Azerbaijan's vote rigging Prior to the finals, the Lithuanian media outlet
15min released an undercover video suggesting that representatives from Azerbaijan were trying to
bribe Lithuanians for votes in the televoting. In response to the allegations, Executive Supervisor
Jon Ola Sand reaffirmed the contest's commitment to a "fair and transparent result". He stated that while Eurovision organisers were looking into the case, they "[emphasised] that the intention of these individuals have not yet been clarified, and nor has a link been established between the individuals in the video and the Azeri delegation, the Azeri act or the Azeri EBU member
Ictimai TV." He added that, since 1998, when he was first involved with the contest, "every year there are rumors about irregularities in the voting". The EBU later confirmed an attempt of cheating in the contest, which was unsuccessful according to EBU as the EBU's system prevents fraud. According to the EBU, there is no evidence that any broadcaster has been involved in cheating. The rules were changed the next year to ensure that all participating broadcasters would be responsible for preventing fraud to their advantage or face a three-year suspension if fraud is revealed. However, in May 2015, a member of the contest's Reference Group confirmed that Azerbaijan had cheated, and that it was organized and very expensive. When Azerbaijan officially awarded no points to
Dina Garipova of Russia, despite Garipova having reportedly come second in the country's phone poll, the Azerbaijani President
Ilham Aliyev ordered an inquiry. The Russian Foreign Affairs Minister
Sergei Lavrov claimed that the result had been falsified, and stated that "this outrageous action will not remain without a response". He promised a co-ordinated response with his Azerbaijani counterpart
Elmar Mammadyarov. Simultaneously, the Belarusian President
Alexander Lukashenko claimed that his own country having received no points from Russia showed that the result must have been falsified.
Plagiarism allegations The entry for Germany, "
Glorious" by
Cascada, was the subject of investigation by
NDR following allegations that it was too similar to the
2012 winner, "
Euphoria" by
Loreen. NDR spokeswoman Iris Bents played down the allegations, stating that "Every year there are attempts to create scandals around the Eurovision Song Contest and the participants." Following an independent audit, "Glorious" was found not to have plagiarized "Euphoria". Allegations of plagiarism against the winning Danish entry "
Only Teardrops" surfaced after
Eric van Tijn, a notable Dutch music producer, mentioned the opening flute solo's similarity to "I Surrender", a 2002 song by the Dutch band K-Otic. However, Van Tijn also stated that the flute solo was the only similarity between the two songs, thus calling it "a storm in a teacup".
Finland's same-sex kiss The performance of the
Finnish entry, "
Marry Me", caused controversy in some countries broadcasting the contest. The act featured
Krista Siegfrids and one of her female backing singers kissing each other at the end, widely labelled in media as Eurovision's first "lesbian kiss". Siegfrids stated to the media that the act was done to encourage
Finland to legalise same-sex marriage. It was reported that Turkish and Greek media reacted negatively to Siegfrids' act. According to
Gay Star News, the
Turkish broadcaster
TRT, which had previously decided not to participate itself, initially indicated that it would still broadcast the contest, but made a late decision not to do so.
Eric Saade's green room incident Green room host
Eric Saade referred to
Petra Mede as a "
MILF" on air during the break between the first and second halves of the voting, saying "Back to you, Petra.
#MILF". When the broadcaster for the United Kingdom,
BBC aired this, the sound was lost. It remains unknown whether this was just an accident, or if the BBC did it purposely. While the statement was supposedly scripted and SVT were aware of Saade's plan, some on social media were confused and offended by the comment. ==Other awards==