JJ celebrates after winning the Grand Final of the 69th Eurovision Song Contest. Photo / Getty Images
JJ celebrates after winning the Grand Final of the 69th Eurovision Song Contest. Photo / Getty Images
Austria’s JJ won the 2025 Eurovision Song Contest with his opera-tinged song Wasted Love.
JJ, real name Johannes Pietsch, secured Austria’s first win since 2014 with 436 points.
Israel’s participation prompted protests in Basel, leading to clashes and arrests during the event.
Austria’s JJ has won the 2025 Eurovision Song Contest with his opera-tinged song Wasted Love triumphing at the world’s biggest live music television event.
JJ topped the votes from national juries around Europe and viewers from across the continent and beyond, giving Austria its first victory since Conchita Wurst’s triumphin 2014 with Rise Like a Phoenix.
After the nail-biting drama as the votes were revealed, Austria finished with 436 points, ahead of Israel on 357 and Estonia on 356.
“Thank you to you, Europe, for making my dreams come true,” said 24-year-old countertenor JJ, whose real name is Johannes Pietsch.
His performance was filmed in black and white, in the 4:3 ratio of the monochrome television era.
Sweden had long been the bookmakers’ hot favourite to win the 69th edition of the contest in Basel, Switzerland, with the comedy trio KAJ’s Bara Bada Bastu on the delights of sweating it out in a sauna.
But they faded away as the votes came in, finishing fourth ahead of Italy, Greece and France.
Separate jury and viewer votes from each of this year’s 37 participating countries – with equal weight – plus an extra vote from the rest of the world combined, decided who won the coveted microphone-shaped trophy.
JJ, representing Austria, performs Wasted Love on stage during the Grand Final of the 69th Eurovision Song Contest. Photo / Getty Images
‘Ich Komme’
An estimated 160 million people across Europe and beyond were expected to tune in for the annual TV spectacle, where kitsch, glam and spectacular staging go hand in hand.
The 26 finalists took to the stage carrying their national flags at the start of the show, to the thundering sound of a traditional drum corps.
The songs in contention were a showcase of Europe’s different musical scenes.
They included a Portuguese guitar ballad, a Maltese diva, Lithuanian alternative rock, an Italian singalong, a Greek power ballad, ethereal Latvian choral folk, and German booming beats.
Finland’s Erika Vikman – who gained momentum during Eurovision week with the orgasmic Ich Komme – finished by being hoisted in the air on a spark-emitting golden microphone, triggering a big response in the arena.
Poland’s Justyna Steczkowska, 52, set a new record between Eurovision appearances, returning 30 years after her first appearance in the competition.
The Netherlands’ competitor Claude broke into tears after performing his song C’est La Vie.
French singer Louane, who lost both her parents as a teenager, performed her song Maman, with falling pieces of cork representing the sands of time. The song’s final word was spoken by her own daughter.
And Malta’s Miriana Conte finished her diva big number Serving by bouncing up and down on an exercise ball.
Pro-Palestinian protests
Israel’s participation prompted protests in Basel over the war in Gaza.
Israel’s entrant Yuval Raphael survived the October 7, 2023 attack on Israel that sparked the Gaza war, hiding beneath bodies as Hamas gunmen attacked a music festival, killing hundreds.
During the performance of her song New Day Will Rise, loud whistles could be heard in the arena and two people tried to get on stage.
“At the end of the Israeli performance, a man and a woman tried to get over a barrier on to the stage. They were stopped. One of the two agitators threw paint,” a Eurovision spokesman told AFP.
“The man and the woman were taken out of the venue and handed over to the police.”
Elsewhere in Basel, pro-Palestinian demonstrators clashed briefly with riot police. Blows were exchanged and police used tear gas.
Life dreams
Some 6500 excited ticket holders packed out the St Jakobshalle arena in Basel, dressed up to the nines and ready to party.
“This is my first live show at Eurovision. I have goosebumps, I’m so excited!” said Luena Beeler, 20, wearing a red sequin-covered Tirol-style dress, and a big Austrian flag on her shoulders.
Some 36,000 partygoers were watching a live transmission of the show at the football stadium opposite the arena and held a mass singalong of Swedish four-piece ABBA’s smash hit Waterloo, which won Eurovision 1974.