in cases where it'll be a joint field for composers and lyricists. It would only take up the same amount of space. ] (]) 17:02, 3 December 2014 (UTC)
::::::{{Ping|Zouki08}}, I'd wait a bit if I were you. The template itself has been nominated for deletion. The fact it will affect hundreds of articles, seems to be irrelevant. But who am I to argue, when I get accused of all sorts for defending such templates. To be honest, the discouraging attitude and willingness to cast such disgusting allegations from some users is causing me to think about leaving Misplaced Pages. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 00:49, 7 December 2014 (UTC)
:::::::I don't think this template is nominated for deletion though. Other templates were nominated to be merged into this template unless I missed something. ] (]) 01:33, 7 December 2014 (UTC)
{{od}}
Merge or deletion, it would still be wise to put on-hold any mass rollout of the changes. We don't know what will be merged where. There is even talk of merging them all into a "infobox music" or something obscure. And I have suggested at the very bottom thread of looking into the possibility of all-in-one universal infboxes that would house the necessary parameters for each contest type. Currently if were were to use a Eurovision infobox on an ABU contest - the input of a year would cause problems as the syntax only recognised Eurovision in that template, so would direct an ABU link to a ESC page. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 01:58, 7 December 2014 (UTC)

== Maps showing the points allocated to the winning song ==

Hey
]
]
I created some maps that show which country gave how many points to the winning song (examples to the right). I inserted them only to the German articles, but you are welcome to use them for other languages. You can find the maps .
--] (]) 13:04, 17 November 2014 (UTC)


== Nomination of ] for deletion ==
:I'm not sure how we would be able to incorporate these into the article. Would they be for the country article (such as ]), or the yearly Eurovision pages (like ])? I'm just concerned that people may get confused with them, as the yearly articles have maps all over the place, and too many would easily confuse a person. They would look good in country pages, rather than annual contest pages.<span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 13:08, 17 November 2014 (UTC)
<div class="afd-notice">
<div class="floatleft" style="margin-bottom:0;">]</div>A discussion is taking place as to whether the article ] is suitable for inclusion in Misplaced Pages according to ] or whether it should be ].


The article will be discussed at ''']''' until a consensus is reached, and anyone, including you, is welcome to contribute to the discussion. The nomination will explain the policies and guidelines which are of concern. The discussion focuses on high-quality evidence and our policies and guidelines.
:: I think the maps are a nice idea, and they're very well-made. But indeed, it could potentially be a bit much on the annual contest pages? On the other hand, if they're included on the country pages, it would be weird if it isn't the same for all entries. Not just the ones that won the contest. All country pages should preferrably have the same format and include the same information (in this case, these maps). But that would probably be too much work. ] (]) 15:50, 17 November 2014 (UTC)


Users may edit the article during the discussion, including to improve the article to address concerns raised in the discussion. However, do not remove the article-for-deletion notice from the top of the article until the discussion has finished.<!-- Template:Afd notice --></div> ] (]) 13:55, 13 November 2024 (UTC)
:::I recall someone attempted to use similar maps on annual pages before, and a huge discussion took place and resulted in their removal as pure overkill of maps. I've been searching for the last couple of hours to find the discussion, but as there are that many talk pages, both active and archived, that its like hunting for a needle in a haystack. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 15:54, 17 November 2014 (UTC)


== Good article reassessment for ] ==
::::I initially thought they could be a good idea for the country pages (such as ]), but it would look weird if they were only found on the winning entries and not every country taking part, and I think the format of each page should be the same ultimately. It would be a good idea to consult the previous discussion in regards to the annual pages, and discuss if there's any way to incorporate them into the annual pages in a way that makes it less confusing. ] (]) 18:16, 24 November 2014 (UTC)
::::: I suppose the most sensible way to incorporate them into the annual pages would be to do it in a similar way that the split jury/televote result is featured on the annual pages of recent editions. I.e. first hidden, and only appearing by clicking "Show". ] (]) 12:53, 4 December 2014 (UTC) ] has been nominated for a good article reassessment. If you are interested in the discussion, please participate by adding your comments to the ]. If concerns are not addressed during the review period, the good article status may be removed from the article. ] (]) 02:20, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
{{od}}
One could also argue and say why have these maps just for the winning country and not all the others too. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 15:53, 4 December 2014 (UTC)
: Yes indeed. That would make the most sense. And that's why this thing seems like too much work, most likely. Unless someone wants to make maps for over 1,400 entries. ] (]) 23:18, 7 December 2014 (UTC)


== RfC on rescoping WikiProject Eurovision ==
== Haphazard methods ==


<!-- ] 11:01, 30 December 2024 (UTC) -->{{User:ClueBot III/DoNotArchiveUntil|1735556468}}
Now I know some will probably moan at what I'm about to say, but I think {{U|CT Cooper}} would agree, and will most likely have a few words himself to say in regards to this. But, some members lately seem to be lacking the obvious principle of organisation when it comes to the project as a whole. This haphazard approach is starting to cause a bit of chaos and confusion across the project spectrum, and I feel it needs to be addressed once and for all. There's been biographical articles rapidly created that just have one line, and that's in ] and nothing more to expand on it. Articles like this become quick candidates for ] with most falling foul of ] - and in turn some of those deletion debates turn into a ] with the odd ] thrown in for good measure, and all because we feel deflated it was an article you spent time in making, and all the hard work had been for nothing. All that can be easily avoided if we steered clear of our haphazardly ways, and started to pull together as a team. Do a bit of research, check to see if notability is warranted and that a standalone article is likely to be safe from the grasps of the deletionists.
Should ] be rescoped to become a task force for a new WikiProject Song Contests? ] (]) 10:59, 25 November 2024 (UTC)


'''Longer brief:''' I have been thinking for quite a while now about this WikiProject, and what I believe to be considerable ] over the past decade or so. What started as a project devoted mainly to the ], and by extension other ] contests, has since exploded not just EBU events, but also a large number of other events, and by extension many articles that are very much only tangentially related to any of these articles. We now have articles under the remit of the WikiProject, many of which I think are of no interest to the majority of editors within this project, and our ] list each month is almost invariably filled by various broadcasters, a group of articles which also have only a tangential relationship to the majority of articles which are of actual interest to the editors of this project.
Also new styles seem to be getting rolled out without checking prior ] to see if there may be reasons these ideas have not been used. Take that little extra time to just come along to this project page, put forward our proposals and new ideas, discussed them as a team, then we would not be wasting our time creating something only to end up it being deleted. We should have discussed the idea, discovered if it is worthwhile, then used our time to create and roll out the new ideas. The project prides itself on consistency, on high quality, on uniformity. And at the moment, none of that is blending together. Take for example the RfC back in 2012, in which people took time to discuss how Eurovision by Year articles should look. All of the ideas that were put forward, we utilised, we pulled them together to produce a prototype article, which in turn resulted in not just 1, not 2, but '''''FIVE''''' annual article that fall under our project gaining GA status; with the first one now been upgrade even higher to A-Class; and is on the verge of becoming the '''first ever annual contest article''' to be granted <u>'''feature article'''</u> status. That is a massive achievement for this project, and all down to the fact that this project's members engaged in team work discussion to achieve this goal. This project has always been seen as a piss-take from around the community; with negative statements like "Project Eurovision think they can just do what they like and disregard policies and guidelines", or "what makes Project Eurovision so special from any other project". Well, we need to change that negative outlook around, and show people that we '''are''' a serious project; that we '''do''' take policies and guidelines seriously; that we are here to produce high quality articles.


