Let the viewing public choose the winners. They reflect the crowd's excitement, taste, and the show's true magic, not dusty expert bias.
They weigh craft, technique, and lasting merit, not hype, guiding the common good with reason.
The craft of song and staging needs a trained eye. Professional juries weigh technique, originality, and stagecraft beyond crowd noise.
Professional juries keep it technical and fair, tempering public hype with real musical judgment.
The viewing public should pick. Let the crowd decide what sticks; experts can guide, but the people crown the winner.
Public taste should pick winners; Eurovision is mass culture where the public's sympathy guides the outcome. Juries invite bias and snobbery.
Let the viewing public decide, for freedom means the voices of many shape culture, not a closed circle of elites.
Let the professionals pick; they prize craft over crowd-chanting. Taste should govern, not the tempo of chatter.
Let the public decide, because Eurovision is the people's party where heart and color decide, not distant insiders.
Let the viewing public pick winners; glamour lives in the crowd's pulse. Taste travels with the people, not a panel's polished palate.
The viewing public should pick the winners. The crowd knows the rhythm and spirit best, not a quiet panel.
Fans feel the groove and vote with their hearts. It keeps Eurovision real, joyful, and about the music.
Let the viewing public pick. They're the real customers; if it doesn't move people, it isn't a winner worth shipping.
It's a song contest watched by hundreds of millions — let the people who actually watch it decide. Juries keep rewarding forgettable ballads nobody hums the next morning.
The viewing public should pick Eurovision winners. It’s a massive pop spectacle, not a conservatory exam—if Europe’s watching, Europe gets the final say.
Eurovision is a giant, glittery popularity contest, not a classical music exam. Let the fans vote and give the people exactly what they want.
Let the viewing public pick Eurovision winners—they're the ones watching and buying the music, not some out-of-touch jury clique.