Crowd celebrating Denmark and Norway advancing in Eurovision semifinal in Vienna
Crowd celebrating Denmark and Norway advancing in Eurovision semifinal in Vienna
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Denmark and Norway advance to Eurovision final

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In the second semifinal of the Eurovision Song Contest in Vienna, Denmark and Norway advanced to Saturday's final along with eight other countries.

The Eurovision Song Contest final lineup is now complete following Thursday's second semifinal at Wiener Stadthalle. Ten countries qualified, including Denmark with Søren Torpegaard Lund's entry ”Før vi går hjem” and Norway's Jonas Lovv with ”Ya ya ya”.

Søren Torpegaard Lund changed his lyrics from ”fucking dum” to ”freaking dum” to comply with EBU rules. He described the number as ”very un-Danish” and said after the performance that he was ”glad and hungry”.

Other qualifiers included Bulgaria's Dara, Ukraine's Leléka and Australia's Delta Goodrem. The final takes place on Saturday, May 16. Sweden, already through via the first semifinal with Felicia, will be joined by several neighboring countries.

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Swedish singer Felicia on stage at Eurovision semifinal in Vienna, celebrating advancement to the final.
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Felicia advances to Eurovision final

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Sweden’s Felicia advanced to the Eurovision Song Contest final after performing ”My system” in the first semifinal in Vienna.

Viewers can tune in to the Eurovision Song Contest final to see how the UK performs.

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Bulgaria has won the Eurovision 2026 contest in Vienna with Dara performing Bangaranga. France, represented by Monroe with her song Regarde !, finished in 11th place with 158 points.

Sweden's women's national team ended its World Cup qualifying campaign with a 2–2 draw against Italy at Gamla Ullevi. The side has never missed a World Cup but must now contest a playoff in the autumn for a place at the 2027 tournament in Brazil.

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Sweden's women's national football team led 1-0 but ultimately lost 1-2 to Denmark in the World Cup qualifier at Gamla Ullevi in Gothenburg. Monica Jusu Bah scored her first international goal early on, but Pernille Harder equalized and Janni Thomsen decided the match in added time. The young Swedish backline faced criticism but was defended by head coach Tony Gustavsson.

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