🇭🇷 Croatia selects their entry

Croatia selects their entry tonight. After two semifinals, the final of DORA will be held. Out of 16 songs, the Croatians will select a follow up for Baby Lasagna. Televote will decide half of the points, a Croatian jury a quarter and an international jury also a quarter.

The show starts at 20:15 CET and you can watch it on YouTube. These are the contestants:

nr. Artist Title  
1 EoT Bye Bye Bye
2 Natalli Domi si srcu mom
3 IVXN Monopol
4 Filomena Strong
5 Fenksta Extra
6 Laurakojapjeva NPC
7 Nipplepeople Znak
8 Ogenj Daj, daj
9 Petar Brkljačić Kraj
10 Matt Shaft Welcome to the Circus
11 Marko Škugor Šta da Boga molim ja
12 Magazin AaAaA
13 Marko Bošnjak Poison Cake
14 Marko Tolja Through the Dark
15 Lelek The Soul of my Soul
16 Luka Nižetić Južina

 

Maja and Boris Kolarić, members of EoT, took part in 2019 with the band Manntra and reached a 4th place.
Marko Škugor
 was a member of Klapa S Mora, who represented Croatia in the 2013 Eurovision Song Contest with the song “Mižerja”.
Magazin competed in DORA 1995 (winner!), 1997 (7th), 1998 (6th), 1999 (5th), 2005 (2nd) and 2006 (8th). Along with Lidija, they represented Croatia in the Eurovision Song Contest 1995 with “Nostalgija”. Their current singer Lorena Bućan took part in DORA 2019 (2nd) and 2020 (5th) as a solo singer.
Marko Bošnjak
was the runner up in DORA 2022.
Marko Tolja
 participated in DORA 2007 (12th) and 2009 (semifinal).
Luka Nižetić
 competed in DORA 2003 (20th), 2005 (6th), 2007 (11th) and 2019 (3rd).



Related news

Eurovision 2026

Eurovision 2026 reactions after second semi-final

The Eurovision 2026 reactions continued immediately after Thursday night’s second semi-final in Vienna. Bulgaria, Ukraine, Norway, Australia, Romania, Malta, Cyprus, Albania, Denmark and Czechia qualified for Saturday’s Grand Final. Azerbaijan, Luxembourg, Armenia, Switzerland and Latvia did not make it through. Since Eurovision will only reveal the detailed ranking after the final, the “winners” of the night are again the ten qualifiers. Social media quickly filled with tears, hugs and short messages from the green room. Qualifiers celebrate their Grand Final place Bulgaria’s DARA was the first name announced, and her disbelief was clear. In a filmed reaction, she said she “could not believe” it, while also underlining how much she loved being on stage with “Bangaranga”. Ukraine’s LELÉKA reacted with a softer kind of joy. She said she felt happy, hopeful and “lightful” after taking “Ridnym” to the final. Australia’s Delta Goodrem also moved quickly into gratitude mode. After qualifying with “Eclipse”, she called the moment “pure magic” and thanked fans for every vote, message and bit of love. Norway’s Jonas Lovv sounded equally relieved. Speaking to Norwegian press, he said the result felt “insanely” good and joked that his celebration plan was to go straight to bed. Malta’s AIDAN gave one of the most emotional reactions of the night. He said he was “genuinely so happy” and pointed out that the Maltese language was back on the Eurovision stage after 54 years. Denmark’s Søren Torpegaard Lund described himself as overwhelmed and happy, while Czechia’s Daniel Zizka said he was grateful, tired and still trying to understand what had happened. Albania’s Alis also remained emotional after “Nân” reached the final. Cyprus’ Antigoni thanked everyone who supported “JALLA” and said she had felt confident Cyprus could qualify. Romania’s Alexandra Căpitănescu also celebrated online after “Choke Me” secured Romania a place in the Grand Final. For all ten qualifiers, the mood immediately shifted from nerves to preparation for Saturday. Non-qualifiers thank fans and look back For the five non-qualifiers, the Eurovision 2026 reactions were more reflective. Luxembourg’s Eva Marija looked back with pride after “Mother Nature” missed the final. She said she had given everything, was proud of herself and felt grateful for the Eurovision adventure. Azerbaijan’s JIVA ended her performance by thanking Europe, but “Just Go” did not qualify. Armenia’s SIMÓN, Switzerland’s Veronica Fusaro and Latvia’s Atvara also stayed in the semi-final. Their latest Eurovision messages focused on the performance itself, the meaning behind their songs and the support around them. That made their reactions quieter, but not less meaningful. The second semi-final therefore showed the familiar two sides of Eurovision: pure celebration for the qualifiers and gratitude, disappointment and pride for those whose Vienna journey ended before Saturday.

Read More »
Eurovision 2026
Martijn

Eurovision 2026 reactions after second semi-final

The Eurovision 2026 reactions continued immediately after Thursday night’s second semi-final in Vienna. Bulgaria, Ukraine, Norway, Australia, Romania, Malta, Cyprus, Albania, Denmark and Czechia qualified for Saturday’s Grand Final. Azerbaijan, Luxembourg, Armenia, Switzerland and Latvia did not make it through. Since Eurovision will only reveal the detailed ranking after the final, the “winners” of the night are again the ten qualifiers. Social media quickly filled with tears, hugs and short messages from the green room. Qualifiers celebrate their Grand Final place Bulgaria’s DARA was the first name announced, and her disbelief was clear. In a filmed reaction, she said she “could not believe” it, while also underlining how much she loved being on stage with “Bangaranga”. Ukraine’s LELÉKA reacted with a softer kind of joy. She said she felt happy, hopeful and “lightful” after taking “Ridnym” to the final. Australia’s Delta Goodrem also moved quickly into gratitude mode. After qualifying with “Eclipse”, she called the moment “pure magic” and thanked fans for every vote, message and bit of love. Norway’s Jonas Lovv sounded equally relieved. Speaking to Norwegian press, he said the result felt “insanely” good and joked that his celebration plan was to go straight to bed. Malta’s AIDAN gave one of the most emotional reactions of the night. He said he was “genuinely so happy” and pointed out that the Maltese language was back on the Eurovision stage after 54 years. Denmark’s Søren Torpegaard Lund described himself as overwhelmed and happy, while Czechia’s Daniel Zizka said he was grateful, tired and still trying to understand what had happened. Albania’s Alis also remained emotional after “Nân” reached the final. Cyprus’ Antigoni thanked everyone who supported “JALLA” and said she had felt confident Cyprus could qualify. Romania’s Alexandra Căpitănescu also celebrated online after “Choke Me” secured Romania a place in the Grand Final. For all ten qualifiers, the mood immediately shifted from nerves to preparation for Saturday. Non-qualifiers thank fans and look back For the five non-qualifiers, the Eurovision 2026 reactions were more reflective. Luxembourg’s Eva Marija looked back with pride after “Mother Nature” missed the final. She said she had given everything, was proud of herself and felt grateful for the Eurovision adventure. Azerbaijan’s JIVA ended her performance by thanking Europe, but “Just Go” did not qualify. Armenia’s SIMÓN, Switzerland’s Veronica Fusaro and Latvia’s Atvara also stayed in the semi-final. Their latest Eurovision messages focused on the performance itself, the meaning behind their songs and the support around them. That made their reactions quieter, but not less meaningful. The second semi-final therefore showed the familiar two sides of Eurovision: pure celebration for the qualifiers and gratitude, disappointment and pride for those whose Vienna journey ended before Saturday.

Read More »
Follow Us: