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Ukraine's Britney Vs. Turkey's Kylie

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  • Ukraine's Britney Vs. Turkey's Kylie

    UKRAINE'S BRITNEY VS. TURKEY'S KYLIE
    by Wall Street Journal

    National Post, (Canada)
    May 25, 2006 Thursday
    National Edition

    This editorial appeared in Tuesday's edition of the Wall Street
    Journal.

    Forget bureaucratic Brussels, seat of the European Union. The real
    face of European unity was on display Saturday night in Athens,
    this year's host of the Eurovision Song Contest.

    It's the EU through a looking glass. For starters, Eurovision is
    relaxed about who gets in. No need to prove democratic or regulatory
    bona fides or meet geographic litmus tests. Armenia and Belarus take
    part, as does Turkey, which won in 2003. Morocco once competed, and
    Israel does every year, this year fielding a gospel group fronted by
    Eddie Butler, the Israel-born son of black Jews from Chicago.

    Unlike Brussels, the song contest is also a model of democracy and
    transparency. Winners are chosen by country-by-country call-in votes,
    in which listeners may cast their preference with any nation's
    band except their own. Ukrainian voters gave their highest rating
    to Russia, having apparently forgiven the Kremlin's gas-pricing
    policy that threatened to leave millions of Ukrainians without heat
    in January. Russian voters returned the affection, giving their
    second-highest rating to Tina Karol, Ukraine's answer to Britney
    Spears.

    The Turks, remarkably, gave their second-highest score to a historical
    antagonist, Armenia. The countries have no diplomatic relations. But
    what goes around evidently comes around: Turkey won top marks from both
    France and the Netherlands, whose "no" votes to the EU constitution
    last year were partly motivated by fears of future Turkish membership
    in the bloc. While most bands chose to sing in English, Sibel Tuzun
    belted out disco in her native tongue. Call her Turkey's Kylie Minogue.

    Europeans united in particular behind the winning Finnish band Lordi,
    which performed, as it always does, in elaborately gruesome monster
    costumes. Europeans may not be able to agree on much these days,
    but horns and scales, a lead singer with a sonic growl, and lyrics
    announcing the "arockalypse" have brought a troubled Continent
    together.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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