With this in mind, and considering that I believe WikiProjects work best when they focus on the articles that people are actually interested in improving, I'm proposing that the WikiProject be rescoped to become '''WikiProject Song Contests'''. Given that there are several contests out there where we are actively contributing, and not all of which are led by the EBU, or are even entitled "Eurovision" or related to ESC, I believe that this rebranding makes better sense going forwards. As part of this rebrand, I envisage that we will create several ], focussed specifically on high-profile contests. Right now I see one or two task forces in particular being created, specifically focussing on the Eurovision Song Contest and, depending on interest, the ].
So let's turn this around, let's start rebuilding this project to the highest of respect it has ever seen. Look around at other projects, such as ] and ] - they thrive on high standards, they thrive on working and pulling together as a team - why can't we shine like they do? So is it time we got our acts together or what? Well that shining starts here! Share your views, discuss what could be done to turn things around, but ], and comment on the issue, not the on the users. Thank you! <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 04:24, 23 November 2014 (UTC)
:I agree fully with Wesley! I feel like I contribute and would also like for other users to help out more.--] (]) 12:16, 23 November 2014 (UTC)
:: I also agree with you and I will try my best to make this project better. --] (]) 12:28, 23 November 2014 (UTC)
:::I agree Wesley. I'm not a member of ], but know for a fact they have a much higher standard. I will do what I can to help the project and set a good example. However, as I stated before, I will most likely not be as active in terms of creating new content until ''after'' the annual contest of this year. ] (]) 13:18, 23 November 2014 (UTC)
::::Not to sound like a broken record here or anything, but I also fully agree with you Wesley! I might not have as active to the project recently, but I will definitely try to do more to help out and make this project better. In regards to consensus, I think that some more guidance on how we format Country by Year articles would be a great step forward. I realise this may be harder to do compared to the Eurovision by Year pages, since different countries take differing approaches to their selections, but having a discussion on what should and shouldn't be included can hardly be a bad thing! ] (]) 13:27, 23 November 2014 (UTC)
:::::Thank you, {{U|BabbaQ}}, {{U|Redpower94}}, {{U|Jonas Vinther}}, and {{U|Sims2aholic8}} - for once I am speechless at the positive responses so far. At first I felt as though this needed to be addresses, and then after sleeping on it, felt like I had just stuck my head deep into a hornet's nest, and braced myself for an onslaught of hornet stings. But WOW, I had not realised just how many people actually agreed on this point of view. Its like something I read on Misplaced Pages, that I have found to be so inspiring, yet helpful in regards to the way I see myself contributing. Feel free to read ], in which it mentions the key factors here that we all seem to fall foul of the traps around Misplaced Pages. For example, there is no rush to create articles; we can afford to take our time to consider matters before creating a potentially "deleted" article. Some people have the idea that its all about being the first name on the edit history as "creator" of the article. But Misplaced Pages is ], so what if someone gets there first - they may have only created a stub, but our initial research into the subject matter may expand that stub into a good article - and that research will be a major significant towards the article, than the person who "got their name down as creator first". A lot of us could do with reading WP:TIND and soak up the words. Believe me, they are powerful and give that "Eureka!" feeling that one finally gets the understanding of what Misplaced Pages is really about. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 15:38, 23 November 2014 (UTC)
::::::Ditto what has been said above. ] (]) 22:52, 23 November 2014 (UTC)
:Why was this message marked as "urgent"? Unless someone's life was unexpectedly in the balance, I seriously doubt that anything about the project could be considered "urgent". Please remove me from further updates. ] (]) 01:24, 24 November 2014 (UTC)
{{od}}
{{Ping|Fryede}} The fact of the matter is that it was marked as "urgent" so that it drew everyone's attention to something that is of greater importance. And it is proven by the fact that members who ''have'' commented above also agree that everyone which has been said is of immense importance for the project as a whole. People have wandered into edit disputes over how articles should be written etc, disputes that result in members being blocked, and they are avoidable if people just stopped, took a bit of care and responsibility, and started to communicate with each other as a team - there is no I in team. All these issues need to be addressed urgently, such as discussing categorization - which lately has gone all over the place; there's article layout; and so many other issues that when an RfC is created on this very talk page that nobody even gives a toss to participate, and then you get some folk who just moan because something is being done to a way that they dislike. Things only change if people like you and anyone else, just engages in debates so that everyone has a clear perspective of what the project is about and what needs to be done, and how it should be done. That's why we can pull together and avoid having people blocked through sheer idleness. If you seriously doubt that a project could not be considered urgent, then why be a part of a project? But if you wish to stop receiving messages then I'm sure you are capable of taking your name off ''']'''. But looking at the responses above, the "urgency" is clearly appreciated by some. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 06:47, 24 November 2014 (UTC)
:Could you point to some examples where there have recently been issues? Which articles need attention specifically, perhaps we could work on some of the cases. I fail to see this sudden urgency, the points you make seem to be very general and could be applied to most of Misplaced Pages. Still, I'd be interested in getting certain things corrected and articles improved.--] (]) 09:00, 24 November 2014 (UTC)
::For starters {{U|Tuzapicabit}}, there are all the ] that hardly anyone from the project seem to take part in any more, and then wonder why articles/categories/templates etc get deleted all of a sudden. There are ] that have now closed which could have done with membership participation. Then there are the newsletters that get sent out, if people read them they would see all the things that need work doing - and there are tons!
::There has also been numerous RfC's (all of which are now archived ], ], ], and ]) that could have had much greater input from members.
::Other discussions have taken place more recently, were only a couple of members take part, and nobody else gives a toss. ], CT Cooper and Mr. Gerbear have been waiting for the last 3 months to see what other members thing of a proposal. ] has a list of articles that may need creating. ] came under question, with a lot of JESC bios under threat of deletion. ], Zouki08 is waiting to see if their proposal is fine, and if it is safe to roll out the change. ], another editor proposing about maps. Its as if people have just lost interest in the project, or just can't be bothered about team work.
::f the message you received about this just said "debate taking place" or along those lines, would you have come along here to see and take part? The fact I labelled it as "urgent" was so that it got everyone's attention, so that people of this project could finally pull their fingers out their ass and start to work together as a team, discuss things about the project, how things should be operated. And it has clearly worked, because more people have participated in this very discussion, then they have done in any other discussion on this project page. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 09:51, 24 November 2014 (UTC)
::: To be fair, importance and urgency are different things, but I do naturally relate to the frustration of only a very small group of project members taking part in discussions. I would say though that if editors have nothing to say or nothing to object to, that's fine, it only gets problematic when people complain about the outcome of a discussion soon after it's finished, having being invited to take part and not having done so. ]<small><span style="font-weight:bold;">&nbsp;·</span>&#32;]</small> 20:08, 24 November 2014 (UTC)


I do not believe that the current sub-categorisation of high-profile contests which serve as national selections for ESC should be maintained, and these should therefore be categorised in the same way as the "main" contests. Depending on editor interest, new task forces could potentially also be created focussing on some of these, e.g. ], ], ], ], etc.
: Yes, I do agree with what a lot of Wesley is saying and it echoes what I said in the most recent newsletter. However, I think we should take a moment to look on the positives – I've been a member of this WikiProject now for well over five years and I've seen a huge change. This project has gone from being one which practically all Eurovision article editors ignore, to one in which is very active and large proportion do and a lot of teamwork takes place. This change has had strong repercussions for the quality of Eurovision articles, where the norm used to be policy violating disasters, compared to now where the average article is at least of reasonable quality. This project will always have its critics, particularly from the "Misplaced Pages should be like Encyclopaedia Britannica" minded editors, simply because of our topic area, but we are certainly taken more seriously than we used to be. There is still plenty which can be done better, and there are a lot of discussions that still need to take place. I myself am thinking about moving on to other Misplaced Pages activities which need my attention more. I'll still be around, but I'll let others take over the day-to-day management, and one could argue that's already happened! ]<small><span style="font-weight:bold;">&nbsp;·</span>&#32;]</small> 20:08, 24 November 2014 (UTC)


Should agreement be reached following this discussion, I believe that Stage 1 of implementing the new WikiProject structure would be to create a new page and related sub-pages for WikiProject Song Contests and to move the current WikiProject Eurovision pages to become sub-pages within the new WikiProject structure (e.g. ] would become ]). Further stages would then be to consider which articles we should include within the scope of our new project and ].
===Main issues===
These are just a few things that crop up at various discussion pages, and it is concerning if this project's ethics are being pulled up and judged. Also people shouldn't have to be told what work needs improving, I'm pretty sure we are capable enough to look for things to do. For example:
# ]: this has cropped up a few times, and in the last few ]'s it has been pointed out that our categorisation is (to repeat the quote used) {{tq|"somewhat disorganised"}}. Do we need to review this? Should we start from scratch, beginning at the top and making our way down?
# ]: at a recent featured article review, a lot of things were pointed out that this project is suppose to be doing, but we never have done. Such as citations in the lead, apparently they are not suppose to be there. Citations go in the main article body, the lead is just to summarise the article. If an article were to become a feature article candidate, the reviewers would all say the same "remove the citations from the lead". Should we be making sure that our contribution style is following GA/FA criteria, so that these articles can get promoted quickly and easily?
# ]: Some content lately has been added without any citations and we all now citations are vital so that we are able to verify that what we write is '''not''' ] - let's fix that issue and source stuff. Another article in had word-for-word copy of everything written from the Eurovision.tv article about a JESC artist. That is just outrageous ], and something we should be strictly avoiding. Use your own words, don't plagiarise words from the journalists.
# ] which tells us if any debates need our attention.
# ] which shows us all the articles B class and below that require expansion to bring them to GA/FA standard.
# ] shows which articles are at GA/FA standard, but also ones that have been demoted - those demoted ones need work to bring them back up to standard.
And then the newsletter which I add a selection of articles in the maintenance tasks section, they need huge amounts of work doing to them. Anything else that needs addressing, then add it to this list. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 11:52, 24 November 2014 (UTC)


Eager to hear thoughts, opinions, suggestions, concerns, musings, etc. on the above! I'm proposing that this discussion continue until 31 January 2025 to try and get the widest input possible from all editors concerned as we move into the 2025 national selection season. ] (]) 11:00, 25 November 2024 (UTC)
== Twitter as sources ==


=== Polling (RfC on rescoping WikiProject Eurovision) ===
There has been a recent discussion at ] in regards to the use of Twitter posts as sources. In accordance with ] they are allowed, but with caution. The tweets need to be outright confirmation, and any ambiguity with the wording would mean the tweet posts should not be treated as 100% confirmation. For example, a fan had posts several questions on the official Junior Eurovision Twitter page, regarding country participation. JESC's replies were that they "hoped" or a country were "likely" to be taking part. Such statements are ]. When dealing with exceptional claims of this nature, we need exceptional sources for additional verification - such as a sourced statement from the national broadcasters that collaborates their participation intentions. If there are none, then the information would be more suitably placed in the "other countries" section, with a brief comment to show that it is a tweet on the official (J)ESC page in response to a fan's question, but an official announcement from the broadcaster has yet to be publicised. That way we are covering our backs, and not breaking the spirit of ], ], or ] (in the event it is one of our tweets that is answered). On the other hand, if the tweet is from the official broadcaster, then they should be fine to use as confirmation.
*'''Support''' {{summoned by bot}}: Sounds very sensible. '']''<sup>]</sup> 11:43, 25 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''Support''': What the user laid out is true. This project has already expanded past Eurovision events, and the WikiProject ecosystem should officially recognize that — ] ] 13:30, 25 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''Support''' Seems reasonable per all above. (Bot summons) ] (]) 04:40, 26 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''Support''' per previous votes. ~ ] (]) 13:19, 3 December 2024 (UTC)
*'''Support''' as this is something I have been thinking of suggesting. ] (]) 18:09, 6 December 2024 (UTC)


=== Discussion (RfC on rescoping WikiProject Eurovision) ===
Any objections to us following this guidance? <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 11:23, 1 December 2014 (UTC)
:I agree that caution should be exercised. On the one hand, there is no doubt that the Twitter source discussed is the official account of the contest organizers. But their language is indeed ambiguous, as I guess they use it more for publicity, building up hype, etc., than for accurate reporting. I don't think the claims are "exceptional" as this word is used in WP policy more to describe "fringe" statements that go against common knowledge of a subject, but they definitely (second point in ]) "involve claims about third parties" (the broadcasters). So better be careful and wait for a statement from the broadcasters. On a side note, I don't think it matters that the tweets come as answers to questions asked by twitter users who are also active on Misplaced Pages: as long as the statement is coming from an official source and is publicly available (i.e. not a private email that a wikipedia user claims to have received), there is no problem AFAIK. ] (]) 11:57, 1 December 2014 (UTC)
::{{Ping|Susuman77}}, they are exceptional to some degree. Point 2 of ] which mentions "challenged claims that are supported purely by primary or self-published sources". Tweets of this nature are easily challenged. As it is the official JESC Twitter account, makes it primary. And responding to a fans question, is close to self-publishing of sorts. That point also has an in-line citation, which touches on the point of "promotional material"; and as you pointed out, these tweets could just be for publicity and hype building (promotional hype, for choice of phrase). <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 13:39, 1 December 2014 (UTC)


{{Comment}} Just a thought/suggestion: Perhaps national selections should be taken out of the Eurovision task force and made into a separate one (]) alongside other song contests limited to a single country, such as ] and the ], and let the Eurovision task force deal with Eurovision articles exclusively — ] ] 13:36, 25 November 2024 (UTC)
== Mass nomination of contest templates ==


