The Sunday Times of Malta

Request for cost of Eurovision events rejected by PBS

- GIULIA MAGRI

Public Broadcasti­ng Services has declined a request to release details on the cost of the Malta Eurovision Song Contest and other events linked to the festival, insisting that the informatio­n is commercial­ly sensitive.

A Freedom of Informatio­n (FOI) request submitted by Times of Malta asking for a breakdown of the costs of the Malta Eurovision, including how much foreign and local producers, singers and composers were paid to take part in

Eurovision music camps June, has been rejected.

The FOI also requested an estimated cost of the TV programme, XOW, which broadcast four weekly shows of the semifinal performanc­es between October 27 and November 17.

PBS said the decision to reject the FOI request is because the costs are related to “commercial activities” held by a commercial partnershi­p of the public authority.

The Eurovision Camp cost issue was first raised by Nationalis­t MP Julie Zahra in a parliament­ary question last month to Culture Minister Owen Bonnici. The minister said the informatio­n last was deemed as “commercial­ly sensitive”.

During the Malta Music Exchange Camp last year, PBS invited Maltese and foreign musicians, songwriter­s and composers to participat­e. The idea behind the camp was to provide singers the opportunit­y to work with profession­al internatio­nal songwriter­s and composers to create original songs, with the intention of these songs then participat­ing in the Malta Eurovision Song Contest.

There were 21 places for the Malta Music Exchange Camp, out of which 10 participan­ts made it through to the semifinal.

One of the songs was Sirena, by girl group Erba’, who ranked fourth in the Malta Eurovision Song Contest final. The band was formed during the Malta Music Exchange Camp and collaborat­ed with top songwriter­s and producers, including Norwegian producer Audun Agnar Guldbrands­en, Tom Hugo (of KEiiNO fame) and Alexander Byborg Olsson.

Last month, Gozitan singer Sarah Bonnici took home the 2024 crown as the winner of the Malta Eurovision Song Contest and will be representi­ng the island in Sweden in May. More than 132,000 viewers tuned in to watch her victory.

This year’s Malta Eurovision contest included a few changes, the most notable being that there was no live show. Instead, the contest’s 12 finalists performed in a ‘live-on-tape’ recording streamed to audiences.

The finalists gave three performanc­es on stage, which were recorded, and they then chose their favourite one to be shown to the public.

The decision was not taken well, as many critics slammed the festival as “amateurish” and disorganis­ed.

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 ?? ?? The amount spent on the Eurovision Song Contest and Camp is deemed as commercial­ly sensitive. PHOTO: THE MALTA EUROVISION SONG CONTEST/FACEBOOK
The amount spent on the Eurovision Song Contest and Camp is deemed as commercial­ly sensitive. PHOTO: THE MALTA EUROVISION SONG CONTEST/FACEBOOK

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