Recent work on media events has questioned their integrative function, arguing that they operate as sites of symbolic struggle between different interest groups. However, relatively few studies have examined the experiences of those who design, organize, and attend such events. This article addresses this lacuna with reference to the biggest nonsporting live TV event in the world, the Eurovision Song Contest. Drawing on data from the 2014 competition in Copenhagen, Denmark, it examines the varying levels of commitment to the event among organizers, fans, broadcasters, and journalists and, in particular, notes how this shaped responses to a controversial incident involving the Russian entry. While those with an ongoing interest, including or...
This article focuses on the growing importance of large-scale events and their central role in a glo...
Amongst the most prominent uses of Twitter is its role in the discussion of widely televised events:...
From the vantage point of the early 1990s, when the end of the Cold War not only inspired the discou...
Recent work on media events has questioned their integrative function, arguing that they operate as ...
Academic literature on media events is increasingly concerned with their global dimensions and the a...
The concept of media events continues to generate widespread debate among scholars around the globe....
Over the last six decades, the Eurovision Song Contest has tried to embody the voice of European uni...
In this article, we use the concept of the potlatch to explore the organization and valuation of the...
This paper examines Eurovision as a site for the public representation of the nation and explores th...
As economic and budgetary scandals reached Danish front pages in 2014 over the Eurovision Song Conte...
This paper examines Eurovision as a site for the public representation of the nation and explores th...
This article explores volunteering in relation to the Eurovision Song Contest (ESC), which took plac...
Politics is officially banned from Eurovision, and songs that are too political can be prevented fro...
This article focuses on the growing importance of large-scale events and their central role in a glo...
Amongst the most prominent uses of Twitter is its role in the discussion of widely televised events:...
From the vantage point of the early 1990s, when the end of the Cold War not only inspired the discou...
Recent work on media events has questioned their integrative function, arguing that they operate as ...
Academic literature on media events is increasingly concerned with their global dimensions and the a...
The concept of media events continues to generate widespread debate among scholars around the globe....
Over the last six decades, the Eurovision Song Contest has tried to embody the voice of European uni...
In this article, we use the concept of the potlatch to explore the organization and valuation of the...
This paper examines Eurovision as a site for the public representation of the nation and explores th...
As economic and budgetary scandals reached Danish front pages in 2014 over the Eurovision Song Conte...
This paper examines Eurovision as a site for the public representation of the nation and explores th...
This article explores volunteering in relation to the Eurovision Song Contest (ESC), which took plac...
Politics is officially banned from Eurovision, and songs that are too political can be prevented fro...
This article focuses on the growing importance of large-scale events and their central role in a glo...
Amongst the most prominent uses of Twitter is its role in the discussion of widely televised events:...
From the vantage point of the early 1990s, when the end of the Cold War not only inspired the discou...