:But would it not be (mostly if not entirely) the same editors doing essentially the same sort of work for all of those projects? Seems like an arbitrary division that could serve to make editing harder by separating efforts and discussions which apply to all relevant articles. ] (] &#124; ]) 18:15, 25 November 2024 (UTC)
There are a lot of contest templates being nominated for deletion at ], all with ridiculous reasons behind each of them. The following have been nominated under the respective reasons:
# ] - an apparent fork of ].
# ] - redundant to {{t|Infobox music festival}} and {{t|Infobox recurring event}}. <s>I like to know how that can be so, when they are clearly different.</s>
# ] - a fork of {{t|Infobox Eurovision}}. <s>Clearly not a fork, as the Eurovision deals with annual, ABU Radio is biennial.</s>
These nominations require serious attention from project members. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 20:22, 6 December 2014 (UTC)


{{Comment}} While I agree that the project currently has scope creep, your brief raises many questions for me.
*<small>'''Note:''' - the above is in no way a means of canvassing, and is merely to make project members aware of a series of TfD noms that require participation. Members are fully aware that they are capable of making their own decision on whether a template should be kept, deleted, or merged. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 21:34, 6 December 2014 (UTC)</small>


First, I don't understand why the WikiProject Eurovision has no relation to WikiProject Television and it has with WikiProject Music. The current description of the project is "improving Misplaced Pages's coverage of topics related to the Eurovision Network, and other topics similar to but not necessarily identical to the Eurovision event concept". The Eurovision network is a television communications network, and every Eurovision event is essentially a television show (and not all of them are related to music). So, according to the current definition of the project, I understand that it is closer to television than to music.
:Please see ], a guideline which your post breaches considerably. <span class="vcard"><span class="fn">]</span> (<span class="nickname">Pigsonthewing</span>); ]; ]</span> 20:54, 6 December 2014 (UTC)
::Does it heck breach it considerably. Notifying this project of TfD's is reasonable, as not everyone has the alerts page on their watchlist - which has been noted on a thread above. Also the deletion log for 6 December strangely enough is just all your nominations. Someone pissed you off to cause you to go on a deletion nomination spree? <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 21:18, 6 December 2014 (UTC)
:::In a way it kinda is though since you loaded your post with reasons against the deletions rather than just pointing out that they were nominated and let people from this project arrive to their own decision. I don't know much about merging of templates but a lot of these templates do seem similar and perhaps it would be better for them to be merged. ] (]) 21:34, 6 December 2014 (UTC)
::::That was not the manner I was trying to express the issue though, {{U|Pickette}}. I added the reasons so people could see in brief of the nom rationales. But the debate of reorganising this project is still taking place above, which includes looking into how we are categorising things, and of course templates would be raised too. This project is going to encounter a lot of RfC's over the next couple of months to address these issues, so that we are better structured, and can mass-delete obsolete templates/categories etc. Saves on heated deletion debates then, as we would have resolved such issues via a RfC. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 21:41, 6 December 2014 (UTC)
*I've struck through the POV-ish comments, as I was only questioning, not trying to force an opinion. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 21:46, 6 December 2014 (UTC)


If I understand correctly, what you are asking for is a rescope of the project to make it WikiProject Song Contests, so that it falls completely within WikiProject Music, which would mean that any event that is not a Song Contest would be excluded from the project, even any other Eurovision event apart from ESC and JESC. Is everyone who agrees aware of this?
* I agree that it would be better to discuss mergers here and work something out rather than having piecemeal TfDs, which currently seem to be causing more trouble than their worth. It is perfectly appropriate to notify a WikiProject on some possible changes to templates; it was unfortunate that the notifications weren't neutral, and I recently complained about an editor doing something similar elsewhere. However, I know Wesley well enough to know what he's overall aim here – which is to get a resolution that all involved parties will be happy with. Going through people's archives to dig-up things to use against them is very unhelpful, particuarly as the full context of old discussions won't be apparent at face value. ]<small><span style="font-weight:bold;">&nbsp;·</span>&#32;]</small> 14:53, 7 December 2014 (UTC)


Even with this rescope, neither the ESC nor the JESC nor any of their national finals nor any song contests similar to them (which will make up the vast majority of the events covered by the new project) will cease to be essentially television shows, meaning that they were intentionally created as television shows by television broadcasters. All these song contests together form a subgenre of television shows, rather than independent events in their own right. Of course there are song contests of the latter, but I think they will be a small minority in the new project.
== Restructuring ==
{{rfc|proj|rfcid=A1BCE47}}
Following on from the discussions that took place 2 weeks ago on the project, regarding haphazard methods and the need to review a restructuring debate into recategorisation, template review, article layout review, etc. I have therefore opened up this "all-in-one" RfC with the aim to try and cover everything at once. Feel free to comment on any areas, and provide any improvement suggestions. Thank you. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 13:18, 7 December 2014 (UTC)


I do not agree with the phrase "high-profile contests which serve as national selections for ESC". With the exception of Sanremo, which is the only "high-profile contests which serve as national selections for ESC", all other contest that are ESC and JESC national finals were specifically created by the respective broadcaster as a television show to select their entry to the contest, and are simply that (however popular they became), so their subordination to the main event is obvious, even though there have been years in which a broadcaster has not competed in the main and has staged the local contest.
===Categorisation===
Discussion on our categorisation procedure. Do we have too many? Do we need more? Could some be merged or reorganised better? Please add your comments below. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 22:51, 6 December 2014 (UTC)


I do agree with ]. I don't think that splitting the project into subprojects or taskforces will help with the problem, when we are the same editors doing essentially the same sort of work on similar articles. And if the intention of the change is to attract new editors, I'm not sure that changing the well-known name Eurovision to a more generic one will help. ] (]) 21:22, 3 December 2024 (UTC)
===Templates===
{{see also|Misplaced Pages:Templates for discussion/Log/2014 December 6#Song content temapltes}}
Discussion on our templates procedure. Do we have too many? Do we need more? Could some be merged or reorganised better? Could templates such as {{t|Infobox ABU Radio}} and similar ones be merged into a "all-in-one" type template that would have parameters that allows us to have one template used across the different contests which fall under our scope, and avoid the need to have separate ones for ABU, Intervision, Turkvizyon, Eurovision, etc... Please add your comments below. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 22:51, 6 December 2014 (UTC)


:Regarding your first point: I believe that the vast majority of editors which are attached to WikiProject Eurovision as it currently stands are mainly interested in editing articles related to the song contests only. Potentially I'm wrong here, but that's my understanding, and it's certainly what motivates me to be a part of this project. I have very limited interest in editing articles on the network, or indeed the member broadcasters, or any other EBU-related articles. I understand that everyone has different interests, so if there are any members that are interested in these articles, then please do add to this discussion! However if it's true as I believe that most editors attached to this project are only interested in the song contest element of Eurovision, then why are these other articles "attached" to our project if we have no intention of improving them?
We have a lot of infobox templates that could probably be recreated into an "all-in-one" version that is flexible and used across all the different kinds of contests this project looks after:
:I understand your point around how this project interacts with WikiProject Television. Certainly I believe that any rescoping should include more of a branching out into that project. Eurovision, Junior Eurovision, etc. are more than just television shows though, and the musical element is just as important. So I disagree with your point that they will "cease to be essentially television shows", because I think they have evolved into much more than just a TV show. Yes broadcasters are involved, and without the EBU there would be no ESC, but you just have to look at music charts around the world to see the impact of these contests beyond just television.
* {{t|Infobox ABU country}} and {{t|Infobox Eurovision country}} could possible become an all-in-one {{t|Infobox Song Contest country}}.
:Regarding your disagreement with the "promotion" of other contests related to ESC to the same level as ESC or JESC, there are definitely more cases than just Sanremo; ] existed long before Albania joined ESC. Culturally as well a lot of events match, or even surpass, ESC, even if they were founded when a country joined ESC. I find it hard to believe that ], the biggest event in Sweden every year, should be "relegated" just because the winner goes to Eurovision. ] (]) 21:53, 3 December 2024 (UTC)
* {{t|Infobox ABU Radio}}, {{t|Infobox ABU TV}}, and {{t|Infobox Eurovision}} could possible become an all-in-one {{t|Infobox Song Contest}}.
::Yes, everyone has different interests and motivations. I see (and understand by the description) the current project as an "Eurovision events" project, with not only the ESC and JESC and its national finals, also with EYM, EYD... and even JSF (which I don't know why it hasn't been included yet). I myself am interested in its television, competitive, and international co-production aspects. And I see that a vast majority of the article edits focus on the organization of those events, the competition itself (point tables) and its broadcasting (commentators, stations that broadcast it, spokespersons, etc.) rather than on the music, so I must not be the only one. I do not underestimate the musical value of ESC and JESC and so, and I understand that in that sense the project is related to the WikiProject Music. But even with this great musical value, ESC and JESC are still television shows so they are more related to the WikiProject Television. And we have other Eurovision events that are not song contest and the question is whether we should get rid of them or not, when they share similarities with the others. In my opinion any other EBU-related article not related with the events, including the broadcasters, are covered in the WikiProject Television and WikiProject Media and can fall out this project.
* {{t|Infobox Cân i Gymru National Year}} and {{t|Infobox ESC National Year}} could become an all-in-one {{t|Infobox Song Contest National Year}}.
::Yes, maybe FiK is like Sanremo, but Melodifestivalen, even though it is the biggest event in Sweden each year, is still a television show created and staged by SVT specifically to choose its entry for Eurovision. My point is that is not a high-profile contests "which serve" as national selections, it is a national selection that had became huge. And maybe locally in some cases, but internationally none of the national events come even remotely close to the cultural impact of the ESC. ] (]) 23:38, 3 December 2024 (UTC)
* {{t|Infobox ESC entry}} could be improved to an all-in-one {{t|Infobox Song Contest entry}}.
:@], normally, we don't use an RFC for a question like this. That's because a ] is a group of people, and in practice, you can't get a "consensus" that other ] will do what we tell them to do.
Any ideas how these could be merged into an all-in-one version, and would it make life simpler? <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 23:15, 6 December 2014 (UTC)
:If you want to rename a group, then the usual process is outlined at ]. If you want to merge two or more groups, then the usual process is (mostly) outlined at ]. The key point is that the decisions need to be made by the people who participate in the groups (or else they'll quit participating, and then you won't actually have a WikiProject). ] (]) 04:23, 15 December 2024 (UTC)
:I think all of these should indeed be merged. They are literally the same thing. Wouldn't the addition of a field to one main template that allows identification of the contest in question be the solution to this? I don't know much about merging or creating templates so if there are legitimate reasons about why this shouldn't be done then please let me know. ] (]) 14:53, 7 December 2014 (UTC)
::{{Ping|Pickette}} I'm not that technically minded to be able to play around with such complex syntax; and I even had to seek the help from {{U|AxG}} when it came to doing similar coding changes for the {{t|Escyr}} templates. To have a universal infobox, we are going to need to decide what should be included, in what order it should be listed. And then we have the issue of rolling them out across hundreds of articles. No doubt such action would get left to a single-individual to rollout, as usual. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 15:03, 7 December 2014 (UTC)


