Norway s TIX (Andreas Haukeland) performs during the Eurovision Song Contest dress rehearsal in Rotterdam, Netherlands. Image: Dean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty Images
This Saturday, May 22, on or around 3:00 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, you may sense a diffuse but palpable shift in the global marketplace of finite resources. At that time, vast stockpiles of sequins, lasers, dry ice and fireworks scattered around the world will dry up spontaneously only to reappear all at once,
en masse, on a stage in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
Yep: It s Eurovision time.
The Eurovision Song Contest pits 26 European nations and sometimes Australia (long story) against one another in a three-hour display of pure, exuberant, insanely catchy and/or just plainly insane songs, painstakingly engineered by teams of professionals to worm their way into the ears and hearts of an audience numbering in the hundreds of millions.
Dean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty Images
toggle caption Dean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty Images
Norway s TIX (Andreas Haukeland) performs during the Eurovision Song Contest dress rehearsal in Rotterdam, Netherlands. Dean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty Images
This Saturday, May 22, on or around 3:00 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, you may sense a diffuse but palpable shift in the global marketplace of finite resources. At that time, vast stockpiles of sequins, lasers, dry ice and fireworks scattered around the world will dry up spontaneously only to reappear all at once,
en masse, on a stage in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
Yep: It s Eurovision time.
The Eurovision Song Contest pits 26 European nations and sometimes Australia (long story) against one another in a three-hour display of pure, exuberant, insanely catchy and/or just plainly insane songs, painstakingly engineered by teams of professionals to worm their way into the ears and hearts of an audience numb