Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2024

The Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2024 was the 22nd edition of the Junior Eurovision Song Contest, held on 16 November 2024 at the Caja Mágica in Madrid, Spain, and presented by Ruth Lorenzo, Marc Clotet, and Melani García. It was organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and host broadcaster Radiotelevisión Española (RTVE). It was the first time that the contest was held in the country. The contest was also the first since 2015 to be held on a Saturday.

Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2024
Let's Bloom
Date and venue
Final
  • 16 November 2024
VenueCaja Mágica
Madrid, Spain
Organisation
OrganiserEuropean Broadcasting Union (EBU)
Executive supervisorMartin Österdahl
Production
Host broadcasterRadiotelevisión Española (RTVE)
DirectorMercè Llorens
Executive producerAna María Bordas [es]
Artistic directorMarvin Dietmann
Presenters
  • Ruth Lorenzo
  • Marc Clotet
  • Melani García
Participants
Number of entries17
Returning countries Cyprus
 San Marino
Non-returning countries United Kingdom
Participation map
  •      Competing countries     Countries that participated in the past but not in 2024
Vote
Voting systemThe professional jury of each country awards a set of 12, 10, 8–1 points to 10 songs. Viewers around the world vote for 3 songs, and their votes are distributed proportionally. The votes of the jury and the audience make up 50% of all votes.
Winning song Georgia
"To My Mom"
2023 ← Junior Eurovision Song Contest → 2025
Event page at junioreurovision.tv

Broadcasters from seventeen countries participated in the contest, with Cyprus and San Marino returning after six- and eight-year absences respectively, while the United Kingdom opted not to participate after doing so the previous year.

The winner was Georgia with the song "To My Mom" by Andria Putkaradze, its fourth win and first since 2016. Portugal won the public vote and finished in second place, its best placing to date. Ukraine finished in third place, its best placing since 2013. France finished in fourth place, the first time it placed outside of the top three in four years. Malta finished in fifth place, its best placing since 2018. San Marino finished last on its return.

Location

Unlike the Eurovision Song Contest, the winning broadcaster of the previous year's Junior Eurovision Song Contest does not automatically receive the right to host the next edition. However, since 2011 (with the exceptions of 2012, 2015, and 2018) it has become customary for winners to take on hosting duties, and since 2019, the winning broadcaster has had the right of first refusal on hosting the following competition. In 2015, 2014 winner, Italian broadcaster Radiotelevisione italiana (RAI), was given this right but ultimately opted out of it.

On 27 November 2023, upon its victory in the 2023 contest on home soil, French broadcaster France Télévisions announced that talks would be conducted with the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) regarding the hosting of the 2024 contest, as multiple countries had expressed interest in doing so and it did not want a "French monopoly on Junior Eurovision", having already hosted the event twice in a three-year span; It ultimately opted not to host in 2024. Spanish broadcaster Radiotelevisión Española (RTVE), which had finished in second place in the 2023 contest, was announced as the host for 2024 on 14 February 2024, with the Caja Mágica in Madrid announced as the venue on 10 May 2024. This marked the first time that the contest has been held in the country.

Bidding phase and host city selection

Valencia
Barcelona
Málaga
Madrid
Granada
Zaragoza
class=notpageimage|
Location of host city (in blue), bidding cities (in green), and cities that submitted a bid but later withdrew (in red)

Upon the confirmation of Spain as the host country for 2024, the Generalitat Valenciana announced that it would bid to host the contest in a city in the Valencian Community; since 2022, the autonomous community has hosted Benidorm Fest, the Spanish national final for the Eurovision Song Contest. The mayor of Barcelona, Jaume Collboni, expressed interest in hosting the event in the city, followed by the mayor of Málaga, Francisco de la Torre. Madrid, Granada and Zaragoza also announced their readiness to host the competition. Ana María Bordas [es], head of the Spanish delegation for the contest, had said that the broadcaster had received several bids upon the host country announcement and that a decision would be taken within the following weeks. Valencia, Barcelona, Málaga, Granada and Zaragoza were reported to have submitted an official bid by mid-March 2024. Shortly after, however, Zaragoza announced its withdrawal due to the unavailability of the intended venue for an assessment visit. In mid-April, Barcelona was unofficially reported to be in the forefront of the selection process, with Palau Sant Jordi considered as the potential venue, but by the end of the month the city dropped out of the running due to the lack of an adequate venue available for late 2024.

RTVE and the EBU scheduled a press conference at Malmömässan in Malmö on 10 May 2024, during the adult contest, where the selected host city was revealed to be Madrid, with Caja Mágica as the selected venue.