== "Eurovision Awards" notability ==
'''Note''' These templates were already being discussed at TfD. Wesley Mouse stated this section in attempt to close down that discussion. I collapsed, it, but (s)he has reverted me. <span class="vcard"><span class="fn">]</span> (<span class="nickname">Pigsonthewing</span>); ]; ]</span> 17:25, 7 December 2014 (UTC)
:'''Factual note''' {{Ping|Pigsonthewing}} Firstly Wes (short for Wesley) is clearly a male name, so '''<u>do not offend</u>''' me by referring to me as "she". Secondly you "collapsed" the entirety of this thread that is covering not just templates, but other issues too - so I had not "reverted" per se, but restored a multi-purpose RfC that you forced to close in an attempt to get your own way. Thirdly, I have '''NOT''' started this in an attempt to close down your piecemeal TfD's (which has been noted above). If you actually took a little more time in your actions and researched, you will have noticed this project has been discussing templates and such for the past 2 frigging weeks at ]. Learn to read before casting bullish accusations. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 17:36, 7 December 2014 (UTC)
:'''Additional note:''' This is not the first time that the above-named user has attempted to mass-nominate Project ESC templates. The same was done in ]. Clear signs of "not liking the outcome" are evident for the fact the templates are re-nominated 9 months later using the same rationale as before (which for the record resulted in the templates being kept). I would appreciate if the user peacefully refrained from participation here, as their behaviour is causing distress and more harm than good. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 17:41, 7 December 2014 (UTC)
::Your claims here are both untrue, as any fool can see; and constitute further canvassing, about which you have already been warned. <span class="vcard"><span class="fn">]</span> (<span class="nickname">Pigsonthewing</span>); ]; ]</span> 17:48, 7 December 2014 (UTC)
:::Do you even know the definition of the word canvass? Clearly not. My claims are untrue? Er let's see {{Tq|"These templates were already being discussed at TfD. Wesley Mouse stated this section in attempt to close down that discussion. I collapsed, it, but (s)he has reverted me."}} You definitely referred to me as "she" - fact!. And this thread alone is not canvassing, it is a continuation of something that was promised 2 weeks ago at ]. You clearly do not like the fact that it has been proven a debate has been ongoing for the last 2 weeks. You've mass-nominated piecemeal TfD's. Did you even read the comments from the admin above and the stern telling off you were given for "digging-up" archived material that had no face value. Crawl back in your hole and leave the project to sort its own active messes. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 17:57, 7 December 2014 (UTC)
::: Andy and Wesley, this really has gone on long enough. I really don't want this to escalate to ANI, and I don't think anyone else does either. Yes the canvassing by Wesley was inappropriate, and many of his responses have been needlessly inflammatory. For example, clearly calling someone "(s)he" is common on Misplaced Pages as some don't like the ] and there are plenty of females with male sounding usernames and vice versa. Using "(s)he" is not malicious, and at worse should result in a polite note that one wishes to be referred to as "he" or "she". That said, ]. Going through someone's talk page archives to find some dirt to use on them is highly inappropriate – Wesley had a legitimate grievance there which should have at least been acknowledged. Also saying that starting this RfC constitutes "shutting down" the TfDs has little basis in fact. A discussion on the overall strategy with templates should be allowed to take place, and then this followed-up at existing or future TfD nomination. All should be welcome to participate in these discussions. So can we agree to a cease fire and move on? ]<small><span style="font-weight:bold;">&nbsp;·</span>&#32;]</small> 20:09, 7 December 2014 (UTC)
:::: For the record, I think it's fair to point out that there was no previous ongoing discussion about these templates during the past two weeks. I don't even think these templates would be under discussion today had they not been nominated for merging. ] (]) 20:21, 7 December 2014 (UTC)
::::Thank you for your good-faith intervention. However, you seem to be lacking some of the important facts. The response to someone who blatantly canvasses (which can include ''immediate'' and indefinite blocks) depends on whether or not they've done it before. It was therefore entirely legitimate to look at his talk page archives for prior warnings (not "dirt"); and he has no "legitimate grievance". I said that this RfC was an ''attempt'' to close down the TfDs. Wesley has ''explicitly'' and ''repeatedly'' asked that the TfDs be shut down ''specifically'' because of this new discussion ({{tq|"Request to postpone TfD so that the discussions can conclude "}}; {{tq|" Admin closure of these should be taken to allow the active project discussion to conclude its course"}} - both on the 6 Dec TfD page). <span class="vcard"><span class="fn">]</span> (<span class="nickname">Pigsonthewing</span>); ]; ]</span> 21:41, 7 December 2014 (UTC)
::::: I stand by my analysis. Digging things up, if it has to be done, is for ANI or another user conduct venue, not for a content based discussion, where it will do nothing but cause bad feeling and turn it into a mudslinging contest. Also if users insist on going through people's talk page archives, they should familiarise themselves with the full facts of the matters they review before passing judgement, as talk page discussions are often missing important context. I happen to be familiar with what happened in the year-and-a-half old discussion you cited and the accusations of canvassing by Welsey in that incidence were not justified. In ''this'' incidence they were justified, but there's still been a lot of exaggeration which has achieved nothing but added fuel to the fire. Wesley's notifications were clearly non-neutral, but they were public and openly disclosed, and some of the offending content has been struck, so this was far from the most serious incident of canvassing in Misplaced Pages history. It was for an uninvolved admin to decide what action to take, but I would suspect at worse a firm warning would be given – a block was not likely, and an indefinite block was out of the question.
::::: Welsey has the liberty to request the closure of any XfD, and in this case he ''asked'' for the TfDs to be ''postponed'' while the discussion here takes place, so at worst he was trying to move the discussion from one place or another. He did not engage in an edit war to achieve that, so there has been no violation of Misplaced Pages policy by him on this issue. It is unlikely that his request will be accepted, but he is not trying to "shut down" all discussions on the templates, and implying otherwise is not helpful. The tragic irony is here that there is close to a consensus on merging the templates, only the details need to be worked out, so there is no reason for this feud to have occurred. ]<small><span style="font-weight:bold;">&nbsp;·</span>&#32;]</small> 18:53, 8 December 2014 (UTC)
:::::: The accusations of canvassing by Welsey in that incident may indeed have been not justified; but since I made no claim that they were, your comment is a ] (as is your comment about edit warring); I merely cited them as evidence that Wesley was aware of the concept (in the Misplaced Pages sense) of canvassing. Furthermore, while it is true that he is at liberty to ask for any TfD to be closed, I was pointing out the falsehood of the claim that he had not done so. ] makes no exclusion for canvassing which is "''public and openly disclosed''" (indeed, it prohibits "hidden" canvassing ''separately''), not subsequently struck (though f course still easily readable). <span class="vcard"><span class="fn">]</span> (<span class="nickname">Pigsonthewing</span>); ]; ]</span> 16:09, 10 December 2014 (UTC)
::::::: Your point that you were intending to point out that Wesley was aware of what canvassing was is noted, though I still question whether it is appropriate to dig through people's archives for a content discussion. It would also have been helpful if you had make that clear earlier rather than allowing things to escalate, as any reasonable person might have interpreted your citing of that old discussion in a post accusing Wesley of canvassing as suggesting that Wesley has a history of canvassing. As for straw man fallacies, you've just made one. I worded my comments carefully and explicitly stated that Wesley ''had'' violated the ] guideline, for which I am familiar with. I never said at any point that it "makes exclusions" for publicly and openly disclosed notifications, I just said the fact that Wesley did openly disclose the notifications made the issue far less serious than was being portrayed. Or to put it another way with legal terminology, openly disclosing canvassing is not a ] but it is a ], as it shows there was no intent to manipulate discussions in a covert manner. ]<small><span style="font-weight:bold;">&nbsp;·</span>&#32;]</small> 18:23, 10 December 2014 (UTC)


Although this is run by official ESC social media accounts, this end-of-year "awards" in my opinion has turned into fodder to drive up engagement for official ESC handles, evident in a category name containing the word 'rizz' in 2023. Should this continue to be added to the Wiki going forward, or should it be removed (this also applies for 2021-2023)? ] (]) 10:42, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
===Assessment===
Looking at the importance scale on our assessment, maybe this is also worth a review? What should be deemed as being of low, mid, high, and top importance? <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 13:07, 7 December 2014 (UTC)


:I agree and I would support its removal under ]. However I think that there is a bit of a problem with this section in its entirety. Apart from the Marcel Bezençon Awards, which are organised by the EBU and have a specific set of criteria upon which the awards are decided, I don't believe any other awards which are commonly included here should be retained. I fail to see how the OGAE poll or the Barbara Dex Award/You're a Vision Award is notable enough to be mentioned here, when in effect they are just internet polls in the same way that these Eurovision Awards are. I think the whole section should go and the Marcel Bezençon Awards should be reformatted to become a sub-section of the "Contest overview", changed to become prose-only per ] and to sit underneath "Final" (since only finalists are up for these awards). ] (]) 12:36, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
===Project scope===
::Agree. Marcel Bezençon's is an actual award, while the others are simply internet polls. ] (]) 13:35, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
Anything else that could do with a review by the project? Its scope: are we covering too much? Would a task force be better to cover non-Eurovision? <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 13:13, 7 December 2014 (UTC)
:I disagree with this. I feel that they are notable enough to be included — ] ] 14:26, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
:The OGAE contests are covered in way too much detail. I've raised concerns about this before. OGAE is a fan club and the results of each and everyone of their contests is quite irrelevant and really don't hold any kind of real significance in the world of Eurovision. ] (]) 14:56, 7 December 2014 (UTC)
:Agree. Internet polls of this nature do not have much credibility. Support keeping Marcel Bezençon Awards and removing the rest. I think if you'd like to mention the other two, it could be a sentence or two on the individual country or song's article, but it has no impact on the contest itself at a high level. I honestly find the OGAE one somewhat bizarre; it's almost like "who cares how the contest actually went, let's focus on how a self-selecting group of fans ''think'' it should have played out." ] (]) 16:38, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
::{{Ping|Pickette}} OGAE has been discussed at ] (above), and is still waiting for members to actively participate in the debate. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 15:04, 7 December 2014 (UTC)
:I believe the Marcel Bezençon Awards should remain fully fleshed out on Eurovision year articles, as they are officially organized by the EBU and meet notability criteria. For the other awards, such as the OGAE poll and the You're a Vision Award, I propose a compromise: include a single sentence for each, providing a brief description and linking to their respective Misplaced Pages pages where more detailed information can be found. This way, we maintain a balanced and informative overview without overemphasizing awards that may lack the same level of significance or credibility as the Marcel Bezençon Awards. ] (]) 18:07, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
::It's also worth pointing out that we already had a rather long conversation about this, see ]. ] (]) 18:30, 6 December 2024 (UTC)


