Other entrants also advertised
There were also ad campaigns for other entries this year. Social media users in parts of Europe reported seeing sponsored posts for Malta, Greece, Albania, Poland, Armenia and France, although some of these were run by the artists themselves via their own social platforms, and some were promoted via the competing broadcaster in the territory. In some cases, ads were run weeks ahead of the contest, without a prompt to vote.
Maltese singer Miriana Conte ran a series of ads through her own Meta platforms, as can be seen in the Meta Ad Library. An ad campaign for the Greek entry, Klavdia, was run on Meta platforms by Greek broadcaster ERT, via an official Facebook page the broadcaster has for the song contest. Physical poster advertisements were seen in Italy for Tommy Cash, the Estonian entry, whose song makes multiple references to Italian culture. The poster showed the ads appeared to have been run by Epic Records Italy, a division of Sony Music. The Spotify listing for the song, ‘Espresso Macchiato’, shows it is under exclusive licence to Sony Music Entertainment Italy S.p.A.
this post was submitted on 21 May 2025
47 points (96.1% liked)
Eurovision Song Contest
504 readers
77 users here now
A place for all fans of the Eurovision Song Contest :D
Rules:
- No discrimination. This explicitely includes racism, homophobia, transphobia, sexism. Don't be a jerk.
- Please be nice, friendly and welcoming. Criticism and discussions and okay, but don't hate on people for their opinions.
- Relevance to the Eurovision Song Contest. This space is made for the ESC, so all posts should be at least somewhat related to it.
Rules may be added or changed if necessary.
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
47
Israeli government agency paid for adverts targeting Eurovision Song Contest public vote
(spotlight.ebu.ch)
Interesting context! Maybe broadcasters and artists should be required to disclose ad spend?
They absolutely should. But how to account for outside spending?
In the case of Israel the broadcaster didn't buy ads, the government did.