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Lights, camera, glitter ball: The Eurovision Song Contest reaches its grand final

Lights, camera, glitter ball: The Eurovision Song Contest reaches its grand final

BASEL, Switzerland (AP) — The world's largest live music event has reached its glitter-drenched conclusion with the grand final on Saturday of the Eurovision Song Contest, a celebration of music and unity ruffled by discord over Israel's participation.
A trio singing for Sweden about the joys of saunas and a classically trained Austrian countertenor are among those tipped to take the microphone-shaped Eurovision trophy at the contest in
Basel, Switzerland
.
But at the ever-unpredictable event, the prize could just as easily go to powerful singers from France, the Netherlands or Finland — or even an Estonian who sings about Italian coffee. The final kicks off at 9 p.m. local time.
Sweden's sauna song is a favorite
Bookmakers say the favorite is
KAJ, representing Sweden
with their ode to sauna culture 'Bara Bada Bastu,' followed by Austrian singer JJ's pop-opera song 'Wasted Love.'
French chanteuse Louane has risen up the odds with 'maman,' as has Dutch singer Claude with soulful ballad 'C'est La Vie' and Finland's Erika Vikman with the innuendo-laden 'Ich Komme.'
Estonia's Tommy Cash
is also a contender with his highly caffeinated dance-pop song 'Espresso Macchiato.'
Israel's Yuval Raphael
has won many fans with her anthemic 'New Day Will Rise,' but also faced protests from pro-Palestinian demonstrators calling for Israel to be kicked out of the contest over its conduct of the
war against Hamas in Gaza
.
Acts from 26 countries — trimmed from 37 entrants through
two elimination semifinals
— will perform to some
160 million viewers
for the continent's pop crown. No smoke machine, jet of flame or dizzying light display has been spared by musicians who have 3 minutes to win over millions of viewers who, along with national juries of music professionals, pick the winner.
The live show is also set to feature a guest performance by
nonbinary Swiss singer Nemo
— who won last year's contest in Sweden — and a face-off between two fan favorites: Baby Lasagna of Croatia, the 2024 runner up with 'Rim Tim Tagi Dim,' and Finland's Käärijä, whose rap-pop party anthem 'Cha Cha Cha' came second in 2023.
There are also rumors of an appearance by Celine Dion. Before she was a global star, the Canadian chanteuse won Eurovision in 1988, competing for Switzerland. She sent a video message to one of the semifinals, where three singers performed her winning song, 'Ne partez pas sans moi' (Don't Leave Without Me).
An eclectic competition
Dean Vuletic, an expert on the history of Eurovision, said the competition has become more diverse over the years, both musically and linguistically. There are songs in 20 languages this year, including Ukrainian, Icelandic, Albanian, Latvian and Maltese.
'In the past it was about having a catchy, innocuous pop song, usually in English,' he said. But in the past decade 'we've seen songs become much more socially and politically engaged, songs that present the audience with some sort of meaning.'
'In recent years the formulaic approach to a Eurovision entry hasn't succeeded,' he added. 'An entry needs to be memorable and it needs to be authentic in order to succeed these days.'
Gaza war clouds the contest
This year's contest has been roiled for a second year by disputes over Israel's participation. Dozens of former participants, including Switzerland's Nemo, have called for Israel to be excluded.
Pro-Palestinian and pro-Israel protests have both taken place in Basel, though on a much smaller scale than at last year's event in Sweden, where tensions spilled over backstage and Dutch competitor Joost Klein was expelled over an alleged altercation with a crew member.
A pro-Palestinian demonstration is planned for Saturday evening in central Basel, about 3 kilometers (2 miles) from the St. Jakobshalle arena contest venue.
A group of Israel supporters gathered in Basel's cathedral square on Saturday to root for Raphael and to show that 'Jews belong in public spaces in Switzerland,' said Zurich resident Rebecca Laes-Kushner.
She said 'it would be such a strong statement against antisemitism,' if Raphael won.
'This is supposed to be about music, not about hate,' she said.
The European Broadcasting Union or EBU, which runs Eurovision, tightened the contest's code of conduct this year, calling on participants to respect Eurovision's values of 'universality, diversity, equality and inclusivity' and its political neutrality.
After a controversial ban in 2024 on flags, apart from national ones, being waved in the arena, this year audience members can bring Palestinian flags or any others, as long as they are legal under Swiss law. Performers, though, can only wave their own country's flag.
Axel Åhman, one third of favorites KAJ, acknowledged that it's tough to keep Eurovision an unpolitical event.
'The world always seeps in in some sense,' he told the AP. 'But we're here to represent Sweden and we have prepared for this for all our lives and want to make the best of our moment as artists in this huge and legendary competition.
'So our main focus is there, and the politics (we) try to leave that to the EBU and those actually making the decisions.'
Eurovision director Martin Green told reporters that the organizers' goal was to 're-establish a sense of unity, calm and togetherness this year in a difficult world.'
'All 37 delegations, in difficult times, have behaved impeccably,' he said.
___
Hilary Fox and Kwiyeon Ha contributed to this report.