== Potential deletion of categories ==
===Article layout===
Article layout: do we need to review the layout again? I have noticed the country by year ones (especially the 2014 for Austria and Netherlands) have a lot of good work done and the layout is superb. Should we follow the same layout across all country by year articles? <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 13:13, 7 December 2014 (UTC)
:We should wait and see the results of the GA nominations before considering changing the layouts. I agree the layouts are nice however. Discussions in the past pointed out that layouts for these articles will be different depending on the type of selection though. ] (]) 14:57, 7 December 2014 (UTC)
::I agree that we're ultimately pending the GA review so that we have a rough idea what to be aiming for. But I think the main structure that has been used would work across the board, regardless of the selection process used. Having a 1) Lead; 2) Background; 3) Before Eurovision; 4) At Eurovision; 5) After Eurovision; and thus allows us to go into sub-topics in the "Before Eurovision" section dependant on the selection of entry. The main headers would provide a main backbone. And as we know each country does things differently, we would be able to detail such content within sub-headers and be placed into a corresponding main "backbone" header, that suits it best. For example; the "Before Eurovision" could house "National selection" or "Internal selection" as a sub-header; the main header would also enable us to add information on how the entry was promoted etc. At Eurovision would enable us to mention the entry at the contest, and the voting etc. After Eurovision allows us to mention "what happened next" kind of thing. An article in theory is like a book, it needs a start, a middle, and an end.
**The lead is like reading the back of the book that gives brief insight into what the book is about.
**"Background" would be like a prologue.
**"Before Eurovision" would be the beginning.
**"At Eurovision" would be the middle.
**"After Eurovision" would be the end.
Makes sense to me anyway. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 15:15, 7 December 2014 (UTC)


While I was helping add categories to ], I noticed that all of the categories by country and by year for every Eurovision entry have been nominated for deletion.
== ESC 1973 logo ==


Now, while I'm a Eurovision fan and not an official member of WikiProject Eurovision, I found this idea to be concerning - helping categorize each entry by year and by country, I believe, helps with avoiding clutter and keeps things neat and organized.
Hello guyz. I need a question. Which image is realy correct for Contest of 1973? In English Misplaced Pages have ], Russian have ], and source for most <s>images</s> Eurovision logos in Misplaced Pages have . I don't know, where is true? ← <b>] <sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub></b> 11:30, 9 December 2014 (UTC)
:The official ESC site has so I would say that this is the correct logo. ] (]) 13:43, 9 December 2014 (UTC)
:: OK, I found some images that differs with other logos. My analysis:
::* 1956­-1972 logos no differs in all websites
::* 1973 logo (see above)
::* 1974­-2004 logos no differs in all websites
::* 2005 logo (, , ]): Both differ with Official
::* 2006 logo (, , ]): ALL differs
::* 2007 logo (, , ]): ALL differs
::* 2008 logo (, , ]): ALL differs / differs with all
::* 2009 logo (, , ]): At this only Diggiloo logo correctly displayed russian flag colors (blue instead lightblue)
::* 2010 logo (, , ]): Both differ with Official
::* 2011 logo (, , ]): ALL differs / differs with all
::* 2012 logo (, , ]): Both differs with Diggiloo, and Official differ with Wiki only in color and background
::* 2013 logo (, , ]): ALL differs ← <b>] <sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub></b>
::* 2013 logo (, Diggiloo haven't page, ]): Official differs with Wiki only in surrounded Diamond's background
::* 2015 logo (no data, no differs between Wiki and Official website at this moment)
::This is my alalysis, what you say? ← <b>] <sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub></b> 14:57, 9 December 2014 (UTC)


Apologies for any potential "unprofessional" phrasing here, I just wanted to bring this issue to the WikiProject's attention. ] (]) 21:18, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
*The official logo for 1973 is . <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 13:54, 10 December 2014 (UTC)
: Ok, thanks. What about another logos above? ← <b>] <sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub></b> 14:30, 10 December 2014 (UTC)
:: I would say the others are fine, most of them just include the sub-logo from each year's theme that the broadcaster developed. I'm only unsure about 2006 since it has completely different designs paired together with the standard ESC logo. ] (]) 15:29, 10 December 2014 (UTC)


:{{reply to|ButI'llBeThereNextTime}} As the nominator of these ], I would just reiterate that Misplaced Pages has guidelines around ]. There are many cases where categorisation is not necessary, and in this case I believe that these categories fall down specifically on the "]" grouping. If you disagree, I suggest you contribute to the discussions at ] and ].
== Scoreboard's files with J in the end of name ==
:For any WikiProject members that were not aware of this, I would strongly suggest that you follow ], as this will keep you abreast of all developments related to WikiProject pages. ] (]) 21:56, 23 December 2024 (UTC)


'''Links'''<br />
Why in ] uses word 'J' at the and of filename? Do you disagree if I rename (request to rename) all this images to "File:ESC<Country>.svg" without J? I want to help other wikis (Czech, Hungarian, Polish and other) to translate this text in many languages (only SVG) and if, for example, Czech use in scoreboard ESCMaltaJ.svg and ESCBelgie.svg that can very annoying for fast reading of the table. I hope that you understand me. ← <b>] <sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub></b> 19:28, 9 December 2014 (UTC)
I came here to post a notice about the same thing.<br />
:{{Ping|Alex Great}} I'm guessing the 'J' is connected with Junior Eurovision. If nobody has objections to renaming them, then I have ] and can do the changes, saving the need to request them to be changed. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 13:52, 10 December 2014 (UTC)
Please visit these pages
::This is not a Junior Eurovision. See all countries (Lebanon, Iceland and other non-Junior participated countries + Rest of the World). You're filemover in the Commons? I merged all texts into Commons (local files remain to the discretion of administrators - delete or do not). If this action is'nt problem, ], can you rename all files in Commons with redirect (just in case)? ← <b>] <sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub></b> 14:29, 10 December 2014 (UTC)
* ]
:::I will happily rename them, as long as nobody has any objections. I wouldn't want to move them at present just in case there is a valid reason for the 'J' to be used. The last thing we want is to cause heated problems by moving files without a clear consensus. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 14:34, 10 December 2014 (UTC)
* ]
:::Damn and blast. File mover rights are for Wiki only, not commons. <small>(sulks)</small>. I have made a request for the contestants image, using the #6 rationale, which seems logical to me. I doubt these file moves would be contested by anyone, so if you want to do the same for all the others, {{U|Alex Great}}, then feel free to do so. <span style="font-family:Corbel;text-shadow:#F70 2px 4px 6px;">''']&nbsp;&#124;&nbsp;<sup>]'''</sup></span> 14:42, 10 December 2014 (UTC)
and read the discussion. (It there is any. Cause people are just blindly voting "delete by nom", "delete by nom", seemingly without even thinking.) --] (]) 13:59, 26 December 2024 (UTC)
:::: Well, I will be apply renaming request on the same criteria that did you have with renaming of «Contestants». With the consensus, I think that most of the files already called without the letter J (Meanwhile, I helped to ] and ]), still remains a redirect. ← <b>] <sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub></b> 18:12, 10 December 2014 (UTC)
Well, I already requested all "imaJes". I need to consult with you. What if I will request ] and ] to another harmonize name: "ESCSerbiaMontenegro.svg" and "ESCSerbia.svg" respectively? And I have another question: What Eurovision project will be do with same images (that I merged into Commons) in English Misplaced Pages? Is it will be deleted anybody? ← <b>] <sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub></b> 18:59, 10 December 2014 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 14:04, 26 December 2024

HomeTalkArticle
Alerts
AssessmentQuality
Articles
Popular
Pages
Formatting
& Guidance
News DeskArchiveMembers
This is the talk page for discussing WikiProject Eurovision and anything related to its purposes and tasks.
Archives: Index, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33Auto-archiving period: 30 days 
This project page does not require a rating on Misplaced Pages's content assessment scale.
It is of interest to the following WikiProjects:
WikiProject iconEurovision
WikiProject iconThis page is within the scope of WikiProject Eurovision, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of Eurovision-related topics on Misplaced Pages. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks.EurovisionWikipedia:WikiProject EurovisionTemplate:WikiProject EurovisionEurovision

Broadcaster in the infobox song contest national year

Hi. I don't know if this has ever been discussed before, but I'm wondering why the participating broadcaster is not in the Infobox song contest national year, when it is actually the one entering the contest. Ferclopedio (talk) 08:39, 18 August 2024 (UTC)

