United Kingdom in the Eurovision Song Contest 2007

Eurovision Song Contest 2007
Country  United Kingdom
National selection
Selection process Eurovision: Making Your Mind Up
Selection date(s) 17 March 2007
Selected entrant Scooch
Selected song "Flying The Flag (For You)"
Selected songwriter(s)
Finals performance
Final result 22nd, 19 points[1]
United Kingdom in the Eurovision Song Contest
◄2006 2007 2008►
Performing at the Eurovision Song Contest 2007.

The United Kingdom chose their entry for the Eurovision Song Contest 2007 on the BBC programme Eurovision: Making Your Mind Up. The fourth and final edition of Making Your Mind Up took place on Saturday 17 March 2007 on BBC One. The main show aired at 19.30 GMT and the results showed at 21.30 GMT.

The six initial acts were reduced to two after a public vote. The two remaining acts participated in a final sing-off - and a final public vote decided the winner of the competition which was Scooch with their song "Flying the Flag (for You)". The United Kingdom finished in 22nd place with 19 points, they did, however, receive the maximum award of 12 points from Malta. This is the first time since Jessica Garlick in 2002, that the UK received 12 points from a country.

Eurovision: Making Your Mind Up 2007

Results

OrderActSong1st Round2nd Round
1Liz McClarnon"(Don't It Make You) Happy!"5th
2Brian Harvey"I Can"6th
3Big Brovaz"Big Bro Thang"3rd
4Cyndi"I'll Leave My Heart"2nd (47%)
5Scooch"Flying the Flag (for You)"1st (53%)
6Justin Hawkins and Beverlei Brown"They Don't Make 'Em Like They Used To"4th

[2]

Announcement blunder

After the sing-off and final public vote, Cyndi and Scooch returned to the stage for the final result. After several moments, Terry Wogan announced the winner to be Cyndi while simultaneously, co-host Fearne Cotton revealed the winner to be Scooch. Wogan's announcement was louder than Cotton's, leading many people to believe Cyndi had won the sing-off. After several seconds of confusion, it was finally confirmed that Scooch were the winners. The BBC later issued a written apology, blaming the blunder on "live TV".

Earlier rumours

Before the six acts were officially announced by the BBC on 28 February 2007, a number of rumours circulated about who would be entering a bid in Eurovision: Making Your Mind Up 2007. Such rumours included:

  • Ace of Base (This rumour was later denied on their website sometime prior to BBC's official reveal)[3]
  • Scissor Sisters
  • Morrissey (The BBC approached him in January 2007 to write the entry, not perform it, but a song wasn't produced in time)
  • Queentastic[4]
  • Daz Sampson and Carol Decker (Sampson submitted a song entitled "Goodbye" but the BBC felt it was too soon for him to enter since he represented the UK in 2006)[5]

Justin Hawkins and Beverlei Brown replaced The Puppini Sisters who had been earlier approached by the BBC, but whose submitted material, "And She Sang" and "Don't Call Again", were not considered suitable for the competition.

At Eurovision

As a member of the Big Four, the United Kingdom automatically qualified to compete in the final held on 12 May. Scooch was drawn to perform nineteenth in the line-up. At the end of the contest, the song finished in 22nd place with only 19 points, ahead of only Ireland, who came last. Nevertheless, the United Kingdom still managed to receive a maximum score of 12pts from Malta.

Points Awarded by United Kingdom

Points Awarded to United Kingdom (Final)
12 points 10 points 8 points 7 points 6 points
5 points 4 points 3 points 2 points 1 point

Unofficial Representation

Despite Scooch being the official representatives, the UK was unofficially representing Eurovision for other countries.

See also

References

  1. https://eurovision.tv/country/united-kingdom/profile
  2. "Eurovision Song Contest Serbia 2008 | Live Shows". Archived from the original on 27 December 2016. Retrieved 27 December 2016.
  3. "Exclusive: Ace of Base: No to Sweden, Yes to UK". esctoday.com. 2006-10-11. Retrieved 2006-10-11.
  4. "Queentastic rejected from Norwegian finals - looking to UK". esctoday.com. 2006-10-07. Retrieved 2006-10-07.
  5. "Exclusive: Daz reveals song and duet partner for Eurovision". oikotimes.com. 1 October 2006. Archived from the original on 10 October 2006. Retrieved 1 October 2006.
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