Vidbir

<i>Vidbir</i>

Vidbir

Ukrainian musical competition


Natsionalnyi Vidbir (Ukrainian: Національний відбір, IPA: [nɐts⁽ʲ⁾ioˈnɑlʲnɪj wid⁽ʲ⁾ˈbir]; meaning "National Selection"), informally known as Vidbir, is a Ukrainian musical competition originally organized by Suspilne and STB, which determines the Ukrainian representative at the Eurovision Song Contest. In late August 2021, it was announced that the two broadcasters had terminated their partnership, and that Suspilne was looking for a new selection format for the Eurovision Song Contest 2022, thus bringing an end to the original concept for Vidbir.[1] In October 2021, Suspilne announced that the 2022 edition of Vidbir would be organized by it alone under a new format.[2]

Quick Facts Vidbir, Also known as ...

In the first year of the show, the local record by SMS voting was set by receiving 344,268 unique votes, 37.77% of which supported Jamala,[3] who eventually became the winner of the Eurovision Song Contest 2016.

Winners

Table key
1
Winner
2
Second place
X
Entry selected but did not compete
More information Year, Artist ...

Cast

Key:

  Judge / Host / Music producer / Showrunner
  Competed as a contestant


More information Judge, Vidbir ...
More information Music producer, Vidbir ...

Seasons

Series overview

Color key

  Male artist
  Female artist
  Band/duo
More information Year, Premiere ...

Vidbir 2016

The final took place on 21 February 2016. The six entries that qualified from the semi-finals competed. The winner, "1944" performed by Jamala, was selected through the combination of votes from a public tele-vote and an expert jury. Ties were decided in favour of the entries that received higher scores from the public tele-vote.[4] "1944" is the first Eurovision Song Contest song to feature lyrics in the Crimean Tatar language. 382,602 votes were registered by the tele-vote during the show.[5] In addition to the performances of the competing entries, 2016 Irish Eurovision entrant Nicky Byrne performed the 2016 Irish entry "Sunlight" as a guest.

More information Draw, Artist ...

Vidbir 2017

Final took place on 25 February 2017. Special guests included Alma, Manel Navarro, Tamara Gachechiladze, Naviband, and Kasia Moś.

More information Draw, Artist ...

Vidbir 2018

Final took place on 24 February 2018. Special guests included Mikolas Josef and Madame Monsieur. 179,455 unique votes were received from SMS and App voting.

More information Draw, Artist ...

Vidbir 2019

The final took place on 23 February 2019 with special guests Lake Malawi and Bilal Hassani. More than 167,500 unique votes were received from SMS and App voting. Maruv was declared the winner after receiving the most votes among the six finalists. On 26 February 2019, three days after the final was aired, Ukraine withdrew from the Eurovision Song Contest 2019 after Maruv and UA:PBC were unable to reach an agreement on her participation in the contest as a result of controversy.[6][7]

More information Draw, Artist ...

Vidbir 2020

More information Draw, Artist ...

Following the cancellation of the Eurovision Song Contest 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Go_A were internally re-selected to represent Ukraine at the 2021 edition, this time with the song "Shum".[8][9]

Vidbir 2022

More information Draw, Artist ...

Following controversy regarding her travel history, Alina Pash's status as a legitimate participant, and therefore winner, of Vidbir was challenged, which resulted in her participation being ceased by Suspilne as well as her withdrawal. The runner-up, Kalush Orchestra, were chosen as the Ukrainian entrant for the Eurovision Song Contest 2022.

Vidbir 2023

More information Draw, Artist ...

Vidbir 2024

In this edition, the public determined a wildcard entry through an online vote.[10] During the show, aired on 3 February 2024, the voting app crashed, causing the voting window to be extended to the following day.

More information Draw, Artist ...

Ratings

More information Year, Semi-Final ...

Notes

  1. Ukraine withdrew from the Eurovision Song Contest 2019 after Maruv and Suspilne were unable to reach an agreement on her participation in the contest as a result of controversy.
  2. The 2020 contest was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
  3. Alina Pash won Vidbir 2022 but was disqualified after it was discovered that her representative had provided Suspilne with a falsified travel certificate.
  4. Ukraine was unable to host the 2023 contest due to security concerns resulting from the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The United Kingdom, as the second-placing country in the 2022 contest, hosted on Ukraine's behalf, with Ukraine automatically qualifying for the 2023 final as the previous year's winning country.
  5. Runner-up of Vidbir 2016 as a lead vocalist of The Hardkiss.
  6. Won Vidbir 2020 as a lead vocalist of Go_A.
  7. Voting extended to the following day due to a crash in the voting app.
  8. Due to technical issues during the first performance, Cloudless had to perform their song again after all the other songs.

References

  1. Mori, Yevheniy (30 August 2021). "Суспільне мовлення завершує співпрацю з СТБ в проведенні нацвідбору на Євробачення". suspilne.media (in Ukrainian). Suspilne. Retrieved 24 September 2021.
  2. "Results of the SMS voting on Vidbir 2016" (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 23 Feb 2018.
  3. Omelyanchuk, Olena (21 February 2016). "Jamala will represent Ukraine in Stockholm!". eurovision.tv. European Broadcasting Union. Retrieved 21 February 2016.
  4. Smith, David (22 May 2021). "Go_A will release Eurovision version of "SHUM" on 9 March". Wiwibloggs. Retrieved 22 May 2021.
  5. "Суспільне розпочало Національний відбір на Євробачення-2024" [Suspilne has started the National Selection for Eurovision 2024]. suspilne.media (Press release) (in Ukrainian). Suspilne. 2023-08-30. Retrieved 2023-08-30.
  6. Mori, Yevheniy (2022-02-13). "Фінал Нацвідбору переглянули понад 2,5 млн глядачів на каналі UA: ПЕРШИЙ". suspilne.media (in Ukrainian). UA:PBC. Retrieved 2022-02-13.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Vidbir, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.