Yeah, why is it not? — IмSтevan 08:40, 18 August 2024 (UTC)
That's a really good question, it really should include that. Aris Odi ❯❯❯ talk 11:20, 18 August 2024 (UTC)
I hadn't considered this. I support changing the infobox to include this. Ktkvtsh (talk) 16:08, 21 August 2024 (UTC)
OK. Is four enough quorum? Anyway, I'm going to request the change on the talk page of the template. Let's see if some kind soul will listen to us. Ferclopedio (talk) 19:54, 23 August 2024 (UTC)
I oppose this. The infobox is not a in depth view of the participation's entire background for the year and in most cases, the broadcaster is a stable and the same each year. I'm not sure what adding this "adds" for the reader. Grk1011 (talk) 20:57, 24 August 2024 (UTC)
The contest is a competition between broadcasters, adding the participating broadcaster is not a vision of depth but is one of the fundamental data of the article, which should also appear prominently in the lead section. Of course there are broadcasters that have been stable over the years, but there are cases where they have not been, such as in France, Belgium, Germany, and Russia, to give just a couple of examples of the seventeen that I have counted. Ferclopedio (talk) 21:21, 24 August 2024 (UTC)
The lead section is the prose, where this information is always presented prominently. The regular country in articles have the broadcaster in the infobox because those articles are about that country (and broadcaster's) overall participation efforts. The impact is not the same for the country in year articles where the broadcaster is certainly relevant information, but it is not particularly interesting to the reader and has no bearing on the quick-reference nature of an infobox. Grk1011 (talk) 13:07, 25 August 2024 (UTC)
Does it not? To me it feels like the broadcaster is even more relevant than the country — IмSтevan 13:13, 25 August 2024 (UTC)
It comes down to the audience of the article and the impact. It is through the national broadcaster (a government entity) that the country is represented, otherwise articles, press, viewers, etc. would be saying things like "BBC in the Eurovision Song Contest"; however, these articles are about the countries. The broadcaster is an important part of how the participation occurs, but it does not need to be that prominent for the quick-reference nature of the infobox. Do we have any sense of why the viewer would need to know the specific broadcaster as they scan the page for the results, which is the point of the infobox on these pages? The information is still in the body of the articles. To be blunt, I cannot figure out why someone would care what the broadcaster was at the high level overview. Grk1011 (talk) 13:40, 25 August 2024 (UTC)
Why would the viewer need to know who composed the song since that's also featured in the infobox? Because it's relevant to the entry, and so is the competing broadcaster — IмSтevan 13:48, 25 August 2024 (UTC)
I completely disagree with that comparison. Grk1011 (talk) 13:51, 25 August 2024 (UTC)
@Grk1011, I am sorry, but your reasoning is based on assumptions and general beliefs that are not true, rather than on actual facts.
The EBU is an organisation of broadcasting companies with their own independent legal entity. The fact that they are publicly funded or state-owned does not make them a government entity. In fact, the EBU would not allow a government entity to be a member, as it requires a certain level of impartiality and independence for membership (a level that the Russian and Belarusian broadcasters do not meet, which is why they were expelled).
The participating broadcaster enters the competition representing its country, meaning that it competes under the name of its country, for better identification in the international competition, and to give local viewers the feeling that the participation is theirs and not just that of the broadcaster. This does not mean that the country is the one that competes, and statements like "the broadcaster organizes the country's participation", "the broadcaster participates on behalf of the country", "the broadcaster selects the country's entry", and the like, which are all over Misplaced Pages, are all wrong. The broadcaster participates in the contest in its own right, and has full control over its participation. It is not just an important part of how the participation occurs, it is who really participate and who pay to do so.
The ESC is a television co-production (legal, financial, and technical) of the participating broadcasters, who elect the members of the committee that governs the event on behalf of all of them. The participating broadcaster is not only "responsible for choosing a song and broadcasting the event" (another wrong statement all around Misplaced Pages). The participating broadcaster is the one invited by the EBU to participate; the one who decides whether to participate or not; the one who pays the participation fee to finance the event; the one who selects a song freely at his discretion, organizing or not a national final that it can take into account or not; the one who secures the rights of the song from the songwriters; the one who hires the performer (and the conductor when there was an orchestra) for the live performance; the one who has to provide the EBU with all the legal and audiovisual documentation of its entry, including contracts, lyrics, the video-clip (in most cases produced by itself), music track (or sheet music for the orchestra), and the camerawork layout for the live broadcasting; the one who decides on the staging of the live performance; the one who appoints a head of delegation as its contact with the EBU, and the one responsible for its delegation at the event; the one who assembles the "national" jury for the competition (even when there was only televoting, since the jury was the backup); the one who hires the notary public to certify its jury's vote; the one who owns the broadcasting rights and the brand exploitation rights in the country (exclusively or shared with the other EBU members in the same country); the one who produces the broadcast for his local viewers with its own commentators and onscreen information; the one who produces and transmits the voting segment of its spokesperson for the international broadcast; the one who bears expenses of all this; the one who has to host the contest the following year in case of winning; and the one who takes all the criticism if the participation was not successful. (And I've probably left out some other things). The participating broadcaster is not only a fundamental data for an entrant but also for the event itself.
The country in year articles are the most in-depth articles of this project with the most detailed information on a participation, and it is the place where it makes the most sense to have the information of the participating broadcaster, as it is an indispensable element of the participation, since it has the power over the song and the performer. @ImStevan's feeling that the participating broadcaster is even more relevant than the country is correct, I would say that it is the most important piece of information of the participation. And you only have to look at country in year articles from old years to see that in many cases, it's not just that it's not in the lead section, it's that it's not even mentioned anywhere in the prose or it's mentioned as something totally secondary. There are even articles that have passed the GA review that talk about a wrong participating broadcaster.
The use in Misplaced Pages of the name of the country when speaking in general and in the country and country in year articles is also for better identification of the participant internationally, matching the way it is presented in the contest, and to group all the entrants that come from the same country in the same place and in the same way. In no way does it mean that it is the country that participates. And indeed, the local press throughout Europe talks extensively about the participation of the broadcaster in the contest ("BBC at the Eurovision Song Contest", for example).
All this is not just me saying it, it is said by the EBU and the participating broadcasters in all their official documentation and communications, starting with the rules of the competition, an extract of which can be read here.
And this has nothing to do with the audience of the article and the impact, this is not a blog, this is an encyclopedia, and it has to do with the presentation of the information and facts correctly, preferably in order of importance. And the participating broadcaster is, indeed, the foremost piece of information of an entry, whether you are interested in knowing it or not. Ferclopedio (talk) 22:18, 25 August 2024 (UTC)
The problem is that the user seems to have forgotten that it's not a country entering, but "EBU member broadcaster from country" — IмSтevan 07:50, 27 August 2024 (UTC)
I'm still not convinced it makes sense. I don't recall seeing examples from reliable sources that place the broadcaster ahead of the country name for identification purposes. Let's remember that the infobox is for quick-reference information; it is not intended to be an exhaustive list nor even a full summary of the article. Grk1011 (talk) 00:48, 2 September 2024 (UTC)
How do you explain the discrepancy between articles that overview a country's entire history at the contest (where the current broadcaster is prominently listed) and by year articles (where it is not) — IмSтevan 02:59, 2 September 2024 (UTC)
The country in articles are focused on the performance of a country overall throughout the years, for which the broadcaster is paramount as the organizing body. For country in year articles, the focus is on the entry itself (i.e. selection, song, artist, and performance), where those aspects are critical details and are therefore in the infobox. It's not a "discrepancy" as these are different types of articles. If we include every detail in every article, then we lose the whole point of detailed sub articles. Grk1011 (talk) 13:09, 2 September 2024 (UTC)
In this case the sub article is missing the detail, what now — IмSтevan 14:21, 2 September 2024 (UTC)
@Grk1011, I honestly don't understand how you see the role of the participating broadcaster paramount in the country but not in the country in year. The participating broadcaster is the actual entrant in the contest, as is the one invited by the EBU to participate that year and the one who has to fulfill all the obligations for it. In order to compete it selects the song, hire the artist/performer, and stage the performance. The participation is its and its alone as it has full control over it.
We are not including every detail in the infobox. We want to include only the essential information: the entrant (the participating broadcaster), the name of the country under which it participates, the entry (song + songwriters), the artist/performer, the selection method, and the result. I don't think we are asking for anything unreasonable.
And this points out one thing that is wrong in the infobox, as the artist/performer is called the "entrant", something that is completely incorrect as this is a song contest between broadcasters, not a singer contest, so the artist cannot be the entrant in any way. Ferclopedio (talk) 18:38, 2 September 2024 (UTC)
I'm warming to the broadcaster in the infobox (as it's abbreviation/acronym). I'm not sure I understand this new entrant comment now though? Grk1011 (talk) 13:08, 5 September 2024 (UTC)
Well the entry into the contest is the song, not the performer. I imagine just a renaming of the value from "entrant" to "performer", as is the case in the tables — IмSтevan 13:18, 5 September 2024 (UTC)
Yes, that is the point. The entrant is the broadcaster and the entry is the song, so we should rename in the infobox the parameter "entrant" to "performer", or to "artist". (I say "artist", even though I don't like it, because that is what is used in the "Preselection" field when the song and performer are selected separately). I don't think we can change the parameter directly without causing a mess, but at least we can change the label displayed to "Selected performer" (or artist).
And regarding the participating broadcaster in the infobox, I think it's better to show it with its full name followed by its abbreviation in parentheses, to match the way it's shown in the country infobox, and to avoid confusion as for example in the case of RTP, which the same abbreviation is used by "Rádio e Televisão de Portugal" and its predecessor "Radiotelevisão Portuguesa". Ferclopedio (talk) 19:16, 5 September 2024 (UTC)
I support this change. It's important for countries which have changed broadcaster in the past (France, Israel, Netherlands), and especially important for countries that swap broadcaster on a regular basis (Belgium, Germany, Russia) Spleennn (talk) 21:34, 2 September 2024 (UTC)
Your attention, please. I am pleased to announce that the participating broadcaster is now available in the Infobox song contest national year, by filling in the parameter "broadcaster". Thank to your support and the merge made by BrandonXLF.
Please, make sure that the full name of the broadcaster is correct for the year and country when filling it in, with the correct spelling, and that it matches the one that appears in the prose, in the country article, in that year's contest article, and in the list of countries article, so that we have consistency throughout.
I encourage everyone to take the opportunity to review the prose of the article when filling in the parameter, and to complete the lead section in cases where information is missing. I have already done for Spain and 20th-century Portugal in the ESC, and I have unified their introduction with something like this:
Spain was represented at the ] with the song "]", composed by ], with lyrics by ], and performed by ]. The Spanish participating broadcaster {{lang|xx|]|i=no}} (XX) selected its entry through ... Ferclopedio (talk) 17:03, 24 September 2024 (UTC)
Thanks for the update. I think we need a better wording for the intro though that avoids that run-on sentence. Suggest: Spain was represented at the ] with the song "]", performed by ]. The song, composed by ], with lyrics by ], was selected through... The event saw ## contestants compete..." Grk1011 (talk) 18:58, 24 September 2024 (UTC)
Yes, that is another discussion, the wording I used is improvable. I didn't make it up, I copied it from the best written articles of this kind out there (not written by me).
What I made on purpose was to use the straightforward sentence: "The broadcaster selected its entry" avoiding the use of the "was selected", as the participating broadcaster, as the entrant, is who selected the entry, and its role has to be highlighted as soon as possible in the prose. Ferclopedio (talk) 19:27, 24 September 2024 (UTC)
I know I'm probably a bit late to the game on this one. Just back from a Wiki-break and I noticed this change. I'm pretty content with the discussion above, and happy to support the change to add the broadcaster to the infobox. However I do feel it's a bit strange to place the broadcaster above the country in the order of the infobox. In almost every context it is the country that is shown to be participating in the contest, not the broadcaster; i.e. it's the UK entry, not the BBC entry. Graphics, reporting, even the official list of participating broadcasters list the country above the broadcaster. Yes it may be a competition of public service broadcasters, but I still believe that within these infoboxes the country should still take precedence over the broadcaster. Sims2aholic8 (talk) 18:48, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
Hi Sims2aholic8, welcome back.
I'm sorry, but in the "official list of participating broadcasters" page you linked, I don't see that "the country is shown to be participating in the contest" or that it "list the country above the broadcaster". I see a page that is titled "37 broadcasters head to Malmö". I see a prose that begins with "Public broadcasters from 37 countries will take part in the Eurovision...". I see a list titled "Participating broadcasters" that lists them alphabetically by country of origin. And I see also the sentence "A total of 35 broadcasters will return from Liverpool 2023". On that page it is clearly stated that the entrant in the contest is a broadcaster, as it is clearly stated in every formal document and in every formal communication, beginning with the rules of the event.
As I said above, the use of the name of the country and the flag, for better identification of the entrant in the international competition, however widespread it may be, does not really make the country a participant, specifically speaking. ("A lie repeated a thousand times does not become the truth"). It is okay to use the name of the country when speaking in general, but when speaking specifically about the entrant we should always make it clear who is participating in the contest, avoiding unnecessary ambiguity and inaccurate statements. The entrant/participant in the contest is a broadcaster who is a "EBU member", who is "from a country", who "participates representing its country", and who "selects its entry". Statements like "the broadcaster organizes the country's participation", "the broadcaster participates on behalf of the country", "the broadcaster selects the country's entry", "the broadcaster is responsible for choosing a song" (as if the country had delegated responsibility on it), and the like, are wrong for all the reasons I said above, and we should avoid them. Just because some of these claims have passed a GA review doesn't make them correct, as the reviewers may not have been aware of everything said and have only looked at grammar, style, reliability of references, etc.
The country in year articles are the most in-depth articles of this project, and it is the place where it makes the most sense to be accurate with the entrant. In this context, giving precedence to the country over the broadcaster in the infobox only serves to continue giving the false impression that it is the country that is participating rather than the broadcaster, and gives the latter a secondary role. Ferclopedio (talk) 07:48, 25 October 2024 (UTC)
I understand your viewpoint, but I think it really falls down when you actually consider the bigger picture with participants in Eurovision. Yes it may be a contest in which public service broadcasters send entries, but there is only one entry allowed per country, and only one broadcaster from a given country may participate; therefore the country is just as relevant to the participation as the broadcaster, because it's not just the BBC entry for Eurovision, it's the UK's, because the BBC participating prevents ITV or Channel 4, which are also UK EBU members, from participating.
Additionally, while the 2024 participants release listed it as broadcasters, most likely to downplay the significance of an Israeli entry given the ongoing controversy around that, in all other years it was the countries that received the top billing (albeit with the caveat occasionally that public broadcasters were the ones actually entering the contest; see 2023, 2022, 2021, 2019).
I really disagree with your assertion that we would be somehow "lying" by listing the country ahead of the broadcaster in these infoboxes; I think they are just as important as the other. Broadcasters can only join the EBU if the countries they broadcast from are within the European Broadcasting Area, or are member states of the Council of Europe, therefore I believe the geography is just as important to a broadcaster participating as any other aspect. All the infographics at each contest, not to mention the official Eurovision website on contest history, go by country more than broadcaster. If we also look at other events where "countries" compete and see what Misplaced Pages does there, e.g. the Olympics, where an athlete can only compete with the backing of the respective NOC, is listed the country first and then the NOC (see Austria at the 2024 Summer Olympics as an example). With all this in mind I just think it's sorta counter-intuitive to keep the country below the broadcaster; as if you're almost trying to bend-over-backwards to make a point that it's a contest where broadcasters compete (just my opinion).
Two other points: I really don't understand why the country name was taken out of the infobox title; surely this should match the article title? And regardless of where the broadcaster is place, I think it looks super weird to keep the flag against the "second" entry within the infobox, and right now this could potentially be a MOS:DECOR violation. I think the flag should either be more prominent, e.g. included in the infobox header, or it should be gotten rid of completely from these infoboxes. Sims2aholic8 (talk) 10:26, 25 October 2024 (UTC)
Your viewpoint falls down when you realise that the ESC is a television co-production of the participating broadcasters, who themselves co-produce the event in which they participate. Only one entry is allowed per country, and only one broadcaster from a given country may participate, just to ensure fairness in the competition with the broadcasters from other countries. The point is not that two broadcasters are from the same country, is that they both share the broadcasting area and viewers, and allowing both to participate would unbalance the competition and make it difficult to identify them internationally. Your UK example only reinforces the fact that an entry is just a BBC entry, as the other UK EBU members have no say in the matter.
The country is not as important to participation as the broadcaster, for the simple fact that without a broadcaster there is no participation. A country is not an entity that can participate on its own, nor does it have any right to do so. I am not trying to bend-over-anything, the ESC is a own owned competition between the broadcasters, something that the Olyimics are not. Yes, geography is important to join the EBU, but only in terms of broadcasting area, broadcasting license, broadcasting rights, coverage, public service, laws, etc., that fall within each country; geography gives the country nothing to say in the participation. And again, using the country name to identify the participant speaking in general is fine, even to bring together all the entries that have come from the same country on the official page, but this does not make the country a participant, nor does it diminish the primary importance of the broadcaster.
In the examples of previous years you linked, I still see that the articles start with the sentence in bold: "Public broadcasters from XX countries will take part in the Eurovision.."; and I see sentences like "Fans of the Contest will welcome back ARMTV from Armenia and RTCG from Montenegro" in 2022 or "After the cancellation of the ESC2020 nearly half of the broadcasters already confirmed their participants for 2021.", which makes your Israeli theory collapse. In addition, if you check the official performance videos of recent years, you will see the participating broadcaster billed at the end of the video, and If you go back much further in time you will even see the broadcaster logo in the voting sequence of its spokesperson, just to give a couple of easily visible examples.
My assertion about "lying" had more to do with ignoring or underestimating the role of the broadcaster because the belief that the participant is the country is so widespread.
Regarding the last two points about the infobox, I don't have the slightest idea. Ferclopedio (talk) 16:13, 25 October 2024 (UTC)
If all you say is true, then why are you not pushing for us to rename the articles entirely to remove the country names and list the broadcasters in their place? If you believe that the broadcasters are the most important thing here, then why is it not "BBC in Eurovision" or "SVT in Eurovision"? Also, with this in mind, should we then be splitting the history of each participating country based on the broadcaster? Belgium has two broadcasters that split responsibility for competing in the contest, should we have a "VRT in Eurovision" and a "RTBF in Eurovision" article then? Obviously these suggestions are ridiculous, because by all known criteria of the average viewer and the average reader of Misplaced Pages, it's the country that matters, not the broadcaster. I absolutely believe that we should be informing people with our articles, but not at the sake of doing things illogically just to make a point. I do believe that the broadcaster is an important part of each country's participation, and has a place within the infoboxes, but placing them ahead of the country just doesn't make logical sense to me, given the article titles reference the country and not the broadcaster, and the official website even reference the country more in the list of participants and the results tables of each edition. Sims2aholic8 (talk) 16:29, 25 October 2024 (UTC)
I didn't see anything wrong with the way we used to list and refer to the participants as it aligned very well with the convention seen in reliable sources. While I finally caved to agreeing to giving more prominence to the broadcaster's role (which let me be clear, is set by the media and contest producers, not Misplaced Pages editors), I would agree with Sims2aholic8 in that rewriting articles in Ferclopedio's way is misleading, and I feel it does not reflect reality. To continue down this path with further "broadcaster is first" changes would be original research. There are certainly articles that talk about how the broadcaster is running its process, but it's the country itself that supports that effort as it's the body that created and funds the broadcaster. It is not our role to 'correct' how sources (including the contest itself) refer to things. If we take a step back, it's important to remember that this contest is an exhibition of national pride and artistic abilities; it's not merely a television show to see which channel can produce the best programming. Even if we can't see eye-to-eye on this, I believe Sims2aholic8's request was just to swap the order of country and broadcaster in the infobox, not to omit broadcaster. I find that to be a very reasonable suggestion that better aligns with how the public actually view this event. Grk1011 (talk) 17:00, 25 October 2024 (UTC)
Yes, of course everything I say is true, I wouldn't be here arguing if it weren't. Have you ever read the contest rules?
And for the third or fourth time I say this, I think it's fine to talk about the country when we talk in general terms, or to group all the entries from the same country in the same place (the country articles). At no time have I said that this should change, it would be overkill.
What I'm trying to push is to refer accurately to who the participant is when talking specifically about the entrant (the participating broadcaster), and to avoid statements like "the broadcaster is an important part of each country's participation", that suggests that the country is an entity that participates (I would get into a loop if I started refuting that same sentence again, I have already given sufficient reasons against it above). Ferclopedio (talk) 18:31, 25 October 2024 (UTC)

