A lot of Eurovision fans are already dreaming of a fairytale ending for Croatia at Eurovision 2024. And the prince in that story is Baby Lasagna — real name Marko Purišić. When his song “Rim Tim Tagi Dim” dropped in January, he became the talk of Zagreb. And now he’s the talk of Europe as radio stations across the continent play his song and as DJs wonder aloud about the lyrics, which include a plea for a cat to meow back and a very memorable hook: rim tim tagi dim.

But the song isn’t just about humour and fun. It convey the stress and anxiety that come with leaving home in search of better opportunities. 

Scroll down to read the Rim Tim Tagi Dim lyrics.

Croatia at Eurovision 2024: Baby Lasagna with “Rim Tim Tagi Dim”

Baby Lasagna’s journey to Eurovision hasn’t been straightforward. In fact, he fell at the first hurdle. 

At the end of 2023, after the submissions window closed for Croatia’s national selection show DORA, broadcaster HRT selected 24 acts. Mr. Lasagna was not among them. Instead he was relegated to the reserve list. However, in early January, the singer Zsa Zsa withdrew. Suddenly the lasagna was in the oven.

Within hours of the song reveal, “Rim Tim Tagi Dim” was trending within the Top 50 on Croatian YouTube. We spoke with Baby Lasagna the next morning and he was absolutely floored by the response. 

“Like three or four days ago I was just a guy from a small town writing stuff in my room. And now all of a sudden a guy from London is talking about me and Croatian media is calling me. I get some crazy offers. And it seems like a dream, but at the same time it can feel uncomfortable when people are expecting a lot of you. They want to get on that train Baby Lasagna. I’m starting to work up an anxiety, which I already had and which is getting even worse. At the same time I am happy people are enjoying my work.” 

What do the “Rim Tim Tagi Dim” lyrics mean?

First things first: the title “Rim Tim Tagi Dim” does not have a Croatian translation.

“It means nothing actually,” Baby L told us. “The first sample that you hear in the song goes like rim tim tagi dim, rim tim tagi dim. I was like, ‘It would be funny if I put some real vocals with rim tim tagi dim. There is no great origin story. It’s just a guy in his room and the riff sounds like rim tim tagi dim.”

The real meaning comes not in the title, but in the verses that capture a national dilemma. The European Union has described Croatia as a country of emigration: more people are leaving the country than are arriving from outside its borders. “Rim Tim Tagi Dim” explores this mass exodus of young people — and the effects it has on those leaving and those they leave behind. 

The song opens with a young person announcing that he’s leaving home. The music video makes it clear he’s leaving a rural community, which may mirror the outskirts of Umag, Baby Lasagna’s real-life hometown.

Despite the big dreams, that journey is fraught with panic, pain, and anxiety.

And we can see all of that and more in the official video, which dropped on Tuesday. We see a young man preparing to leave his rustic existence behind. In between rocking out in the barn amid bales of hay, he pets his cows, feeds his chickens and chops wood. He’s excited to move on, but at times you get the sense he’s also a little sad.

“Hey, I’m a big boy now, I’m ready to leave, ciao, mama, ciao…I’m a big boy now, I’m going away and I sold my cow…”

As the video progresses we see Baby Lasagna bidding farewell to his fellow villagers at an outdoor feast, which turns into a dancing affair. As he dreams of life in a more happening place, he also wonders if his language and traditions will be understood. As he sings, “I hope I find peace in the noise, wanna become one of those city boys, they’re all so pretty and so advanced, maybe they also know our dance.”

Does the act of leaving bring him the joy he dreams of? Well the video doesn’t answer that. It’s up to you to decipher the final scene, which is beautiful if bittersweet. 

And what does Baby Lasagna say about all this?

“I think that a lot of my songwriting comes from my subconscious — you know things that I’m not thinking really about. We have a lot of problems with young people moving and there’s been a lot of news going on about that, so I think that constantly listening to those words…maybe the song is about that, about young people living our country in the search of a better place. A heavy heart and as it says in the song, ‘in my anxiety attacks, I’m gonna miss you all, but mostly the cat.'”

