Belarus in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2012

Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2012
Country Belarus
National selection
Selection processSong For Eurovision
Selection date(s)28 September 2012
Selected entrantEgor Zheshko
Selected song"A more-more"
Finals performance
Final result9th, 56 points
Belarus in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest
◄2011 2012 2013►

Belarus selected their Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2012 act through a national selection on 28 September 2012. Egor Zheshko represented Belarus with the song "A more-more". He placed 9th out of 12 countries in the contest with 56 points.

Before Junior Eurovision

Song For Eurovision

The national final "Song For Eurovision" was held on 28 September 2012. Ten acts competed for the winning title. Egor Zheshko won with "A more-more", winning 1st place from both the jury and the televiewers.[1][better source needed]

Final – 28 September 2012
Draw Artist Song Jury Televote Total Place
1 Tatyana Prokhorenko "Moya dusha" 3 711 1 4 9
2 Daria Atroshenko "Ne pakiday!" 2 716 2 4 9
3 Anna Trubetskaya & Timur Shushkov "Etot mir" 10 2037 8 18 2
4 Trio "Deti Solntsa" "Luna-park" 5 1727 7 12 4
5 Irina Kruglik "Privet" 4 997 5 9 7
6 Yulia Atroschenko "Glyane sontsa" 8 3183 10 18 2
7 Antoniy Konoplyanik "Klub krutyh parney" 7 909 3 10 6
8 Zaranak "Vot tak" 1 920 4 5 8
9 Valeriya Shepelevich "Pust' budet tak" 6 1708 6 12 4
10 Egor Zheshko "A more-more" 12 4428 12 24 1

At Junior Eurovision

During the contest, Belarus opened the show, preceding Sweden. Belarus came 9th with 56 points.[2]

Voting

Points awarded to Belarus[3]
Score Country
12 points[a]
10 points  Ukraine
8 points
7 points
6 points
5 points
4 points  Russia
3 points
2 points
1 point
Points awarded by Belarus[3]
Score Country
12 points  Ukraine
10 points  Russia
8 points  Armenia
7 points  Sweden
6 points  Georgia
5 points  Israel
4 points  Moldova
3 points  Belgium
2 points  Azerbaijan
1 point  Netherlands

Notes

  1. ^ All countries received one set of 12 points to ensure no country finished with nul points.

References

  1. ^ Mikheev, Andy (28 September 2012). "Belarus/Беларусь - Yegor Zheshko - A more-more". esckaz.com. ESCKaz. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
  2. ^ "Final of Amsterdam 2012". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 30 May 2021. Retrieved 30 May 2021.
  3. ^ a b "Results of the Final of Amsterdam 2012". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 30 May 2021. Retrieved 30 May 2021.