As a Eurovision fan, checking out Intervision was a little confusing... so here are some notes in no particular order.
Quite a lot of talking between each song
Holographic big men and women in modern, festival, or cultural garments to represent each country to counter the Eurovision flag parade
Venezuela's entry's hook gave off the vibes of a South American version of "Pokemon: Advanced Battle Theme" (I'm unbeatable)'s hook
The USA is participating?
The USA is represented by a cowgirl??
The USA is no longer participating due to their representative being pressured by the Australian government (they're from there)???
Why did the USA not choose someone from their vast amount of musicians????
There is an ad after the first song
The cultural diversity is insanely good
Colombia's entry is something Eurovision fans think will do well with the Juries but don't, then end up crying... except they actually did well with the Juries in this case, YAY!
The jury scoring system was weird "27, 24, 22, 20, 18, 16, 14â1"
Only jury votes, no televoting
There is a slight bias for Asian countries in this edition
Russia is unranked? Is it because they're hosting?
Would people represent the host country even if they're not being ranked by the juries???
The next host country is not the winning country but randomly decided?
I love Vietnam and Qatar
I am glad Qatar got a high placement
Vietnam was my winner and it won
Putin talks for a really long time
Everyone is on stage in the jury score reading
Only 1 Jury per country?
No Jury show?
The Juries are sat in the same arena?
The Jury score them live on the same day and time?
I like that.
When the first juror's scores were announced, everyone was so confused and congratulated the Chinese representative thinking he won
The Chinese dude also thought he won, luckily his reaction wasn't that big to be too embarrassing
The broadcasting was very low quality, some performances were slightly delayed
SO MUCH BLUE AND PURPLE
The lights were kind of too bright
Kids are allowed on stage apparently
The contestants are seated in the green room to watch and enjoy the vibes like everyone else until they're about to perform? Eurovision take notes!
No winner reprise? Sad.
Every contestant singing 2015 "A Million Voices" for the outro.... no.
We rarely see people rising up into the air in Eurovision, there were a lot here in Intervision
Serbia's entrant's hair... no.
Why is Egypt second to last? They should be last, not Brazil!
Some LED backgrounds were very screensaver
There were a lot of sleeper moments, but it was an enjoyable watch.
Better than American Song Contest?
Optional live instruments? Cool
"Intervision Song Contest" does not roll off the tongue good
Barely any English commentation, so I was very confused when there were yapping
Only found the Indian host memorable
Once more, TOO MUCH BLUE AND PURPLE
It felt like 2021 again if Switzerland was hosting
Kenya's entry gave out the vibes of a song that would be very popular in the islands of the Pacific Ocean
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
â Live Streamingâ Interactive Chatâ Private Showsâ HD Quality
Anya is LIVE right now
FREE
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
On September 20th, Russia held their Intervision Song Contest for the first time in almost two decades. The hosting and revival of the show has been seen as a direct response to the nation being expelled from Eurovision.
Russian Foreign minister Sergei Lavrov said that the contest served to "[preserve] traditions and national cultures, as well as religious, spiritual and moral constructs."
23 nations took part, and the winner was decided by a jury, and awarded a cash prize of about ÂŁ26,661.
The participating nations were:
Belarus, Brazil, China, Colombia, Cuba, Egypt, Ethiopia, India, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Kyrgyzstan, Madagascar, Qatar, Republic of South Africa, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Serbia, Tajikistan, United Arab Emirates, Uzbekistan, Venezuela, and Vietnam
The USA was originally set to take part, but the contestants pulled out. The contest organizers claimed that VASSY, an Australian-American, was forced to withdraw due to "unprecedented political pressure from the Australian government." Additionally, before VASSY, Brandon Howard was set to represent the USA, but he had to withdraw due to unforseen circumstances. The USA still took part as a jury.
The contest was won by Vietnam's Duc Phuc, a gay man, notable due to Russia's extreme laws against homosexuality. The winner also made remarks about Eurovision saying that it was once won by a "bearded man in a dress."
Representatives from Ukraine's foreign ministry said that the Intervision Song Contest was "an instrument of hostile propaganda and a means of whitewashing the aggressive policy of the Russian Federationâ.
Serbia is the only nation to take part in both Eurovision and Intervision in 2025.
[Sources]
Participants, Intervision.world.
"Gay singer Duc Phuc crowned winner of Russiaâs Eurovision rival, the Intervision Song Contest," attitude.co.uk.
"Vietnamese singer Duc Phuc wins Intervision song contest, a Russian answer to Eurovision," apnews.com.
