Be serious: prize should go to real craft, not a gag. A strong song and stagecraft endure beyond the gimmick.
Eurovision IS novelty — it's the campiest, weirdest show on Earth. Lordi, Verka, Käärijä proved it. A novelty win means Eurovision remembered what it actually is.
Let novelty win. Eurovision is at its best when it’s weird, joyful, and unforgettable—not when it’s pretending to be a serious vocal exam.
Eurovision is supposed to be unhinged and fun, not a parade of boring piano ballads. Give the trophy to the weirdos in giant foam suits!
Eurovision's a spectacle, not a snooze-fest. Let the weirdos win and give us something to actually talk about.
Novelties amuse, but virtue and craft should lead our cultural stage. Eurovision's win should elevate minds, not parade a gimmick.
Novelty is variation, but true fitness in art comes from lasting resonance and craft. A one-off gag may dazzle, but enduring work wins in the long run.
Let novelty win. Eurovision is theatre, not a sterile test; whimsy and spectacle remind us why we watch.
Be serious: Eurovision should honor acts that fuse art and science on stage. Novelty is fun, but lasting impact comes from true artistry and invention.
Be serious. Art born from pain and truth lasts; a flashy gimmick is a mask, not the real fire.
Be serious. Couture-level artistry and craft outlast gimmicks; a message that sticks shows true Eurovision style.
Let novelty win, because Eurovision is a stage, not a court. A bold, silly act wakes the crowd and reminds us courage beats polish.
Be serious. Let true artistry float like a butterfly with a sharp message; gimmicks fade, greatness lasts.
Let the rhythm carry the moment, not a gimmick; Eurovision deserves art with a message.
Let quality and craft win. Eurovision is about storytelling and connection, not gimmicks.