Participants

On 3 September 2024, the EBU announced that 17 countries would participate in the 2024 contest. Cyprus returned to the contest after a six-year absence, while San Marino did so after an eight-year absence, despite originally confirming non-participation. Meanwhile, the United Kingdom opted not to participate after doing so the previous two years.

Prior to the contest, a digital compilation album featuring all the songs from the 2024 contest was put together by the European Broadcasting Union and released by Universal Music on 1 November 2024.

Participants of the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2024
Country Broadcaster Artist Song Language Songwriter(s) Ref.
 Albania RTSH Nikol Çabeli "Vallëzoj" Albanian
  • Endri Muçaj
  • Eriona Rushiti
 Armenia AMPTV Leo "Cosmic Friend" Armenian, English
  • Arpine Martoyan
  • Tokionine
  • Vahram Petrosyan
 Cyprus CyBC Maria Pissarides "Crystal Waters" Greek, English
  • Armin Gilani
  • Maria Pissarides
  • Sophia Patsalides
 Estonia ERR Annabelle "Tänavad" Estonian Sven Lõhmus
 France France Télévisions Titouan [fr] "Comme ci, comme ça [fr]" French
  • Malory Legardinier
  • Marie Bastide [fr]
 Georgia GPB Andria Putkaradze "To My Mom" Georgian
  • Giga Kukhianidze
  • Maka Davitaia
 Germany Kika/NDR Bjarne "Save the Best for Us" German, English
  • Ignacio Uriarte
  • Kai Oliver Krug
  • Thomas Meilstrup
 Ireland TG4 Enya Cox Dempsey "Le chéile" Irish
  • Ian James White
  • Laoise Ní Nualláin
  • Nicky Brennan
 Italy RAI Simone Grande "Pigiama party" Italian, English
  • Alex Uhlmann
  • Luca Mattioni [it]
  • Pablo Meneguzzo
 Malta PBS Ramires Sciberras "Stilla ċkejkna" Maltese
  • Aleandro Spiteri Monseigneur
  • Lon Kirkop
  • Peter Borg
 Netherlands AVROTROS Stay Tuned [nl] "Music" Dutch, English
  • Jermain van der Bogt [nl]
  • Willem Laseroms
 North Macedonia MRT Ana and Aleksej "Marathon" Macedonian, English
  • Lazar Cvetkoski
  • Magdalena Cvetkovska
 Poland TVP Dominik Arim "All Together" Polish, English
  • Aldona Dąbrowska [pl]
  • Sławomir Sokołowski [pl]
 Portugal RTP Victoria Nicole "Esperança" Portuguese, Spanish Victoria Nicole
 San Marino SMRTV Idols SM "Come noi" Italian
  • Francesco Sancisi
  • Nicola Della Valle
  • Paolo Macina
 Spain RTVE Chloe DelaRosa "Como la Lola" Spanish
  • Alejandro Martínez
  • Chloe DelaRosa
  • David Parejo
  • Luis Ramiro
 Ukraine Suspilne Artem Kotenko "Hear Me Now" Ukrainian, English Svitlana Tarabarova

Production and format

Slogan, visual and stage design

On 3 September 2024, along with the list of participating countries, RTVE and the EBU revealed the theme art and slogan of the 2024 contest, "Let's Bloom", as well as the stage design. The theme art features the image of a blooming flower, which "references the blossoming of young artists".

Presenters

Ruth Lorenzo, Marc Clotet and Melani García were revealed on 12 September 2024 as the presenters of the show. Lorenzo had represented Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest 2014 and hosted Benidorm Fest 2024, while García had represented Spain in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2019.

Postcards

Contestants were featured in "postcard" video introductions, in which they perform activities interspersed with artificial intelligence (AI)-generated footage of themselves in various imaginary scenarios.

Presentation of the jury votes

The presentation of the jury votes was additionally changed for 2024. As opposed to previous years in which the scoreboard was laid out horizontally in descending order, the scoreboard this year was laid out vertically , with each country having its position fixed according to the running order and a score bar to fill out points with. The presenters announced the number of points each country received according to the 1–10 scale; for example, each country is shown the number of countries that have given it 1 point, 2 points, and so forth. The 12 points were still announced by a spokesperson appointed by each country, however, their segments were pre-recorded instead of being a live link. Executive producer Ana María Bordas [es] stated that this was due to the Saturday timeslot forcing the producers to cap the show at two hours, and also in order to avoid causing stress for the participants.