Participants of Basel 2025, Eurovision.tv.
"Vassy, representing United States, disqualified from Intervision song contest â organizers," tass.com.
"Instead of an American, an Australian woman: the USA changed the participant of the Intervision contest," eadaily.com.
It was so much fun, all those different cultures were so beautiful.
Don't get me wrong, eurovision is fun too, but it was so beautiful seeing cultures from so different continents. A song contest where it's not exclusively bound to one region/continent, but where so many gorgeous cultures were shared<3
Also LET'S GO VIETNAM!â€ïž
He so deserved it, I was rooting for him during the voting<33333
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
â Live Streamingâ Interactive Chatâ Private Showsâ HD Quality
Anya is LIVE right now
FREE
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
On one hand, the new Intervision Song Contest is not a replacement of Eurovision for me. I'd prefer the originals as they were a true rep of peace after a Great War that got the whole world ruined.
On the other hand... since I'd only seen the second half and actually heard the entire soundtrack during the prime time discussing ÄĂșc PhĂșc's victory... I can say I love some of the songs)) A bit underwhelming mostly, but since they're starting out, it may be more fun!
Wishing for the audience votes to appear, though. Not cool to see just the officials out there.
I KNOW WHAT YOU'RE GOING TO TELL ME. I only watched because Mom really wanted to and I did find some of the songs enjoyable, so... I don't know. Sorry for Vassy not coming, would've probably made it fun. Sorry for South Africa having their number botched like hell. Have they had live rehearsals before that? Feeling bad for their main.
And some of the votes just hurt me. Not saying which.
I think, my final verdict will be: I'll watch Eurovision, JESC and Intervision together)) Doing it for the songs only, so it's all fair!
Couldn't find China, beautiful voice, reminds me of Draco's central head for a bit.
Serbia was adorableđ€đđč
Why can't I find South Africa? And the many others...
Conceived in 1960s Czechoslovakia, Vladimir Putin ordered the competitionâs return and the US has now confirmed its participation â is this
When singer-songwriter B Howard takes to the stage in Moscow this month, heâll be making history. On 20 September the Los Angeles-born artist will be the first to represent the US at Russiaâs revived Intervision Song Contest, a cultural spectacle that manages to be both nostalgic throwback and very modern geopolitical manoeuvre. While Eurovision has famously stretched its geographic boundaries to include Australia, Russiaâs alternative contest represents a rather different kind of international outreach.
Russia dusting off the Intervision brand, largely dormant since 1980 apart from a brief reprise in 2008, follows the countryâs exclusion from Eurovision since its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Its expulsion cut off access to a platform that â while often mocked by British audiences â had served as a crucial tool of cultural diplomacy for decades.
Emblazoned on Intervisionâs website is the claim that: âThe world-famous music event returns to Russiaâ â but the contest was, in fact, conceived in 1960s Czechoslovakia. Whatâs more, that original contest served rather different purposes. âThe idea of Intervision was certainly not what the Russians are presenting us these days,â explains Dean Vuletic, a historian who has extensively researched the contest.
Rather than being born of exclusion, Vuletic says the first series, running from 1965 to 1968, was explicitly designed to bring east and west together; Czechoslovak Television actually offered to collaborate with Eurovision organisers, though the proposal was rejected. When the contest finally launched, it featured western artists alongside eastern European performers, including Eurovision winners such as Puppet on a String singer Sandie Shaw and Austrian crooner Udo JĂŒrgens appearing as interval acts.
Poland took Intervisionâs international ethos even further during the contestâs second iteration from 1977 to 1980, including artists from Japan, the US and Canada in a parallel competition for artists representing record companies. Both versions were fundamentally commercial enterprises, with Czech and Polish organisers using the platform to court western record labels and launch careers like that of Karel Gott, who became Czechoslovakiaâs biggest pop star after winning the inaugural Intervision. As Vuletic says: âThey wanted to attract the interest of western commercial record companies. Itâs not like they were communists who wanted nothing to do with capitalism.â
The Soviets themselves, meanwhile, were not especially invested in these early contests. âHaving been to the archives in Moscow, my conclusion is that the Russians themselves werenât that interested,â notes Vuletic. With their vast domestic market, they simply didnât need Intervision to access broader audiences.
To understand why Russian president Vladimir Putin is now so engaged with the concept that he brought the contest back to life via a presidential decree in February requires examining how Eurovision itself has changed since the cold war. The European Broadcasting Unionâs expansion eastward in the 1990s dramatically altered the contestâs character, bringing in broadcasters from former Soviet republics and communist states who used the platform to assert their European identity.