“Rim Tim Tagi Dim” lyrics — Baby Lasagna (Croatia Eurovision 2024)

Songwriter (music and lyrics): Marko Purišić

(Rim-tim-tagi-digi)
(Rim-tim-tagi-digi)
(Rim-tim-tagi-digi)
(Rim-tim-tagi-digi)
(Rim-tim-tagi-digi)
(Rim-tim-tagi-digi)
(Rim-tim-tagi-digi)

Verse 1

Ayy, I’m a big boy now
I’m ready to leave, ciao, mamma, ciao
Ayy, I’m a big boy now
I’m going away and I sold my cow
Before I leave, I must confess
I need a round of decompress
One more time for all the good times
Rim-tim-tagi-digi-dim-tim-tim


(Rim-tim-tagi-digi)
(Rim-tim-tagi-digi)
(Rim-tim-tagi-digi)
(Rim-tim-tagi-digi)
(Rim-tim-tagi-digi)
(Rim-tim-tagi-digi)
(Rim-tim-tagi-digi)
(Digi-digi-digi-digi)

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Nikaaaa
25 days ago

I honestly thought he Said “My anxiety is sex” ngl?

Nope
Nope
4 months ago

Trash song paired with poor vocals and cheap staging, eh.

Ray
Ray
4 months ago

He is a homophobe, disgusting man!

Enyo
Enyo
7 months ago

I love him and the song, the only song i have on repeat. hope he wins <3

Angelina
Angelina
7 months ago

Up to now this is the only song I like.

Angelina
Angelina
6 months ago
Reply to  Angelina

Edit:
unfortunately live it’s bad.

Andros
Andros
7 months ago

So I guess we’ve decided that we are OK with the homophobic lyrics. Just note the derision in the singer’s voice when he mentions those “city boys”

I hope I find peace in the noise
Wanna become one of those city boys
They’re all so pretty and so advanced
Maybe they also know our dance

?

Vale
Vale
7 months ago
Reply to  Andros

He was referring more to himself being the village boy that spends time with his farm animals in the mudd, leaving for the big city where “city boys” are well groomed! He is raised well and by no means a homophobe!

DodoPatak
DodoPatak
7 months ago
Reply to  Andros

Bad troll. Bad.

robert
robert
6 months ago
Reply to  Andros

Take off your tinfoil hat

alfie23
alfie23
7 months ago

I don’t know how I feel about this song. I like it but I don’t. Very 50/50 on it.

marbadella
marbadella
7 months ago

Love it

Purple Mask
Purple Mask
7 months ago

Croatia is topping almost all of the betting odds now. I have never seen that happen to Croatia before, ever. They must be thrilled!!

BabyGrogu
BabyGrogu
7 months ago
Reply to  Purple Mask

We are:)

The Voice of Reason
The Voice of Reason
7 months ago

The live performance now has ONE MILLION views! Amazing for Croatia and in only three days!

FunQ
FunQ
7 months ago

Meeow or not meeow, I don’t like the song at all.

FunQ
FunQ
7 months ago

This song really doesn’t catch me at all.

FunQ
FunQ
7 months ago

I foresee in the near future some delegation bringing a song with burps and farts. Maybe next singer may be the Youtube star Yanagi19871 or Sons of Arkham or That Brown Nerd.

Betty
Betty
7 months ago

The song is catchy, but live it sounds so amateurish. The guy is very weak vocally.

Vincenzo
Vincenzo
7 months ago
Reply to  Betty

From when the eurofans are interested in quality? Most of the eurofans didn’t even know what a good singer must have in order to win a competition. They lack of any judgement quality.

Angelina
Angelina
7 months ago
Reply to  Betty

I agree. When I saw the video I said: no. 1.
But after seeing the live performance I am not sure.

Henry
Henry
7 months ago

William rarely gets it wrong. Zagreb 2025 is more likely than not.

Itchymonkey
Itchymonkey
7 months ago
Reply to  Henry

I could tell on Williams face the joy when he heard it and reviewed it and when he interviewed him. You could tell he liked marko as a person

Jonas
Jonas
7 months ago
Reply to  Henry

Where did William say that?

vetrina
vetrina
7 months ago
Reply to  Henry

Even if it’d place 2nd behind Ukraine, Zagreb has the chance to host, given that Ukraine is unable to!

The Voice of Reason
The Voice of Reason
7 months ago
Reply to  vetrina

True!

Lookoverthere
Lookoverthere
7 months ago
Reply to  vetrina

I dont want my country to host if we dont win.

The Voice of Reason
The Voice of Reason
7 months ago
Reply to  Henry

I HOPE so.

What did he say about Kaarija and Loreen again? Which of the two did he say would win?