Contest overview

The event took place on 16 November 2024 at 18:00 CET. Seventeen countries participated, with the running order published on 10 October. All the countries competing were eligible to vote with the jury vote, as well as participating and non-participating countries under an aggregated international online vote. Georgia won with 239 points, winning the jury vote. Portugal, who won the online vote, came second with 213 points, with Ukraine, France and Malta completing the top five. Cyprus, Estonia, Ireland, North Macedonia and San Marino occupied the bottom five positions.

The opening of the show featured the traditional flag parade, accompanied by all participants performing the common song "Let's Bloom" with 2004 winner María Isabel, 2023 winner Zoé Clauzure and 2023 runner-up Sandra Valero. The interval acts included a dance number titled "Time to Bloom" performed by actress Anastasia Russo [es] and choreographed by Borja Rueda, and Abraham Mateo performing a version of "Maniac" titled "Maníaca".

R/O Country Artist Song Points Place
1  Italy Simone Grande "Pigiama party" 98 9
2  Estonia Annabelle "Tänavad" 55 14
3  Albania Nikol Çabeli "Vallëzoj" 126 7
4  Armenia Leo "Cosmic Friend" 125 8
5  Cyprus Maria Pissarides "Crystal Waters" 60 13
6  France Titouan "Comme ci, comme ça" 177 4
7  North Macedonia Ana and Aleksej "Marathon" 54 16
8  Poland Dominik Arim "All Together" 61 12
9  Georgia Andria Putkaradze "To My Mom" 239 1
10  Spain Chloe DelaRosa "Como la Lola" 144 6
11  Germany Bjarne "Save the Best for Us" 71 11
12  Netherlands Stay Tuned "Music" 91 10
13  San Marino Idols SM "Come noi" 47 17
14  Ukraine Artem Kotenko "Hear Me Now" 203 3
15  Portugal Victoria Nicole "Esperança" 213 2
16  Ireland Enya Cox Dempsey "Le chéile" 55 15
17  Malta Ramires Sciberras "Stilla ċkejkna" 153 5

Spokespersons

The 12 points from the juries were announced by a spokesperson from each country; known spokespersons are listed below.

  •  Cyprus – Patroklos Patroklou
  •  Estonia – Arhanna
  •  France – Lissandro
  •  Georgia – Anastasia Vasadze
  •  Malta – Yulan
  •  Netherlands – Veronika
  •  Poland – Maja Krzyżewska
  •  Portugal – Júlia Machado
  •  Spain – Carlos Higes
  •  Ukraine – Anastasiia Dymyd

Detailed voting results

Split results
Place Combined Jury Online vote
Country Points Country Points Country Points
1  Georgia 239  Georgia 180  Portugal 117
2  Portugal 213  Ukraine 122  Ukraine 81
3  Ukraine 203  France 103  Malta 79
4  France 177  Portugal 96  France 74
5  Malta 153  Albania 82  Spain 64
6  Spain 144  Spain 80  Georgia 59
7  Albania 126  Armenia 76
  •  Germany
  •  Netherlands
57
8  Armenia 125  Malta 74
9  Italy 98  Italy 52  Cyprus 50
10  Netherlands 91  Netherlands 34  Armenia 49
11  Germany 71  North Macedonia 20  Poland 48
12  Poland 61  Ireland 15
  •  Italy
  •  San Marino
46
13  Cyprus 60  Germany 14
14  Estonia 55  Estonia 14  Albania 44
15  Ireland 55  Poland 13  Estonia 41
16  North Macedonia 54  Cyprus 10  Ireland 40
17  San Marino 47  San Marino 1  North Macedonia 34
Detailed voting results of the final
Voting procedure used:
  100% Online vote
  100% Jury vote
Total score
Online vote score
Jury vote score
Jury vote
Italy
Estonia
Albania
Armenia
Cyprus
France
North Macedonia
Poland
Georgia
Spain
Germany
Netherlands
San Marino
Ukraine
Portugal
Ireland
Malta
Competing countries
Italy 98 46 52 3 6 8 4 1 6 2 4 6 3 2 7
Estonia 55 41 14 2 6 1 1 4
Albania 126 44 82 6 8 5 7 1 5 6 7 2 3 8 10 8 6
Armenia 125 49 76 10 2 1 12 5 2 12 4 7 2 5 6 8
Cyprus 60 50 10 4 2 1 1 2
France 177 74 103 7 4 5 10 2 3 7 10 5 8 10 7 6 4 10 5
North Macedonia 54 34 20 5 3 3 4 1 1 3
Poland 61 48 13 2 8 3
Georgia 239 59 180 12 12 12 12 12 8 10 8 12 10 12 12 12 12 12 12
Spain 144 64 80 4 5 7 1 10 3 6 8 3 5 8 10 3 5 2
Germany 71 57 14 1 2 7 1 2 1
Netherlands 91 57 34 3 1 7 3 4 3 3 5 4 1
San Marino 47 46 1 1
Ukraine 203 81 122 10 7 10 8 10 12 12 5 10 2 8 4 7 7 10
Portugal 213 117 96 8 6 8 5 5 7 10 7 8 12 6 4 6 4
Ireland 55 40 15 2 4 3 5 1
Malta 153 79 74 2 4 6 6 4 8 6 7 6 3 10 7 5

12 points

Below is a summary of all 12 points received from each country's professional juries.

