
Austria's Eurovision winner receives hero's welcome
Austrian singer JJ returned to Vienna on Sunday to a hero's welcome, greeted by hundreds of cheering fans after winning the Eurovision Song Contest in Basel. The 24-year-old countertenor, who performed under his stage name but whose real name is Johannes Pietsch, stepped off the plane clutching a bouquet of red roses and his trophy, smiling as supporters pressed against security barriers to get a glimpse. Inside the arrivals hall, the crowd erupted as JJ raised his trophy and thanked fans for believing in him.
'Thank you all for coming. Thank you for believing in me and for being so kind,' he told the crowd, his voice thick with emotion. Supporters waved heart-shaped balloons and rainbow flags as his winning song, 'Wasted Love', played over the loudspeakers.
'I watched the reactions on social media and everyone was stunned by his voice, in America, in Australia, everywhere,' said Samira Kalmar, 52, who said she had never doubted he would win. Barbara Mayer, 53, who came with her two daughters, also praised the artist whose performance, reaching soprano highs between ballad refrains before culminating in a techno finale, won over the audience. 'The opera reminded people of Vienna, but there was also a modern component and good staging,' she said.
Austrian Chancellor Christian Stocker (third right), Austrian Vice-Chancellor and Culture Minister Andreas Babler (second left), state secretary Elisabeth Zehetner (left), ORF General Director Roland Weissmann (right hidden) and Austrian Foreign Minister Beate Meinl-Reisinger (second right) pose for a selfie with singer Johannes Pietsch aka JJ (third left), winner of the 2025 Eurovision Song Contest, during a press conference at the Chancellery in Vienna, Austria on May 19, 2025.
Austrian singer Johannes Pietsch aka JJ, winner of the 2025 Eurovision Song Contest, poses with his trophy after a press conference at the Chancellery in Vienna, Austria on May 19, 2025.
Pietsch will be honored at the chancellery on Monday, where Chancellor Christian Stocker will receive him in the morning, having praised his 'magnificent achievement' the previous day. Vienna's mayor, Michael Ludwig, said the city was ready to host Eurovision, although other cities, including Innsbruck in Tyrol, are also contenders - particularly after Basel showed the contest need not always take place in a capital.
At the public broadcaster ORF however, there are concerns about the high cost of staging Eurovision at a time when the organization is facing budget cuts and Austria's finances remain tight. In Switzerland, the cost was estimated at several tens of millions of euros, with expenses shared between public television, the host city, and other partners. The Austrian government has sought to reassure the public. Culture and Media Minister Andreas Babler expressed confidence that a 'solution will be found' to organize the event. — AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Kuwait Times
20 hours ago
- Kuwait Times
Iran Cannes winner Panahi backs trucker strikes
Iranian director and screenwriter and producer Jafar Panahi poses with the trophy during a photocall after winning the Palme d'Or for the film "Un simple accident" (A Simple Accident) during the closing ceremony at the 78th edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, southern France.--AFP Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi backed week-long nationwide strikes by truckers Wednesday as a "loud call" to the authorities, after arriving home from his triumph at the Cannes film festival. Truck drivers across Iran were striking for a seventh day on Wednesday in a stoppage rare in its length and magnitude, seeking better conditions in a sector crucial for the economy in the Islamic republic. After starting last week in the southern port city of Bandar Abbas, the strike action has spread across the country, according to reports by monitoring groups on social media and Persian-language media based outside Iran. The truck drivers are protesting a rise in insurance premiums, poor road security, high fuel prices and low freight rates, according to union statements cited by these media. "They are fed up. They have no choice but to go strike," Panahi wrote on Instagram, having returned to Iran on Monday after winning the Palme d'or for his latest film "It Was Just an Accident". "When thieves and illiterate people are put in charge, the result is this terrible situation: corruption and mismanagement in everything, from the economy and culture to the environment and politics," added Panahi. The acclaimed director was long banned from filmmaking and unable to leave Iran, having also spent time in prison due to his political stances. "This strike is a loud call to the government saying: 'Enough! Stop all this oppression and plunder'," he