Ari
Ari
7 months ago

Off-topic: seems like Israel’s 2nd song was also ruled out. The lyrics (if those are the correct ones) are even worse than the first song in terms of quality but also even less offensive. They’re basically blabla. Things are getting ridiculous. Spelling mistakes aren’t mine: My mind hiding  I don’t know what’s right  Take me to the right road  There’s no more time and I can’t go wrong  Breath in  I know that i’m strong  I brake all the chains  I’m on the edge now Watch me fly away  Oh dance like an angel  Oh you will remember  That I… Read more »

ThorBeta
ThorBeta
7 months ago
Reply to  Ari

If things are going in this direction, it looks like EBU wants to avoid any risks. I wouldn’t be surprised if we end up with only 35 participants this year.

Ari
Ari
7 months ago
Reply to  ThorBeta

But then the EBU should just say so and not blame the lyrics which is obviously a lie. What can they possibly object to here? They already approved Luxembourg singing „I’m a fighter“ so it can’t be that. You mean 36, or do you see another one leaving? Without Israel, we’d be at 36.

ThorBeta
ThorBeta
7 months ago
Reply to  Ari

Iceland.

Jonas
Jonas
7 months ago
Reply to  Ari

I can’t see any reason whatsoever to ban those lyrics. Would 2002 Light A Candle be censored too? Ridiculous, if true.

Devito
Devito
7 months ago
Reply to  Ari

So Kan was ready to publish the second song? I thought they believed in October Rain so badly to not even consider a discussion of changes to the lyrics or the song itself. Oh well, good riddance.

vetrina
vetrina
7 months ago
Reply to  Ari

Bye bye Israhell, welcome Palestine through Iceland! Reykjavik 2025!!!

Patrick
Patrick
7 months ago

Great energy but we know the juries will kill its chances off.

Milan
Milan
7 months ago
Reply to  Patrick

Do we?

The Voice of Reason
The Voice of Reason
7 months ago
Reply to  Patrick

Who knows? They might love the lyrics of the song. Also, this isn’t the final performance.

The Voice of Reason
The Voice of Reason
7 months ago

The moment you see the man with the suitcase lifting it up and down, the lyrics ‘there’s no going back, my anxiety attacks’ and then the ethnic backing dancers dancing their jig, you instantly recognise that the serious topic that’s being discussed.

Kosey
Kosey
7 months ago

I find these lyrics are incredibly thematically similar to Bashar’s effort in Iceland. It feels to me that Baby is the younger self and Bashar’s is the older-wiser version – but remarkably similar nonetheless.

Jonas
Jonas
7 months ago
Reply to  Kosey

I see what you mean, they are both leaving their home communities… but for very different reasons. One for economics, the other because of homophobic oppression.

The Voice of Reason
The Voice of Reason
7 months ago
Reply to  Jonas

The second one’s debatable. There are lots of things including the regimes in power that relate to those who have left the Middle East. War is one of them…

Jonas
Jonas
7 months ago

Yeah, but this song is about Bashar’s personal reason, about him and only him.

Ari
Ari
7 months ago

Maybe a song revamp is in the works now that it won? Clearly it was enough to build a huge momentum but I think this could be taken much further.

Milan
Milan
7 months ago
Reply to  Ari

The song has that rare quality that you can’t get it out of your head, which is not easy to get, and I think it may be lost if a more sophisticated musical arrangement is made. An interesting dilemma for them, I’m sure.

Efthymios
Efthymios
7 months ago

I believe the message instantly comes clear when you both hear it the first time and also look the country which it comes from. The lyrics are excellent, witty and fun, while also being extremely catchy. Grest song and effort by Marko in general.

Karl
Karl
7 months ago

The unnecessarily most overhyped song of this year

Thomas
Thomas
7 months ago

We can finally put an end to the rumours, Käärija declared:
“Same vibe but Its not the same! I love this crazy croatin song

ThorBeta
ThorBeta
7 months ago
Reply to  Thomas

Käärijä showing the way to the 2024 televoting winner 😉

The Voice of Reason
The Voice of Reason
7 months ago
Reply to  ThorBeta

Maybe it will be something much more than just a televote winner this year…?

Jo.
Jo.
7 months ago
Reply to  Thomas

Shouldn’t even have started, those comparisons are beyond pathetic

Itchymonkey
Itchymonkey
7 months ago
Reply to  Thomas

That green man I will forever love until I die

Jo.
Jo.
7 months ago

Really hope he wins, although Ukraine will be a tough one to beat – I’m expecting killer staging from them

Alex
Alex
7 months ago

People who call these lyrics “trash”, you might as well do some research on population decline in Eastern European countries

Jo.
Jo.
7 months ago
Reply to  Alex

They pretty clever actually.

