Back in 2012, in Azerbaijan's Baku, Loreen won the Eurovision Song Contest with her "Euphoria." Now it’s looking like she could do the double and triumph again more than a decade later with "Tattoo" to become only the second person in the contest's history to win twice, but she has some fierce competition as the 67th Eurovision Song Contest reaches its climax on Saturday with a grand final broadcast live from Liverpool. There will be catchy choruses in the grand final, a kaleidoscope of costumes and tributes to the spirit of Ukraine in a competition that for seven decades has captured the changing zeitgeist of a continent.
Here's what to expect as acts from across Europe – and beyond – vie for the continent's pop crown.
This year, 37 countries sent an act to Eurovision, selected through national competitions or internal selections by broadcasters. The host country is usually the winner of the previous year's event, but 2022 runner-up Britain is hosting this time around on behalf of the winner, Ukraine.
In total 26 countries will compete in Saturday's final at the Liverpool Arena, beside the River Mersey in the port city that gave birth to The Beatles. Six countries automatically qualify: last year's winner and the "Big Five" who pay the most to the contest – France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the U.K.
The other 20 finalists, chosen by public votes in two semifinals on Tuesday and Thursday, are: Albania, Armenia, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Finland, Israel, Lithuania, Moldova, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Serbia, Slovenia, Sweden and Switzerland.
Yes, Australia... Eurovision is about spirit, not just geography. Eurovision is hugely popular in Australia, and the country was allowed to join the competition in 2015. Other entrants from outside Europe's borders include Israel and Azerbaijan.
It's hard to predict victors in a contest whose past winners have ranged from ABBA to Finnish cartoon metal band Lordi, but bookmakers say Swedish diva Loreen, who won Eurovision in 2012, is the favorite to score a double with her power ballad "Tattoo."
Finland's Kaarija was a crowd-pleaser in the semifinals with his pop-metal party tune "Cha Cha Cha," and Canadian singer La Zarra, competing for France, is also highly ranked for her Edith Piaf-esque chanson "Evidemment."
And never underestimate left-field entries like Croatia's Let 3, whose song "Mama SC!" is pure Eurovision camp: an antiwar rock opera that plays like Monty Python meets "Dr. Strangelove."
Around 6,000 fans will attend the final, hosted by long-time BBC Eurovision presenter Graham Norton, "Ted Lasso" star Hannah Waddingham, British singer Alesha Dixon and Ukrainian rock star Julia Sanina.
Each competing act must sing live and stick to a three-minute limit, but otherwise is free to create its own staging – the flashier the pyrotechnics and more elaborate the choreography, the better.
Russia's war in Ukraine will lend a solemn note to a contest famed for celebrating cheesy pop. The show will open with a performance by last year's winner, Ukrainian folk-rap band Kalush Orchestra. Ukrainian singer Jamala, who won the contest in 2016, will perform a tribute to her Crimean Tatar culture.
One person who won't be appearing is Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. He asked to address the final by video — but the organizer the European Broadcasting Union said "regrettably," that would breach "the nonpolitical nature of the event."
After all the acts have performed, viewers in participating nations can vote by phone, text message or app – though they can't vote for their own country. This year for the first time, viewers in nonparticipating countries can also vote online, with the combined "rest of the world" votes being given the weight of one individual country.
National juries of music industry professionals also allocate between one and 12 points to their favorite songs, with an announcer from each country popping up to declare which has been granted the coveted "douze points" (12 points).
Public and jury votes are combined to give each country a single score. Ending up with "nul points" (zero points) is considered a national embarrassment. It's a fate the U.K. has suffered several times.