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Napoleon's iconic hat, red foilo and throne to hit the auction block —but will Elon Musk buy them?
Napoleon's iconic hat, red foilo and throne to hit the auction block —but will Elon Musk buy them?

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

Napoleon's iconic hat, red foilo and throne to hit the auction block —but will Elon Musk buy them?

Elon Musk could become the owner of a host of French conqueror Napoleon Bonaparte's personal items — if the current seller has his way. The Tesla billionaire would be perfect to purchase the collection, according to businessman Pierre-Jean Chalençon, because his spirit reminds him of the late 18th century military commander and Emperor. Speaking of the items coming up for sale, Chalençon told The Post: 'They are like my children. And I wish Elon Musk, the new Napoleon, to buy everything, to keep my children all together.' Advertisement 10 Edouard Detaille's painting of Napoleon during the Italian campaign may fetch more than $100,000 at Sotheby's auction later this month. Sotheby's The collection is 'one of the most significant Napoleonic offerings ever to come to market,' according to auctioneer Sotheby's. It includes more than 100 items such as one of the Napoleon's iconic bicorne hats, his coronation sword, a folding camp bed, ornate throne and even a sleeve from one of his consular garments, worn when he led the French Republic as First Consul for five years beginning in 1799. The sale is scheduled for June 25 in Paris, but a special exhibit is opening at Sotheby's Upper East Side showroom on Thursday. Here are some of the highlights: Bicorne hat Advertisement Ever the trailblazer, Napoleon was known for wearing his bicorne (two cornered) hat side-to-side across his head, rather than the more conventional front to back, with the point at the front, developing his own style. The hat on sale at Sotheby's was created by Poupard, Napoleon's hatmaker, and was a gift from the Emperor to General Georges Mouton, his trusted aide-de-camp. Napoleon praised Mouton's important role in the Battle of Essling in May 1809, calling him 'a lion.' Napoleon biographer Andrew Roberts told The Post the hat, estimated to sell between $570,000 and $913,0000, will likely fetch significantly more once Napoleon 'fanatics with money' start bidding. There are only 17 such hats that belonged to the French statesman, who died in 1821, in existence today, he said. Advertisement 10 A bicorne hat that Napoleon gifted to one of his most important generals, is scheduled to be auctioned at Sotheby's sale of Pierre-Jean Chalençon's collection of Napoleonic artifacts. Sotheby's Napoleon's sleeve The sleeve, which has a pre-auction estimate between $22,000 and $34,000 was kept as a souvenir by Napoleon's tailor after he had removed it when a servant spilled sauce on it. 'It was kept in the tailor's family as a treasured heirloom,' according to the Sotheby's catalogue. 10 A sleeve from one of Napoleon's garments will be auctioned later this month in Paris. The sleeve was removed by Napoleon's tailor after a servant spilled sauce on it. It could fetch more than $30,000. Sotheby's Advertisement 10 Josephine was the love of Napoleon's life although he divorced her when she could not produce a male heir. The couple continued to correspond with each other even after their divorce. Getty Images 10 Pierre-Jean Chalençon says he wants a billionaire like Elon Musk to purchase his entire collection of Napoleonic artifacts, and to hire him as a consultant to organize museum shows. AFP via Getty Images The red folio Also up for auction is a 'monumental' red leather folio that likely contained the certificate of divorce between Napoleon and his beloved wife Josephine de Beauharnai, as well as passionate love letters between the couple. Napoleon split from his wife in 1809 when she could not provide him a male heir. He then married Marie Louise, daughter of the Emperor of Austria. However, he was bereft at losing his 'lucky star' and continued to correspond with Josephine after their split. 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For Ana de Armas, Keanu Reeves' co-star 10 years ago and once again, 'Ballerina' is a pirouette
For Ana de Armas, Keanu Reeves' co-star 10 years ago and once again, 'Ballerina' is a pirouette

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

For Ana de Armas, Keanu Reeves' co-star 10 years ago and once again, 'Ballerina' is a pirouette