This shift coincided with Eurovisionâs growing association with LGBTQ+ causes, beginning with Icelandâs PĂĄll Ăskar â the contestâs first openly gay contestant â in 1997 and followed by Dana Internationalâs 1998 victory and Conchita Wurstâs triumph in 2014. The bearded drag queenâs win particularly rankled Moscow, coming just as Putinâs government was promoting âtraditional valuesâ and passing laws restricting LGBTQ+ content. For visual culture and identities scholar BĂĄrbara Barreiro LeĂłn, Intervision serves as a âcultural counterweightâ to Eurovision, and is born of âa desire to challenge western cultural dominance, particularly as Eurovision has come to represent liberal, western values.â
Beyond the contestâs penchant for camp, perhaps even more galling for the Kremlin was Eurovisionâs role as a platform for countries once under Soviet rule to showcase their independence and distinct cultures. Ukraineâs multiple victories â including Jamalaâs 2016 song about Stalinâs deportation of Crimean Tatars â directly challenged Putinâs narrative that Ukraine lacks legitimate independent culture and history. As expert in post-cold war history Catherine Baker notes, Ukraineâs creativity in Eurovision has made the contest âa platform where hundreds of millions of viewers can see that Putinâs falsehoods about Ukraine arenât true.â
While Russian officials promise to promote âtraditional valuesâ and reject what they term the âperversionsâ of Eurovision, this sanitised approach may prove counterproductive. âPeople like to watch Eurovision because of all of that diversity, because of the provocations, because of the politics,â says Stephen Hutchings, who has studied Russian media for several decades.
So, who has signed up for Putinâs alternative vision? Participating countries appear to be primarily those neutral or supportive of Russiaâs position on Ukraine, though the exact roster remains fluid. Initial reports suggested 20-21 countries, and the official website at the time of writing lists 17 â still considerably fewer than the 37 who competed in the ESC in Basel this year. These include Belarus, Kazakhstan, Venezuela, Cuba, and Qatar, alongside Serbia, notionally an EU candidate country. The USâs participation, sending an artist perhaps best known as the subject of speculation about being Michael Jacksonâs son, is perhaps the most bizarre. Suffice to say, Ukraine will not be taking part. The countryâs foreign ministry has condemned the event âas an instrument of hostile propaganda and a means of whitewashing the aggressive policy of the Russian Federation.â
Beyond politics, Intervision faces practical hurdles. Unlike Eurovision, where participants largely share similar time zones (with the notable exception of Australia), Intervision spans multiple continents, making engagement with the live broadcast and voting procedures more challenging. 8pm in Moscow is 1pm in Cuba and Venezuela â not exactly primetime viewing. Many performances will need to be recorded and shown the following day, undermining the communal viewing experience that makes Eurovision compelling. Unlike Eurovision, which developed alongside European integration and shared cultural experiences, Intervision lacks the underlying political and geographic foundation that could spark and sustain long-term viewer engagement.
The eclectic mix of far-flung participating countries, according to Hutchings, reflects Russiaâs broader strategic pivot away from the west toward the global south and Brics nations. Like the reorientation of Russian state TV news network RT after western bans, the contest represents an attempt to build alternative cultural infrastructure outside western-dominated spaces. Yet for all the geopolitical posturing, the initiative may function more as domestic theatre than international outreach: Putinâs broader strategy of constructing a patriotic Russian culture, while demonstrating that the country can thrive independently of European institutions.
If thatâs the goal, early indicators suggest the audience isnât exactly enthralled. As Barreiro LeĂłn points out, the contestâs social media presence remains underwhelming â little over 4,000 Instagram followers at the time of writing (though Instagram is blocked in Russia, forcing users to access it via VPN), about 14,000 on Russian social media site VKontakte, and approximately 45,000 on a Telegram channel. Eurovision, for comparison, boasts 2.2 million Instagram followers. Even Russian audiences may prove skeptical, Vuletic believes, with educated young Russians seeking cutting-edge music unlikely to embrace a contest explicitly promoting conservative values.
Whether this latest attempt to resurrect Intervision will prove more successful than previous efforts remains to be seen. Moscow may frame this as cultural competition, but practical realities suggest the contest faces an uphill battle. Of course, most European audiences wonât be able to judge for themselves â unlike Eurovisionâs widespread broadcast across the continent, Intervision wonât be gracing screens in the EU or the UK. As for whether Russiaâs alternative will strike the right note with global audiences â the juryâs out.