Weekly Update

It’s Tuesday, February 24, 2026, and time for another weekly update! This week saw Belgium and Austria unveiling their Eurovision entries for Vienna. Austria also launched a Eurovision-themed train to build excitement ahead of May. Meanwhile, a decision by Belgium’s VRT broadcaster made waves in the Eurovision community. National finals are in full swing across Europe as well. Italy’s Sanremo festival kicks off, Serbia’s selection reaches its climax, and finalists are being decided in Lithuania, Norway, Finland, and Germany. Here are this week’s top stories:

New Entries
🇧🇪 Belgium

Belgium’s French-language broadcaster RTBF has internally selected 23-year-old Essyla (Alice Van Eesbeeck) to represent the nation with the song “Dancing on the Ice”. Essyla, a former The Voice Belgique finalist, is Belgium’s first female solo Eurovision act since 2020. Her pop ballad “Dancing on the Ice” was co-written by Essyla herself and will fly the Belgian flag in Vienna.

🇦🇹 Austria

Host country Austria also revealed its entry. In the national final Wer singt für Österreich?, 19-year-old singer Cosmó (Benjamin Gedeon) won with his upbeat German-language track “Tanzschein”. Cosmó beat 11 other acts in a combined jury and televote. He earned the honor of representing Austria on home soil at Eurovision 2026. “Tanzschein” (which means “dance ticket”) is a dance-pop song inspired by club culture. As host country, Austria will perform “Tanzschein” directly in the Grand Final.

2026 Contest News

A specially decorated Eurovision train is now traveling across Austria, carrying the contest’s vibrant theme to cities and towns. National railway operator ÖBB unveiled the locomotive, which features striking Eurovision 2026 artwork and branding. ÖBB officials christened the train at Vienna’s central station as part of its launch ceremony. The locomotive’s mission is to build excitement for the upcoming song contest nationwide while also promoting climate-friendly travel for fans.

This eye-catching train is part of ÖBB’s collaboration with host broadcaster ORF under a sustainability partnership. The initiative encourages fans to use eco-friendly rail travel to attend Eurovision events, highlighting climate-conscious transportation. It also continues a Eurovision tradition: back in 2015, ÖBB launched a similar Eurovision-branded locomotive to celebrate Austria hosting the contest that year, forging a link between rail travel and the Eurovision festivities. source: ÖBB

📷 ÖBB/Willinger

In Belgium, VRT (Flemish broadcaster) announced it will not send its usual TV crew to Vienna for Eurovision 2026. Longtime commentator Peter Van de Veire will provide commentary from VRT’s studio in Brussels instead of on-site. VRT cited unresolved concerns with the event’s current context and a desire to be a “reliable guide” for viewers. This move comes amid calls from VRT and RTBF staff unions to boycott Eurovision 2026 over political controversies. Nevertheless, Belgium will participate as planned with RTBF’s entrant Essyla. source: VRT

National Finals Roundup

🇮🇹 Italy: The famed Sanremo 2026 festival runs from 24 to 28 February with 30 artists competing. The winner will earn the right of first refusal to represent Italy at Eurovision.

🇷🇸 Serbia: RTS is holding Pesma za Evroviziju ’26 with two semi-finals on Feb 24 and 26, and a final on Feb 28. Twenty-four acts are vying to succeed Princ (Serbia’s 2025 entrant). The winner chosen on Sunday will become Serbia’s representative in Vienna.

🇱🇹 Lithuania: After five heats, Lithuania’s selection Eurovizija.LT 2026 will conclude with an 11-act final on 27 February. Singer Nøra Blu just won the wildcard round with her song “Hold My Own.” She claimed the last spot in the final.

🇳🇴 Norway: Melodi Grand Prix 2026 will take place on 28 February in Lillehammer’s Håkons Hall. Nine finalists are set, including Eurovision 2009 winner Alexander Rybak with “Rise.” Drag artist Skrellex won a special radio duel tournament to secure the last final spot. He will compete in the final with the song “Into the Wild”.

🇫🇮 Finland: The final of Uuden Musiikin Kilpailu (UMK) 2026 is scheduled for 28 February at Nokia Arena in Tampere. Seven acts will compete. The result will be decided by 75% public voting and 25% international jury voting.

🇩🇪 Germany: Germany’s national final “Das Deutsche Finale 2026” will be held on 28 February in Berlin. Nine acts, including former pop star Sarah Engels with the song “Fire”, will perform. A two-round voting system will be used. In the first round, an international jury will pick the top three finalists. Then the German public will choose the winner in a superfinal. The victor will represent Germany in the 70th Eurovision Song Contest this May.