NEW YORK (AP) — Years before Ana de Armas was using an ice skate to slice a neck in 'From the World of John Wick: Ballerina,' she co-starred with Keanu Reeves in a much different film. The erotic thriller 'Knock Knock,' released in 2015, was de Armas' first Hollywood film. De Armas, born and raised in Cuba, had just come to Los Angeles after acting in Spain. English was new to her, so she had to learn her lines phonetically. 'It was tough and I felt miserable at times and very lonely,' she says in an interview. 'But I wanted to prove myself. I remember being in meetings with producers and they would be like, 'OK, I'll see you in a year when you learn English.' Before I left the office, I would say, 'I'll see you in two months.'' Since 'Knock Knock,' her rise to stardom has been one of the last decade's most meteoric. She was radiant even as a hologram in 'Blade Runner 2049.' She stole the show in Rian Johnson's star-studded 'Knives Out.' She breezed through the Bond movie 'No Time to Die.' She was Oscar nominated for her Marilyn Monroe in 'Blonde. ' And now, 10 years after those scenes with Reeves, de Armas is for the first time headlining a big summer action movie. In 'Ballerina,' in theaters Friday, de Armas' progressive development as an unlikely action star reaches a butt-kicking crescendo, inheriting the mantle of one of the most esteemed, high-body-count franchises. 'It's a big moment in my career, and I know that. I can see that,' she says. 'It makes me look back in many ways, just being with Keanu in another film in such a different place in my career. It definitely gives me perspective of the journey and everything since we met. Things have come far since then.' Taking on the pressure of 'John Wick' While de Armas, 37, isn't new to movie stardom, or the tabloid coverage that comes with it, many of her career highlights have been streaming releases. 'The Gray Man' and 'Blonde' were Netflix. 'Ghosted' was Apple TV+. But 'Ballerina' will rely on de Armas (and abiding 'John Wick' fandom) to put moviegoers in seats. Heading in, analysts expected an opening weekend of around $35-40 million, which would be a solid result for a spinoff that required extensive reshoots. Reviews, particularly for de Armas playing a ballerina-assassin, have been good. 'There's a lot of pressure,' says director Len Wiseman. 'It's a lot to carry all on her shoulders. But she'll be the first person to tell you: 'Put it on. Let me carry the weight. I'm totally game.'' De Armas, whose talents include the ability to be present and personable on even the most frenzied red carpets, has done the globe-trotting work to make 'Ballerina' a big deal: appearing at CinemaCon, gamely eating hot wings and cheerfully deflecting questions about her next film, 'Deeper,' with Tom Cruise. Yet for someone so comfortable in the spotlight, one of the more interesting facts about de Armas is that she lives part time in that bastion of young A-listers: Vermont. 'Yeah, it surprised many people,' she says, chuckling. 'As soon as I went up there, I knew that was going to be a place that would bring me happiness and sanity and peace. But I know for a Cuban who doesn't like cold very much, it's very strange.' 'This has been a surprise' Winding up in northern New England is just as unexpected as landing an action movie like 'Ballerina.' She grew up with the conviction, from age 12, that she would be an actor. But she studied theater. 'I never thought I was going to do action,' de Armas says. 'What was relatable for me was watching Cuban actors on TV and in movies. That was my reality. That's all I knew, so the actors I looked up to were those.' De Armas also had bad asthma, which makes some of the things she does in 'Ballerina' — a movie with a flamethrower duel — all the more remarkable to her. 'I couldn't do anything,' she remembers. 'I couldn't run. I sometimes couldn't play with my friends. I had to just be home and be still so I wouldn't get an asthma attack. So I never thought of myself as someone athletic or able to run just a block. So this has been a surprise.' At 14, she auditioned and got into Havana's National Theatre of Cuba. Four years later, with Spanish citizenship through her grandparents, she moved to Madrid to pursue acting. When she arrive in LA in 2014, she had to start all over again. Now as one of the top Latina stars in Hollywood, she's watched as immigrant paths like hers have grow increasingly arduous if not impossible. The day after she spoke to The Associated Press, the Trump administration announced a travel ban on 12 countries and heavy restrictions on citizens of other countries, including Cuba. 'I got here at a time when things were definitely easier in that sense,' says de Armas, who announced her then-imminent U.S. citizenship while hosting 'Saturday Night Live' in 2023. 'So I just feel very lucky for that. But it's difficult. Everything that's going on is very difficult and very sad and really challenging for many people. I definitely wish things were different.' 'She doesn't just enjoy the view' Chad Stahelski, director of the four 'John Wick' films and producer of 'Ballerina,' was about to start production on 'John Wick: Chapter 4' when producer Basil Iwanyk and Nathan Kahane, president of Lionsgate, called to set up a Zoom about casting de Armas. He quickly watched every scene she had been in. 'How many people would have played the Bond girl kind of goofy like that?' he says. 'I know that I can harden people up. I know I can make them the assassin, but getting the charm and the love and the humor out of someone is trickier. But she had it.' In 'Knives Out,' Stahelski saw someone who could go from scared and uncertain to a look of 'I'm going to stab you in the eye.' 'I like that in my action heroes,' he says. 'I don't want to see the stoic, superhero vibe where everything's going to be OK.' But it wasn't just her acting or her charisma that convinced Stahelski. It was her life story. ''John Wick' is all hard work — and I don't mean just in the training. You've got to love it and put yourself out there,' says Stahelski. 'When you get her story about how she came from the age of 12, got into acting, what she sacrificed, what she did, that's what got my attention. 'Oh, she's a perseverer. She doesn't just enjoy the view, she enjoys the climb.'' When that quote is read back to her, de Armas laughs, and agrees. 'Being Cuban, and my upbringing and my family and everything I've done, I've never had a plan B,' she says. 'I've never had that thing of, 'Well, if it doesn't work, my family can help.' Or, 'I can do this other career.' This was it. And I also knew, besides being the thing I loved the most, this was my survival. This is how I live. This is how I feed myself and my family. So it's also a sense of, I don't know, responsibility.' That makes her reflect back to when she was just trying to make it in Hollywood, sounding out words, trying not to disappoint directors whose instructions she could barely understand, trying not to be intimidated by the action star across from her who had just finished shooting the first 'John Wick.' 'I was so committed to do it,' she says. 'I was so invested in the trying of it, just giving it a shot. When I give something a shot, I try my best, whatever that is. Then I can actually say: I gave it a shot.'