said. Persian-language television channels based outside Iran, including Iran International and Manoto, which are critical of the government, said the strike was continuing Wednesday, broadcasting images of deserted roads sent from inside Iran as well as trucks parked up in cities including the central city of Isfahan. It was not immediately possible to independently verify the images. Tankers carrying fuel from the major refinery in Abadan in western Iran have now joined the strike, Manoto said. Iran International also said some participants had been arrested in the western city of Kermanshah, following arrests earlier this week in the southern city of Shiraz. The same outlets also indicated that there have been strikes in other sectors in Iran, notably by bakers who are angered by early morning power cuts when they are baking bread. — AFP

Kuwait Times
20 hours ago
- Kuwait Times
In troubled world, grown-ups find joy in doll's houses
A log burns in the hearth in the artfully lit drawing room. The armchairs look plush and inviting. Glasses and a bottle of wine stand ready as a grandfather clock keeps time. It is all straight out of a glossy magazine and yet every carefully crafted item in the room could fit into the palm of one hand. "I love Victorian (19th century) houses and always wanted to live in one but it never happened," laughed doll's house enthusiast Michele Simmons, admiring the cosy miniature scene by historical specialists Mulvany & Rogers. The 57-year-old corporate recruiter revived her childhood passion for doll's houses during the pandemic and has since "flipped" about 10, buying them, doing them up and selling them on. She and her daughter thought nothing of flying all night from Boston in the United States to hunt for tiny curtains and a child's crib at the leading Kensington Dollshouse festival in London. "I love it! You don't think about anything else when you are doing this," she told AFP, admitting she often had to be dragged out of her work shed to feed her children as she became so absorbed. People attend the London Dollhouse Showcase. A picture shows miniatures at the London Dollhouse Showcase. People attend the London Dollhouse Showcase. People attend the London Dollhouse Showcase. People attend the London Dollhouse Showcase. People attend the London Dollhouse Showcase. Exquisite miniatures The annual festival has been gathering some of the world's finest miniature craftspeople since 1985, celebrating a hobby that has seen rising interest recently and a mushrooming of online activity. It showcases tiny versions of anything needed to furnish a house, from chandeliers and paintings to mahogany dining tables and kitchen items, all with steep price tags. Doll's houses may be traditionally associated with children, but this high-end miniature collecting is very much an adult hobby. "This is craftspeople working on just exquisite things," said self-confessed "tiny-obsessed" Rachel Collings, who bought toys from renowned miniaturists Laurence & Angela St. Leger. Every single one of her purchases, which cost at least £40 ($53), fits easily into a small plastic container and will be added to her collection of equally small items. "I've got half a cut lemon. Just imagine the size of that. A lemon squeezer and a pastry brush and a hand whisk that actually works," said the 47-year-old editor. "It's an inner child thing. These things are just so beautiful." Doll's houses originated from Europe in the 1500s when they were used to display the miniature possessions of the wealthy. People attend the London Dollhouse Showcase. People attend the London Dollhouse Showcase. A picture shows miniatures at the London Dollhouse Showcase. People attend the London Dollhouse Showcase. A picture shows miniatures at the London Dollhouse Showcase. Just as at the London festival, these so-called "baby houses" were strictly for adults, not children. Retired midwife Susan Evans, 67, on her annual pilgrimage from Colwyn Bay in north Wales, does not just have one doll's house. "I have a whole village," she said. "It's got 18 Victorian shops, a school, a manor house, a pub and a now a church," she said, adding that the church had cost over £4,000. Initially the hobby was just a stress-buster to help her unwind, but she has now raised thousands of pounds hosting groups to visit the display in her home. "It's my passion. It's escapism and it's about using your imagination, which I think is very good for your mental health," she said. 