Alex
Alex
7 months ago
Reply to  Jo.

For some yes it might be, depends whether they like the working environment in their country or not, how much they earn etc etc.

Jo.
Jo.
7 months ago
Reply to  Alex

I meant the lyrics

The Voice of Reason
The Voice of Reason
7 months ago
Reply to  Alex

Based

Johnny
Johnny
7 months ago

I think Baby will place very high in May. Just watching him on stage makes me feel happy, he is so adorable. Meow

Yeah yeah fire
Yeah yeah fire
7 months ago
Reply to  Johnny

Right, he won by a landslide, I wonder if he will have a similar effect in Malmo.

The Voice of Reason
The Voice of Reason
7 months ago
Reply to  Yeah yeah fire

The juries might appreciate the socio-political commentary of the lyrics

Patrick
Patrick
7 months ago

They won’t. Sweden douze points as usual yawn

Patrick
Patrick
7 months ago
Reply to  Yeah yeah fire

The juries will kill its chances sadly

Ben
Ben
7 months ago

Wow… the lyrics are nice done. I think this is something a lot of people can relate to as not only people from Croatia are leaving the country. To a certain point almost everyone had that point in late adolescence to say “Goodbye”, being aware that alongside with excitment for the new things to come and to finally be free, sometimes anxiety and missing the old comfortable bed can mix up to a weird emotional cocktail. The biggest error that I see with this song is that Finnlands Käärija is musically, thematically and stylistically a direct comperison – yet it… Read more »

Anna Banana
Anna Banana
7 months ago
Reply to  Ben

It feels like just with Eleni where every female dance number got compared to her the years after she competed as if she invented female dance numbers. The OG anyway was Sertab Erener, the next two winners were all female bops. So it is just like with this, there is a genre that got popular in ESC and now all songs in this genre or vibe get compared to it.

The Voice of Reason
The Voice of Reason
7 months ago

The lyrics are definitely the best this year. Hopefully the juries will appreciate that and decide to upvote it a little at least. The lyrics have two or three meanings, not just about Croatians leaving, but about mental health and the actual politics of the country, i’m finding.

But one things for sure: After Baby Lasagna’s Eurovision performance, thousands of Croatians and non-Croatians are gonna flock back!

Ellen
Ellen
7 months ago

Tbf, Spain’s lyrics are better to me. But I’m a woman so that’s why I can relate to it.

Yeah yeah fire
Yeah yeah fire
7 months ago

Great article! Also, I think it’s pretty interesting that we’re able to see his journey unfold. From a backup to a potentional winner. Eurovison cinderella

Anna Banana
Anna Banana
7 months ago

Some people have said the instrumentals are ethno elements but I just can’t here it? And I come from the region? Can someone explain me what these ethno/folk elements in the song are?

ThorBeta
ThorBeta
7 months ago
Reply to  Anna Banana

The percussion beat sounds pure Balkan to me (where exactly are you from?). Reportedly he has incorporated an Istrian rhythm to the melody, but I have heard similar rhythms in North Greece where I come from.

Anna Banana
Anna Banana
7 months ago
Reply to  ThorBeta

my parents are croats from central bosnia. i don’t know, i still can’t here it, but istrian music is a little different than other sounds from the balkans, kind of reminds me more of Slovenia/Austria

ThorBeta
ThorBeta
7 months ago
Reply to  Anna Banana

I have Aromanian roots (which is not uncommon in North Greece) and I think Istrians and Aromanians have similar folk music, so I guess it makes sense. You’re right, Balkan folk can mean more than one thing. I guess your mention to Slovenia/Austria refers to the local brass bands that play similar folk music? That’s what I’m getting. In any case, I believe that the rhythm is very relatable for many people and that will definitely help to get a good result.

Anna Banana
Anna Banana
7 months ago
Reply to  ThorBeta

yes, it’s nice how diverse we are but still similar. i think that many of us from the region can relate to this song and staging! looking forward to may 🙂 also excited what greece will bring

The Voice of Reason
The Voice of Reason
7 months ago
Reply to  Anna Banana

That would make sense then, since it’s closer towards Italy and that coastline and there’s even the lyrics ‘Ciao, Mama, Ciao!’