Agenda
Date Country National Final Time Watch here:
24 February Serbia 1st semifinal 21:00 RTS Pesma Evrovizija on YouTube
  Italy 1st night 20:40 RaiPlay
25 February Italy 2nd night 20:40 RaiPlay
26 February Italy 3rd night 20:40 RaiPlay
  Serbia 2nd semifinal 21:00 RTS Pesma Evrovizija on YouTube
27 February Lithuania Final 18:00 LRT and YouTube LRT
  Italy 4th night 20:40 RaiPlay
28 February Norway Final 19.45 NRK
  Bulgaria Song selection 20:00 BNT and Escplus
  Sweden 5th heat/fq 20:00 SVT Play
  Finland Final 20:00 YLE and YLE (English commentary)
  Germany Final 20:00 ARD1 (To be announced)
  Italy Final 20:40 RaiPlay
  Serbia Final 21:00 RTS Pesma Evrovizija on YouTube
  Portugal 2nd semifinal 01:00 RTP1 and RTPinternacional

Related news

Eurovision 2026

🇷🇸 National: Serbia: Pesma Za Evroviziju 26 starts!

Serbia:  “Pesma za Evroviziju 26” will have two semifinals of 12 songs. From each semifinal, seven songs will go through to the final. 50% televoters and 50% jury will decide the winner. The show starts at 21:00 CET and you can watch it on YouTube. 1st semifinal date: 24 FebruaryPlace: RTS Košutnjak, Studio 8Hosts: Dragana Kosjerina, Kristina Radenković & Stefan Popović (green room) 1 Mirna Omaja         l: Bojana Vunturišević & Đorđe Živadinović Grgur  m: Mladen Stojanović         2 Kosmos Trip Sve je u redu         l: Luka Maksimović m: Luka Maksimović & Pavle Đurić         3 Iva Grujin Otkrivam sebe         l: Iva Grujin & Nikola Lazić  m: Nemanja Antonić & Nikola Lazić         4 Eegor Klaber         l & m: Igor Mišković         5 Makao Daj nam svet         l: Imad El-Aoudeh & Nikola Knežević  m: Nikola Knežević         6 Lores Unseen         l & m: Ruben Papian         7 Manivi Svaki Dan         l & m: Ivana Vukmirović         8 Bella Trampolina         l & m: Božidar Ristić & Pavle Kovačević         9 Yanx Srušio si sve         l & m: Aleksandra Janković         10 Zejna Jugoslavija         l & m: Marko Drežnjak & Zejna Murkić         11 Ana Mašulović Zavoli me         l: Radovan Dikanović  m: Dušan Alagić         12 Đurđica Moma mala         l: Pavle Petrović m: Aleksa Petrović           2nd semifinal date: 26 FebruaryPlace: RTS Košutnjak, Studio 8Hosts: Dragana Kosjerina, Kristina Radenković & Stefan Popović (green room) 1 Aleksandar Sudbina         l: Adriana Pupavac & Aleksandar Radojević  m: Adriana Pupavac, Aleksandar Radojević & Andreas Björkman         2 Milica Burazer Svima vama treba mama         l: Aleksandra Janković  m: Aleksandra Janković, Ljuba Stojanović & Mladen Stojanović         3 Sanja Aleksić Ko me proba         l: Adelina Iordachi  m: Marian Stavar         4 Lu-ka Veruj         l: Tamara Popović  m: Andrija Gavrilović, Tamara Popović         5 Jack Lupino Adrenalin         l & m: Daniel Ćulafić & Nebojša Ćulafić         6 Zona Čairi         l & m: Tijana Trivić (Zona)         7 Brat Pelin Fräulein         l & m: Stefan Papić (Brat Pelin)         8 Geminni Metar sreće         l & m: Nataša Erić & Nemanja Erić (Gemini)         9 Avgust Jabuka         l & m: Milan Trivić (Avgust)         10 Harem Girls & Ivana Bom Bom         l: Aleksandar Dilan, Miljan Stojanović Nikolovski, Nemanja Antonić, Sanja Vučić & Titta Foureira m: Marian Stavar         11 Aleksandra Sekulić Kule         l & m: Slavko Milovanović         12 Lavina Kraj mene         l & m: Ivana Jegdić & Lavina           final date: 28 FebruaryPlace: RTS Košutnjak, Studio 8Hosts: Dragana Kosjerina, Kristina Radenković & Stefan Popović (green room) *                       *                       *                       *                       *                       *                       *                       *                       *                       *                       *                       *                       *                       *                      