'In control' Kensington Dollshouse organizer Charlotte Stokoe said there was currently huge interest in doll's houses and miniatures compared to before the pandemic. "When the world itself is going a bit crazy with so much stress in everyone's lives, it's quite relaxing. You are in control," she said, adding that many people had delighted in pulling out old doll's houses during the Covid lockdowns. And at a time of rising costs, she said, people had "discovered they can do interior design that maybe they can't do with their own homes -- in small scale it's so much more doable". Medical anthropologist Dalia Iskander of University College London (UCL) has spent three years researching the subject for her forthcoming book "Miniature Antidotes". "For many people it's a way of exploring their own experiences and memories and imagination and incorporating that into these miniature worlds," she said. A whole range of medical issues such as depression or anxiety could all be explored through miniatures in a "beneficial" way, she added. Miniatures enthusiast Collings said the hobby had become such a source of happiness that her 12-year-old daughter also got involved. She urged anyone to give it a try. "When everything is difficult, there are these tiny things," she said. "Sometimes I just go and sit and look at them and it just makes me happy."—AFP

Kuwait Times
2 days ago
- Kuwait Times
Fire walkers defy pain in ancient Greek ritual
Under a cloud of incense smoke, a group of men and women in a village in northern Greece swayed slowly to the music before removing their shoes and rushing, barefoot, onto waiting embers. The fire walking ritual, held on the day of the Orthodox feast of Saint Constantine and Saint Helena on May 21, has been practiced for over a century in four villages of the Greek region of Macedonia, which borders Bulgaria. Each year, this ceremony -- called "Anastenaria" ("sighs" in Greek) -- attracts crowds of visitors. Considered a pagan ritual to honor the ancient Greek gods Dionysus and Artemis, the ancient custom was once banned by the powerful Greek Orthodox Church. For the past several decades, cooler heads have prevailed. But the rite remains shrouded in mystery. "Those who walk on fire don't like to talk about it much," explained Sotiris Tzivelis, 86, who grew up in the village of Agia Eleni, near the city of Serres. "Back then, when someone fell ill, we would call the 'anastenarides' to help heal them," he told AFP. The family requesting help would make a special handkerchief, to be blessed during the ceremony. It is one of these handkerchiefs that the ceremony leader, Babis Theodorakis, gives participants to mark the start of the ritual in the "konaki" -- a room decorated with Orthodox icons where participants prepare by dancing to the sound of the lyre and the drum. When ready, they head to a nearby meadow and form a circle around the glowing embers. "I have never walked on fire, but every year, I give our family's handkerchief to the dancers before taking it back at the end of the ritual," said Tzivelis. Musicians play traditional Greek music as a select group of faithful known as "Anastenarides" take part in a trance-like preparatory dance before walking on hot coal during a religious ritual ceremony in the northern Greek village of Agia Eleni.--AFP photos A select group of faithful known as "Anastenarides" take part in a trance-like preparatory dance before walking on hot coal. Men light a fire to prepare the burning embers before a select group of faithful known as "Anastenarides" walk on hot coal. A faithful known as "Anastenarides" walks on hot coal. A select group of faithful known as "Anastenarides" walk on hot coal. A faithful known as "Anastenarides" shows their feet after walking on hot coal. Pagan ritual According to local tradition, the rite originated in the villages of Kosti and Brodivo in southeastern Bulgaria, where Greek communities lived before emigrating to Greece in the early 20th century with the collapse of the Ottoman Empire. "How to walk on fire without getting burned, I can't explain it to you!" said Babis Theodorakis, the ceremony leader. Apostolis Vlaspos, 65, who has practiced the ritual for 20 years, described it as "something internal, an indescribable force". "The first time I walked on fire, I saw the image of Saint Constantine, whom we call 'grandfather', and I felt like an electric shock," he said. After circling the glowing embers three times, participants begin to walk on them, swaying to the music and clutching icons under their arms. When they return to the "konaki", visitors rush to photograph them and check that they have no burns on their feet -- proof of a miracle, according to believers. The ceremony concludes with a meal of mutton specially slaughtered for the occasion. "Those who say that people walking on fire are in a trance are wrong," said villager Kostas Liouros, 67. "What happens to them is natural and requires mental peace and great concentration," he explained. "Some say we drink alcohol or that before removing our socks and shoes, we coat our feet with herbs and things like that, but none of that is true," added another participant, who declined to give his name. — AFP