Lulu
Lulu
7 months ago
Reply to  Anna Banana

Ana you can google “istarski tanac” and instrument they use, it is called “sopile”. Pure Istria, beat and dance

The Voice of Reason
The Voice of Reason
7 months ago
Reply to  ThorBeta

I would imagine the rhythms and music from the Mediterranean and East Balkans areas very much clash and fuse as they get to the borders with Greece and North Macedonia

ThorBeta
ThorBeta
7 months ago

They definitely do. North Greece has a very interesting mixture of folk traditions combining elements from the Mediterranean, to Balkans and even to Black Sea. 🙂

gea
gea
7 months ago
Reply to  Anna Banana

The whole basis of the song (ie the rythm) is based on local folklore (circle dance) from Istria.

Itchymonkey
Itchymonkey
7 months ago

It’s already gone viral. The view numbers for a small country at this stage are rivalling the heavily populated countries with 20 times more people in.
He’s got momentum only politics can stop him now

Ellen
Ellen
7 months ago

I feel sad for him because of his anxiety. Hope he’ll get better.

The Voice of Reason
The Voice of Reason
7 months ago
Reply to  Ellen

Why was this downvoted?

Ellen
Ellen
7 months ago

Because I clowned the people that liked BL song before he won. That still doesn’t mean I can’t feel for him.

I also see that he’s about to challenge Ukraine on winning this year and I better see Croatia take the crown than Ukraine. So, I’m on the Lasagna’s team now lol

Despicable Annie
Despicable Annie
7 months ago

I think this song is excellent. It has an international reach, but it very well explains the point that Croatia is suffering a major population loss from young people leaving. It’s both relevant to the country it represents, and digestible by anyone else abroad. Genius!

Efthymios
Efthymios
7 months ago

There have recently been some rumours that he has straight up copied a sample for his song from another artist’s music video which is called “Espectro”, by Adrian de la Vega, and has been on the internet for about three years. I went to give it a listen (it starts around the 3rd minute) and both parts from these songs sound almost identical, although not entirely the same. I seriously hope Marko hasn’t actually copied another person’s sample and it’s just pure coincidence because the article I’ve read these rymours from (the Greek eurovisionfun) has me doubting his participation now… Read more »

just an esc fan
just an esc fan
7 months ago
Reply to  Efthymios

Adrian de la Vega already claimed he wants to file law actions, made it clear that he didn’t sell the track to Baby Lasagna. Will surely be interesting to see how this evolves and if he’ll change the song. I heard the track and I have to say, its not just similar, it’s almost identical!

Efthymios
Efthymios
7 months ago

Oh, this is such a bummer…

ThorBeta
ThorBeta
7 months ago

Meh. Attention seeker. Happens every year. The copyright threshold is much higher than a simple chord progression like this one.

The Voice of Reason
The Voice of Reason
7 months ago
Reply to  ThorBeta

It happened with Ed Sheeran and Matt Cardle and they proved even the main melody isn’t enough to be plagarism.

Neki
Neki
7 months ago

Looks like Adrian de la Vega wants to get some attention. He bought this sample (and so did Baby Lasagna) form Splice platform, but he did not read Splice terms and conditions: Q: Are all sounds on Splice Sounds non-exclusive? A: Yes. You have a non-exclusive license to each sound that you download from Splice Sounds, meaning other users can also use the same sounds as you without infringing on any New Recording or Creative Works you create using that sound and vice versa. In fact, he was not first one to use this sample – you can hear it… Read more »

ThorBeta
ThorBeta
7 months ago
Reply to  Efthymios

Greek Eurovision sites being b*tchy as usual (I’m Greek as well btw). It’s just a simple and rather common chord progression. Way beyond the copyright threshold. Nothing to see there.

Efthymios
Efthymios
7 months ago
Reply to  ThorBeta

I also believe that our sites are extremely whiny and simply try to undermine the competition because our entries are never up to the level of the rest of the countries in the recent decade. Maybe Maria Satti isn’t such a big favorite anymore, lol. We should learn to be much more mature than that. I highly hope Baby Lasagna wins his case.