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Eurovision 2026
Martijn

Weekly Update

It’s Tuesday, February 24, 2026, and time for another weekly update! This week saw Belgium and Austria unveiling their Eurovision entries for Vienna. Austria also launched a Eurovision-themed train to build excitement ahead of May. Meanwhile, a decision by Belgium’s VRT broadcaster made waves in the Eurovision community. National finals are in full swing across Europe as well. Italy’s Sanremo festival kicks off, Serbia’s selection reaches its climax, and finalists are being decided in Lithuania, Norway, Finland, and Germany. Here are this week’s top stories: New Entries 🇧🇪 Belgium Belgium’s French-language broadcaster RTBF has internally selected 23-year-old Essyla (Alice Van Eesbeeck) to represent the nation with the song “Dancing on the Ice”. Essyla, a former The Voice Belgique finalist, is Belgium’s first female solo Eurovision act since 2020. Her pop ballad “Dancing on the Ice” was co-written by Essyla herself and will fly the Belgian flag in Vienna. 🇦🇹 Austria Host country Austria also revealed its entry. In the national final Wer singt für Österreich?, 19-year-old singer Cosmó (Benjamin Gedeon) won with his upbeat German-language track “Tanzschein”. Cosmó beat 11 other acts in a combined jury and televote. He earned the honor of representing Austria on home soil at Eurovision 2026. “Tanzschein” (which means “dance ticket”) is a dance-pop song inspired by club culture. As host country, Austria will perform “Tanzschein” directly in the Grand Final. 2026 Contest News A specially decorated Eurovision train is now traveling across Austria, carrying the contest’s vibrant theme to cities and towns. National railway operator ÖBB unveiled the locomotive, which features striking Eurovision 2026 artwork and branding. ÖBB officials christened the train at Vienna’s central station as part of its launch ceremony. The locomotive’s mission is to build excitement for the upcoming song contest nationwide while also promoting climate-friendly travel for fans. This eye-catching train is part of ÖBB’s collaboration with host broadcaster ORF under a sustainability partnership. The initiative encourages fans to use eco-friendly rail travel to attend Eurovision events, highlighting climate-conscious transportation. It also continues a Eurovision tradition: back in 2015, ÖBB launched a similar Eurovision-branded locomotive to celebrate Austria hosting the contest that year, forging a link between rail travel and the Eurovision festivities. source: ÖBB 📷 ÖBB/Willinger In Belgium, VRT (Flemish broadcaster) announced it will not send its usual TV crew to Vienna for Eurovision 2026. Longtime commentator Peter Van de Veire will provide commentary from VRT’s studio in Brussels instead of on-site. VRT cited unresolved concerns with the event’s current context and a desire to be a “reliable guide” for viewers. This move comes amid calls from VRT and RTBF staff unions to boycott Eurovision 2026 over political controversies. Nevertheless, Belgium will participate as planned with RTBF’s entrant Essyla. source: VRT National Finals Roundup 🇮🇹 Italy: The famed Sanremo 2026 festival runs from 24 to 28 February with 30 artists competing. The winner will earn the right of first refusal to represent Italy at Eurovision. 🇷🇸 Serbia: RTS is holding Pesma za Evroviziju ’26 with two semi-finals on Feb 24 and 26, and a final on Feb 28. Twenty-four acts are vying to succeed Princ (Serbia’s 2025 entrant). The winner chosen on Sunday will become Serbia’s representative in Vienna. 🇱🇹 Lithuania: After five heats, Lithuania’s selection Eurovizija.LT 2026 will conclude with an 11-act final on 27 February. Singer Nøra Blu just won the wildcard round with her song “Hold My Own.” She claimed the last spot in the final. 🇳🇴 Norway: Melodi Grand Prix 2026 will take place on 28 February in Lillehammer’s Håkons Hall. Nine finalists are set, including Eurovision 2009 winner Alexander Rybak with “Rise.” Drag artist Skrellex won a special radio duel tournament to secure the last final spot. He will compete in the final with the song “Into the Wild”. 🇫🇮 Finland: The final of Uuden Musiikin Kilpailu (UMK) 2026 is scheduled for 28 February at Nokia Arena in Tampere. Seven acts will compete. The result will be decided by 75% public voting and 25% international jury voting. 🇩🇪 Germany: Germany’s national final “Das Deutsche Finale 2026” will be held on 28 February in Berlin. Nine acts, including former pop star Sarah Engels with the song “Fire”, will perform. A two-round voting system will be used. In the first round, an international jury will pick the top three finalists. Then the German public will choose the winner in a superfinal. The victor will represent Germany in the 70th Eurovision Song Contest this May. Agenda Date Country National Final Time Watch here: 24 February Serbia 1st semifinal 21:00 RTS Pesma Evrovizija on YouTube   Italy 1st night 20:40 RaiPlay 25 February Italy 2nd night 20:40 RaiPlay 26 February Italy 3rd night 20:40 RaiPlay   Serbia 2nd semifinal 21:00 RTS Pesma Evrovizija on YouTube 27 February Lithuania Final 18:00 LRT and YouTube LRT   Italy 4th night 20:40 RaiPlay 28 February Norway Final 19.45 NRK   Bulgaria Song selection 20:00 BNT and Escplus   Sweden 5th heat/fq 20:00 SVT Play   Finland Final 20:00 YLE and YLE (English commentary)   Germany Final 20:00 ARD1 (To be announced)   Italy Final 20:40 RaiPlay   Serbia Final 21:00 RTS Pesma Evrovizija on YouTube   Portugal 2nd semifinal 01:00 RTP1 and RTPinternacional

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