No edit summary |
m (Marking navigational galleries) |
||
Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
− | <gallery orientation="square"> |
+ | <gallery orientation="square" navigation="true"> |
2013 scoreboard.jpg|The 2013 scoreboard|link=Eurovision Song Contest 2013 |
2013 scoreboard.jpg|The 2013 scoreboard|link=Eurovision Song Contest 2013 |
||
2004 scoreboard.jpg|The 2004 scoreboard|link=Eurovision Song Contest 2004 |
2004 scoreboard.jpg|The 2004 scoreboard|link=Eurovision Song Contest 2004 |
Revision as of 02:29, 26 August 2014
The Scoreboard is used in the Eurovision Song Contest to display all the votes from the various countries, and has changed in various styles and operations throughout the years.
Behind the older scoreboards, are operators who display the countries and numbers, and sometimes the scoreboard does go a little awry, with the wrong country's points being updated, a delay in updating, or the scoreboard changes colour, such as the 1984 scoreboard. The first computer-generated scoreboard was used at the 1988 contest in Dublin. Jury spokespersons also gave their votes through the phone or have the Jury present in the hall, before there were satellites beginning in 1994 to transmit spokespersons from their own country and displayed on screen.
In 1996 and 2014 there were hologramic versions of the scoreboard on stage (2014's being in the big LED grid) which were also shown on the television in graphic format.
Nowadays, computers are used and are more accurate with more fancy graphics, but they don't create some of the funny moments that they've had in previous years. After 2006, the EBU decided to save some time when voting, instead of each point being read out individually, points 1-7 were already allocated and the spokesperson only has to read out points 8, 10 and 12. The voting still takes about an hour even with this method, due to the number of participating countries.
But sometimes the voting spokesperson does mess up their votes, or just wants to play funny.
In 2012, the Swedish spokesperson was the character "Lynda Woodruff" (aka Sarah Dawn Finer), who is known for various funny sketches throughout Eurovision shows. This caused some laughter.