The Biggest New Restaurant Openings This Month
The Biggest New Restaurant Openings This Month

Eater

time2 hours ago

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The Biggest New Restaurant Openings This Month

This is Eater's guide to all the new restaurants, bars, and cafes that opened in June 2025. This list will be updated weekly and is a round-up of new places in the city we're interested in checking out. When we've been to a place, and like it, we will then include an abbreviated number of openings on our heatmap to let you know the ones that are actually worth it. Stay tuned. If there's an opening in your neighborhood that we've missed, let us know at ny@ Chinatown: King co-owner Anni Shi has debuted an independent wine bar, Lei, with a Chinese American menu on a historic street in the neighborhood. It opens on Friday, June 6. 15-17 Doyers Street, near Pell Street City Island: This seafood haven, an island off the Bronx mainland, has a new restaurant called ATIK. The Mediterranean spot comes from an owner of neighboring Vistamar, a Latin restaurant on the island, alongside partner Josh DeCuffa, a City Island lifer 'whose grandfather founded the beloved next door Jack's Bait and Tackle in 1945,' per a spokesperson. 555 City Island Avenue, at Cross Street Crown Heights: Bottega, a new coffee shop and sandwich spot, has opened in Brooklyn from the team behind Italian restaurant Maretta in the East Village. 215 Rogers Avenue, at Union Street Long Island City: It's a speakeasy switch-up; a cocktail bar stationed inside the Taiwanese street food concept Gulp, which was formerly called 929, has been replaced by one called 56709, with an 1980s Japanese theme. 42-45 27th Street, near 42nd Road Noho: As you might've heard, it's a great time for Vietnamese coffee in New York, the latest is 88 Coffee, which debuted at Bowery Market, according to EV Grieve. 348 Bowery, at Great Jones Street Nomad: Mama Mezze, a new Mediterranean spot, has debuted near Madison Square Park, with a 100+ seat patio. It comes from the team behind the Italian restaurant group, La Pecora Bianca, which has several iterations in the city. 1123 Broadway, at West 25th Street Penn Station: Dining options around Penn Station have leveled up over the past year. Now, Sunday Hospitality — known for Rule of Thirds in Greenpoint and overseeing the new hospitality projects at the reborn Hotel Chelsea — is opening something new in the area. It seems every new restaurant is looking to old-school New York steakhouses as of late, and the Dynamo Room is no different. But in Sunday's hands, this could hopefully be the de facto dining-out option before going to Madison Square Garden. 2 Penn Plaza Rockefeller Center: Lobel's Original, from the family that runs the butcher shop, Lobel's of New York (it first debuted on the Upper East Side in 1954), opened an offshoot at Rock Center. Several sandwiches, including a prime rib version, are for sale. 30 Rockefeller Plaza, rink level Upper East Side: Marlow East features a Southern-inspired menu that ranges from buttermilk fried chicken and Parker House rolls to country-ham-and-pimento croquettes. 1022 Lexington Avenue, at East 73rd Street Upper East Side: The Frick Collection opens its new museum restaurant this week. Westmoreland — the museum's first restaurant in 89 years —will debut starting on Friday, June 6. It's overseen by the Danny Meyer-founded Union Square Events, in a kitchen led by chef Skyllar Hughes, who had most recently been at Meyer's Italian restaurant Ci Siamo. It's part of the museum's overall renovations, which debuted back in April. 1 E. 70th Street, at Fifth Avenue West Village: Dell'anima is what Grub Street describes as 'once an early 2010s favorite,' where celebrity couple sightings were frequent. It has been revived in what was the old home of Pearl Oyster Bar, followed by the short-lived Figure Eight restaurant. 18 Cornelia Street, near West Fourth Street Sign up for our newsletter.

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