Efthymios
Efthymios
7 months ago
Reply to  Efthymios

*Marina

ThorBeta
ThorBeta
7 months ago
Reply to  Efthymios

Efthymie there’s not even a case there. Some random DJ has produced a random track that hasn’t even been released that has the same chord progression. Big deal. EBU won’t even care about this and the Greek sites are giving attention to this random case exactly because “Rim Tim Tagi Dim” plays in the same field with Marina’s song. I’ve been following ESC for decades and this happens every single year. No songs have ever been disqualified because the threshold for copyrights is very high. Even if this random DJ files a lawsuit he can never copyright a chord progression… Read more »

Despicable Annie
Despicable Annie
7 months ago
Reply to  ThorBeta

And that’s that on that. It’s like saying Beyoncé’s Halo copied Leona Lewis’ Bleeding Love or Katy Perry’s Hot n Cold copies Paris Hilton’s Nothing in This World, same exact progression, it happens all the time with mainstream music and it’s not plagiarism. If Adrian de la Verga wants to waste coins on a lawsuit, it’s his choice.

The.ONE
The.ONE
7 months ago

And who is Adrian de la Vega anyway? Just a rhetorical question, but looking at his number of subscribers and views, I can’t help but wonder.

Jonas
Jonas
7 months ago
Reply to  ThorBeta

Do you think the Jack White/Toy ruling was fair?

By law, shouldn’t that have been retrospectively disqualified making Cyprus the winner?

Even if there is legal action on this case, will it matter?

ThorBeta
ThorBeta
7 months ago
Reply to  Jonas

Tbh I never noticed the resemblance between “Toy” and “Seven Nation Army” only until the issue was brought up by UMG. Even if this was indeed a case of genuine plagiarism, I don’t know if it was done intentionally and I don’t think that this gave any advantage to Netta in 2018. I don’t like results to be changed retrospectively unless it’s proven that someone has cheated (see Croatia 1999 for example), so although I was (and still am) a big fan of Eleni and I think she should have won, I won’t behave as a bitter loser in this… Read more »

Yeah yeah fire
Yeah yeah fire
7 months ago
Reply to  Efthymios

It’s called sampling, stop spreading misinformation. It’s pretty common in music making, they both bought the sample and it’s absolutely legitimate.

Efthymios
Efthymios
7 months ago
Reply to  Yeah yeah fire

I didn’try to misinform, I just expressed concern because I love Rim Tim Tagi Dim. Sorry if it came out like that, I apologise.

Neki
Neki
7 months ago
Reply to  Efthymios

Looks like Adrian de la Vega wants to get some attention. He bought this sample (and so did Baby Lasagna) form Splice sample platform, but he did not read Splice terms and conditions: Q: Are all sounds on Splice Sounds non-exclusive? A: Yes. You have a non-exclusive license to each sound that you download from Splice Sounds, meaning other users can also use the same sounds as you without infringing on any New Recording or Creative Works you create using that sound and vice versa. In fact, he was not first one to use this sample – you can hear… Read more »

ANDREW BROWN
ANDREW BROWN
7 months ago

Yesterday in the UK the track was listed in the Top 200 songs on I-Tunes. Unusual for a song from Croatia so far in advance of the contest. Positive sign going forward i think.

Sun
Sun
7 months ago
Reply to  ANDREW BROWN

That doesn’t always mean success. The song from Spain was the 2nd most viral worldwide on Spotify and I think it’s not that well.

ThorBeta
ThorBeta
7 months ago
Reply to  Sun

The Spanish language market is huge if you haven’t noticed before. Spain is one of the favourites to win the 12 points from Rest of the World televoting but that doesn’t mean much indeed.

Sun
Sun
7 months ago
Reply to  ThorBeta

Not as big as the English language I think. Rarely is a song from Spain placed in those positions, another hand are songs from Latin America.

The Voice of Reason
The Voice of Reason
7 months ago
Reply to  ANDREW BROWN

Looking at the UK population’s taste last year, I’m certain it will overtake Kaarija’s record this year for chart position.

ThorBeta
ThorBeta
7 months ago

Thankfully he will likely prevent windows95man getting 12 points from UK televoting.

The Voice of Reason
The Voice of Reason
7 months ago
Reply to  ThorBeta

We’ll give Windows our 10 points instead!

Jonas
Jonas
7 months ago

Please don’t.

ThorBeta
ThorBeta
7 months ago
Reply to  Jonas

I’m hopeful that Lithuanians and Irish living in the UK will prevent that too, but I’ve accepted the fact that Finland will get some televoting points from North Europe. I also expect that “No Rules” will likely be the first song in years that will receive null points from all juries. Hopefully this will prevent a Top 10 placing.