Nomination of National selections for the Eurovision Song Contest for deletion

A discussion is taking place as to whether the article National selections for the Eurovision Song Contest is suitable for inclusion in Misplaced Pages according to Misplaced Pages's policies and guidelines or whether it should be deleted.

The article will be discussed at Misplaced Pages:Articles for deletion/National selections for the Eurovision Song Contest until a consensus is reached, and anyone, including you, is welcome to contribute to the discussion. The nomination will explain the policies and guidelines which are of concern. The discussion focuses on high-quality evidence and our policies and guidelines.

Users may edit the article during the discussion, including to improve the article to address concerns raised in the discussion. However, do not remove the article-for-deletion notice from the top of the article until the discussion has finished.

Grk1011 (talk) 13:55, 13 November 2024 (UTC)

Good article reassessment for Anggun

Anggun has been nominated for a good article reassessment. If you are interested in the discussion, please participate by adding your comments to the reassessment page. If concerns are not addressed during the review period, the good article status may be removed from the article. Z1720 (talk) 02:20, 19 November 2024 (UTC)

RfC on rescoping WikiProject Eurovision

Should WikiProject Eurovision be rescoped to become a task force for a new WikiProject Song Contests? Sims2aholic8 (talk) 10:59, 25 November 2024 (UTC)

Longer brief: I have been thinking for quite a while now about this WikiProject, and what I believe to be considerable scope creep over the past decade or so. What started as a project devoted mainly to the Eurovision Song Contest, and by extension other EBU contests, has since exploded not just EBU events, but also a large number of other events, and by extension many articles that are very much only tangentially related to any of these articles. We now have almost 9,000 articles under the remit of the WikiProject, many of which I think are of no interest to the majority of editors within this project, and our popular pages list each month is almost invariably filled by various broadcasters, a group of articles which also have only a tangential relationship to the majority of articles which are of actual interest to the editors of this project.

With this in mind, and considering that I believe WikiProjects work best when they focus on the articles that people are actually interested in improving, I'm proposing that the WikiProject be rescoped to become WikiProject Song Contests. Given that there are several contests out there where we are actively contributing, and not all of which are led by the EBU, or are even entitled "Eurovision" or related to ESC, I believe that this rebranding makes better sense going forwards. As part of this rebrand, I envisage that we will create several task forces, focussed specifically on high-profile contests. Right now I see one or two task forces in particular being created, specifically focussing on the Eurovision Song Contest and, depending on interest, the Junior Eurovision Song Contest.

I do not believe that the current sub-categorisation of high-profile contests which serve as national selections for ESC should be maintained, and these should therefore be categorised in the same way as the "main" contests. Depending on editor interest, new task forces could potentially also be created focussing on some of these, e.g. Melodifestivalen, Benidorm Fest, Festivali i Këngës, Sanremo, etc.

