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The United Kingdom's televoting list for the 2014 grand final

Televoting, or voting by telephone, was first introduced at the Eurovision Song Contest 1997 as an alternative to the traditional jury system and was tested by five countries - the rest used the jury system.  By 2004, all participating countries used this system.  Since the 2009 finals, televoting now makes up 50% of a country's total score with the remaining 50% coming from a jury of five music professionals from each participating country which are then combined.  The 50:50 system proved so successful that it was extended into the semi-finals for the 2010 contest and has remained in place ever since to not only determine the overall winner, but to also pick the ten qualifiers from each semi-final.

San Marino is the only participating country that does not have its own independent televote system as it shares Italy's phone network.

How it works

At the start of the live shows (semis and final), the running order is shown on screen as shown in the photo above, with a two-digit number beside each country's name, and a number to call at the bottom of the screen - each country's numbers and calling/texting charges varying from one another.  XX is replaced by the two-digit number of the country the individual wants to vote for.  As is customary, a country cannot vote for its own song, and either a warning or a good luck message to their representative would be shown by their home broadcaster on screen during the recaps when their own country's song came up.

After the last song is performed, there will be a 15-minute window for voting (the presenters would announce when the window opens), which could be used on one country or split among as many countries as the voter chose to vote for, and a recap of all the songs would be shown at least twice during that window.  From 2009 until 2011, people could vote right from the first song, but in 2012 it reverted back to the 15-minute window following the last song of the night.  In 2014, there was a maximum of 20 votes per person allowed.  

The window closed with the words "Europe, stop voting now!" announced by the presenters. Before the results, one of the presenters would consult with the Executive Supervisor to confirm the counted votes are valid before proceeding.

Exceptions

  • If a country's televote was unavailable (for example, the Dutch vote in 2000 due to a fireworks factory disaster), a backup jury would be used
  • If a country lacked its own independent televote system, that country would only vote by jury
  • In the 50:50 system, in the event a jury's votes were declared void, that country's overall points would revert back to its televote
  • If a country doesn't have enough televoters to register a set of points, such as San Marino or Albania due to the population, the jury vote will be used instead.
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