12 points awarded by juries
# Recipient Countries giving 12 points
12  Georgia  Albania,  Armenia,  Cyprus,  Estonia,  Ireland,  Italy,  Malta,  Netherlands,  Portugal,  San Marino,  Spain,  Ukraine
2  Armenia  France,  Georgia
 Ukraine  North Macedonia,  Poland
1  Portugal  Germany

Online voting

According to the EBU 2.3 million votes were cast.

Broadcasts

All participating broadcasters may choose to have on-site or remote commentators providing insight and voting information to their local audience. The European Broadcasting Union also provided international live streams of the contest through their official YouTube channel with no commentary.

Confirmed broadcasters and commentators
Country Broadcaster Channel(s) Commentator(s) Ref.
 Albania RTSH RTSH 1, RTSH Muzikë Andri Xhahu[citation needed]
 Armenia AMPTV 1TV Hrachuhi Utmazyan [hy] and Sevak Hakobyan
 Cyprus CyBC RIK 2, RIK Sat Kyriakos Pastides
 Estonia ERR ETV2 Estonian: Marko Reikop
ETV+ Russian: Aleksandr Hobotov and Julia Kalenda
 France France Télévisions France 2 Stéphane Bern and Valentina
 Germany ARD/ZDF Kika Consi [de]
WDR MausLive [de] via WDR 5 Annika Witzel and Max Plate
 Georgia GPB First Channel Sport Nika Lobiladze[citation needed]
 Ireland TG4 Louise Cantillon
 Italy RAI Rai 2 Mario Acampa [it], Simone Barlaam and Kaze
 Malta PBS TVM No commentator
 Netherlands NPO/AVROTROS NPO Zapp via NPO 3 Bart Arens and Matheu Hinzen [nl]
NPO 2 Extra
 North Macedonia MRT MRT 1 Eli Tanaskovska[citation needed]
 Poland TVP TVP2, TVP Polonia Artur Orzech
 Portugal RTP RTP1, RTP África, RTP Internacional Carina Jorge and Nuno Galopim [es]
 San Marino SMRTV San Marino RTV Mirco Zani and Roberto Bagazzoli
 Spain RTVE La 1, TVE Internacional Spanish: Julia Varela and Tony Aguilar
Radio Nacional Spanish: David Asensio and Sara Calvo
La 1, Ràdio 4 Catalan: Sònia Urbano and Xavi Martínez [es]
 Ukraine Suspilne Suspilne Kultura Timur Miroshnychenko
Confirmed broadcasters and commentators in non-participating countries
Country Broadcaster Channel(s) Commentator(s) Ref.
 Croatia HRT HRT 2 Duško Ćurlić and Nika Turković
 Lithuania LRT LRT Plius Ramūnas Zilnys [lt]
 Luxembourg RTL RTL Zwee Eric Lehmann and Raoul Roos [lb]

Incidents and controversies

Implementation of AI

The implementation of AI in the postcards was heavily criticized by fans and media outlets. In the postcards many artists’ appearance was changed to "meet western standards of fashion". For example, the Irish representative's hair was changed to look blonde in her postcard: and one male artist was first accidentally rendered as a female. Besides the postcards, countries like Poland and Estonia were reported to have used AI in their stagings.

Cyberbullying directed at Ukrainian representative

The Ukrainian representitve, Artem Kotenko was subject to cyberbullying by Russian bots on social media. Svitlana Tarabarova said “We analysed: these are Russian bots, a real attack. This year, we did not remain silent, because our goal is to use this example to protect our children, to raise the topic of cyber security in social networks. We explained to Artem that these comments should not affect him. He — a handsome, talented, incredible boy with a very strong song, who has every chance to become No. 1.“ Tarabarova stated that this was the second year in row that the Ukrainian participant facing cyberbullying with Anastasia Dymyd also facing hate comments. Tarabarova also said that the team could limit Dymyd’s screen time but not with Kotenko since he controlls his social media accounts.

See also

  • Eurovision Song Contest 2024
  • Eurovision Young Musicians 2024

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