Should agreement be reached following this discussion, I believe that Stage 1 of implementing the new WikiProject structure would be to create a new page and related sub-pages for WikiProject Song Contests and to move the current WikiProject Eurovision pages to become sub-pages within the new WikiProject structure (e.g. Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Eurovision would become Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Song Contest/Eurovision task force). Further stages would then be to consider which articles we should include within the scope of our new project and reassessing importance.

Eager to hear thoughts, opinions, suggestions, concerns, musings, etc. on the above! I'm proposing that this discussion continue until 31 January 2025 to try and get the widest input possible from all editors concerned as we move into the 2025 national selection season. Sims2aholic8 (talk) 11:00, 25 November 2024 (UTC)

Polling (RfC on rescoping WikiProject Eurovision)

Discussion (RfC on rescoping WikiProject Eurovision)

 Comment: Just a thought/suggestion: Perhaps national selections should be taken out of the Eurovision task force and made into a separate one (Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Song Contests/National contests) alongside other song contests limited to a single country, such as Bundesvision and the American Song Contest, and let the Eurovision task force deal with Eurovision articles exclusively — IмSтevan 13:36, 25 November 2024 (UTC)

But would it not be (mostly if not entirely) the same editors doing essentially the same sort of work for all of those projects? Seems like an arbitrary division that could serve to make editing harder by separating efforts and discussions which apply to all relevant articles. QuietHere (talk | contributions) 18:15, 25 November 2024 (UTC)

 Comment: While I agree that the project currently has scope creep, your brief raises many questions for me.

First, I don't understand why the WikiProject Eurovision has no relation to WikiProject Television and it has with WikiProject Music. The current description of the project is "improving Misplaced Pages's coverage of topics related to the Eurovision Network, and other topics similar to but not necessarily identical to the Eurovision event concept". The Eurovision network is a television communications network, and every Eurovision event is essentially a television show (and not all of them are related to music). So, according to the current definition of the project, I understand that it is closer to television than to music.

If I understand correctly, what you are asking for is a rescope of the project to make it WikiProject Song Contests, so that it falls completely within WikiProject Music, which would mean that any event that is not a Song Contest would be excluded from the project, even any other Eurovision event apart from ESC and JESC. Is everyone who agrees aware of this?

Even with this rescope, neither the ESC nor the JESC nor any of their national finals nor any song contests similar to them (which will make up the vast majority of the events covered by the new project) will cease to be essentially television shows, meaning that they were intentionally created as television shows by television broadcasters. All these song contests together form a subgenre of television shows, rather than independent events in their own right. Of course there are song contests of the latter, but I think they will be a small minority in the new project.

I do not agree with the phrase "high-profile contests which serve as national selections for ESC". With the exception of Sanremo, which is the only "high-profile contests which serve as national selections for ESC", all other contest that are ESC and JESC national finals were specifically created by the respective broadcaster as a television show to select their entry to the contest, and are simply that (however popular they became), so their subordination to the main event is obvious, even though there have been years in which a broadcaster has not competed in the main and has staged the local contest.

I do agree with QuietHere. I don't think that splitting the project into subprojects or taskforces will help with the problem, when we are the same editors doing essentially the same sort of work on similar articles. And if the intention of the change is to attract new editors, I'm not sure that changing the well-known name Eurovision to a more generic one will help. Ferclopedio (talk) 21:22, 3 December 2024 (UTC)

Regarding your first point: I believe that the vast majority of editors which are attached to WikiProject Eurovision as it currently stands are mainly interested in editing articles related to the song contests only. Potentially I'm wrong here, but that's my understanding, and it's certainly what motivates me to be a part of this project. I have very limited interest in editing articles on the network, or indeed the member broadcasters, or any other EBU-related articles. I understand that everyone has different interests, so if there are any members that are interested in these articles, then please do add to this discussion! However if it's true as I believe that most editors attached to this project are only interested in the song contest element of Eurovision, then why are these other articles "attached" to our project if we have no intention of improving them?
I understand your point around how this project interacts with WikiProject Television. Certainly I believe that any rescoping should include more of a branching out into that project. Eurovision, Junior Eurovision, etc. are more than just television shows though, and the musical element is just as important. So I disagree with your point that they will "cease to be essentially television shows", because I think they have evolved into much more than just a TV show. Yes broadcasters are involved, and without the EBU there would be no ESC, but you just have to look at music charts around the world to see the impact of these contests beyond just television.
Regarding your disagreement with the "promotion" of other contests related to ESC to the same level as ESC or JESC, there are definitely more cases than just Sanremo; Festivali i Këngës existed long before Albania joined ESC. Culturally as well a lot of events match, or even surpass, ESC, even if they were founded when a country joined ESC. I find it hard to believe that Melodifestivalen, the biggest event in Sweden every year, should be "relegated" just because the winner goes to Eurovision. Sims2aholic8 (talk) 21:53, 3 December 2024 (UTC)
Yes, everyone has different interests and motivations. I see (and understand by the description) the current project as an "Eurovision events" project, with not only the ESC and JESC and its national finals, also with EYM, EYD... and even JSF (which I don't know why it hasn't been included yet). I myself am interested in its television, competitive, and international co-production aspects. And I see that a vast majority of the article edits focus on the organization of those events, the competition itself (point tables) and its broadcasting (commentators, stations that broadcast it, spokespersons, etc.) rather than on the music, so I must not be the only one. I do not underestimate the musical value of ESC and JESC and so, and I understand that in that sense the project is related to the WikiProject Music. But even with this great musical value, ESC and JESC are still television shows so they are more related to the WikiProject Television. And we have other Eurovision events that are not song contest and the question is whether we should get rid of them or not, when they share similarities with the others. In my opinion any other EBU-related article not related with the events, including the broadcasters, are covered in the WikiProject Television and WikiProject Media and can fall out this project.
Yes, maybe FiK is like Sanremo, but Melodifestivalen, even though it is the biggest event in Sweden each year, is still a television show created and staged by SVT specifically to choose its entry for Eurovision. My point is that is not a high-profile contests "which serve" as national selections, it is a national selection that had became huge. And maybe locally in some cases, but internationally none of the national events come even remotely close to the cultural impact of the ESC. Ferclopedio (talk) 23:38, 3 December 2024 (UTC)
@Sims2aholic8, normally, we don't use an RFC for a question like this. That's because a Misplaced Pages:WikiProject is a group of people, and in practice, you can't get a "consensus" that other WP:VOLUNTEERS will do what we tell them to do.
If you want to rename a group, then the usual process is outlined at Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Council/Guide#Renaming a WikiProject. If you want to merge two or more groups, then the usual process is (mostly) outlined at Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Council/Guide/Merging WikiProjects. The key point is that the decisions need to be made by the people who participate in the groups (or else they'll quit participating, and then you won't actually have a WikiProject). WhatamIdoing (talk) 04:23, 15 December 2024 (UTC)

"Eurovision Awards" notability

Although this is run by official ESC social media accounts, this end-of-year "awards" in my opinion has turned into fodder to drive up engagement for official ESC handles, evident in a category name containing the word 'rizz' in 2023. Should this continue to be added to the Wiki going forward, or should it be removed (this also applies for 2021-2023)? Pdhadam (talk) 10:42, 6 December 2024 (UTC)

I agree and I would support its removal under WP:GNG. However I think that there is a bit of a problem with this section in its entirety. Apart from the Marcel Bezençon Awards, which are organised by the EBU and have a specific set of criteria upon which the awards are decided, I don't believe any other awards which are commonly included here should be retained. I fail to see how the OGAE poll or the Barbara Dex Award/You're a Vision Award is notable enough to be mentioned here, when in effect they are just internet polls in the same way that these Eurovision Awards are. I think the whole section should go and the Marcel Bezençon Awards should be reformatted to become a sub-section of the "Contest overview", changed to become prose-only per MOS:PROSE and to sit underneath "Final" (since only finalists are up for these awards). Sims2aholic8 (talk) 12:36, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
Agree. Marcel Bezençon's is an actual award, while the others are simply internet polls. Ferclopedio (talk) 13:35, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
I disagree with this. I feel that they are notable enough to be included — IмSтevan 14:26, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
Agree. Internet polls of this nature do not have much credibility. Support keeping Marcel Bezençon Awards and removing the rest. I think if you'd like to mention the other two, it could be a sentence or two on the individual country or song's article, but it has no impact on the contest itself at a high level. I honestly find the OGAE one somewhat bizarre; it's almost like "who cares how the contest actually went, let's focus on how a self-selecting group of fans think it should have played out." Grk1011 (talk) 16:38, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
I believe the Marcel Bezençon Awards should remain fully fleshed out on Eurovision year articles, as they are officially organized by the EBU and meet notability criteria. For the other awards, such as the OGAE poll and the You're a Vision Award, I propose a compromise: include a single sentence for each, providing a brief description and linking to their respective Misplaced Pages pages where more detailed information can be found. This way, we maintain a balanced and informative overview without overemphasizing awards that may lack the same level of significance or credibility as the Marcel Bezençon Awards. Ktkvtsh (talk) 18:07, 6 December 2024 (UTC)
It's also worth pointing out that we already had a rather long conversation about this, see here from 2022. Grk1011 (talk) 18:30, 6 December 2024 (UTC)

Potential deletion of categories

While I was helping add categories to Shkodra Elektronike, I noticed that all of the categories by country and by year for every Eurovision entry have been nominated for deletion.

Now, while I'm a Eurovision fan and not an official member of WikiProject Eurovision, I found this idea to be concerning - helping categorize each entry by year and by country, I believe, helps with avoiding clutter and keeps things neat and organized.

Apologies for any potential "unprofessional" phrasing here, I just wanted to bring this issue to the WikiProject's attention. ButI'llBeThereNextTime (talk) 21:18, 23 December 2024 (UTC)

@ButI'llBeThereNextTime: As the nominator of these categories for discussion, I would just reiterate that Misplaced Pages has guidelines around overcategorisation. There are many cases where categorisation is not necessary, and in this case I believe that these categories fall down specifically on the "performers by performance" grouping. If you disagree, I suggest you contribute to the discussions at Misplaced Pages:Categories for discussion/Log/2024 December 19#Song contest performer categories and Misplaced Pages:Categories for discussion/Log/2024 December 21#ESC/JESC entrant categories.
For any WikiProject members that were not aware of this, I would strongly suggest that you follow Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Eurovision/Article alerts, as this will keep you abreast of all developments related to WikiProject pages. Sims2aholic8 (talk) 21:56, 23 December 2024 (UTC)

Links
I came here to post a notice about the same thing.
Please visit these pages

and read the discussion. (It there is any. Cause people are just blindly voting "delete by nom", "delete by nom", seemingly without even thinking.) --Moscow Connection (talk) 13:59, 26 December 2024 (UTC)

Categories: