Melodifestivalen 2010 | |
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Dates | |
Heat 1 | 6 February 2010 |
Heat 2 | 13 February 2010 |
Heat 3 | 20 February 2010 |
Heat 4 | 27 February 2010 |
Second chance | 6 March 2010 |
Final | 13 March 2010 |
Host | |
Venue | Globe Arena, Stockholm, Sweden |
Presenter(s) | Christine Meltzer Måns Zelmerlöw Dolph Lundgren |
Director | Daniel Jelinek |
Participants | |
Number of entries | 32: 8 in each heat; 10 in the final (2 from each heat, 2 from the Second Chance round) |
Vote | |
Voting system | 50% Jury, 50% SMS and telephone voting 11 juries (5 regional juries and six international juries) give 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 points to their seven favourite songs. People can vote by televote or SMS. Televoting gives 11, 22, 44, 66, 88, 110 and 132 points to the seven most popular songs. |
Winning song | "This Is My Life" by Anna Bergendahl |
Melodifestivalen 2010 was a Swedish song contest held in February and March 2010. It was the selection for the 50th song to represent Sweden in the Eurovision Song Contest, and was the 49th edition of Melodifestivalen. Five heats were held in the Swedish cities of Örnsköldsvik, Sandviken, Gothenburg and Malmö, with Örebro hosting the final Andra Chansen (Second Chance) round.
After the five heats 10 songs had qualified to the final of the contest, contested in the Swedish capital of Stockholm, at the Globe Arena. After the voting of 11 juries and a public televote had been revealed, the final winner was Anna Bergendahl with the pop ballad "This Is My Life", which received top marks from the public televote, and placed 2nd in the votes of the 11 juries.
The 2010 Melodifestivalen, as with recent editions of the festival, implemented a number of new rules which changed the dynamics of the contest, including the new "web wildcard" competition, held on the SVT website from October to November 2009, selecting the final heatist from submitted entries on the SVT website.