Selecţia Naţională 2011 Selecția Națională 2011 was the national final format developed by TVR in order to select Romania's entry for the Eurovision Song Contest 2011. The competition took place at the TVR studios in
Bucharest on 31 December 2010 and was hosted by
Paula Seling and
Ovi which represented
Romania in the Eurovision Song Contest 2010 with Gianina Corondan hosting segments from the green room. The show was televised on
TVR1,
TVR HD,
TVRi as well as online via the broadcaster's website
tvr.ro.
Competing entries TVR opened a submission period for artists and composers to submit their entries between 1 October 2010 and 5 November 2010. The broadcaster received 90 submissions after the submission deadline passed, of which 84 were eligible for consideration. An expert committee reviewed the received submissions between 9 and 10 November 2010 and selected thirteen entries for the national final. The committee also reserved the right to change the performer of a selected song and should this be the case, composers were required to submit the final version of their songs with its new performers by 14 November 2010. The members of the expert committee that selected the thirteen entries were: • Eduard Cârcotă – composer • Alexandra Cepraga – music director • Manuel Dinculescu –
Radio 21,
Vibe FM • Horia Moculescu – composer, producer • Ştefan Naftanailă –
Radio Romania • George Natsis – composer • Christian Raetscher – impresario • Gabriela Scraba –
Radio Romania • Elena Stirbescu – TVR director • Dan Teodorescu – singer-songwriter • Andrei Tudor – composer The competing entries were announced during a press conference on 15 November 2010 held at the Howard Johnson Hotel in
Bucharest. TVR hosted a presentation evening on 1 December where the competing artists performed their songs live for the public.
Final The final took place on 31 December 2010. Thirteen songs competed and the winner, "
Change" performed by
Hotel FM, was determined by the 50/50 combination of the votes from an eleven-member jury panel and public televoting. A
BMW 3 Series (E90) car was also awarded to the songwriters responsible for the winning entry. The members of the jury panel that voted were: Adrian Ordean (composer), Alexandra Cepraga (music director), Andrei Tudor (composer), Gabriel Marica (music editor),
Niamh Kavanagh (Irish singer, winner of the
Eurovision Song Contest 1993 and representative of
Ireland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2010), Eduard Cârcotă (composer),
Chiara Siracusa (Maltese singer, represented
Malta in the Eurovision Song Contest 1998,
2005 and
2009), Lucian Avramescu (poet), Olivier Vanhoutte (Belgian journalist), Daniel Iordăchioaie (interpreter) and Dan Manoliu (entertainment editor). In addition to the performances of the competing entries, the interval acts featured performances by the members of the jury panel Chiara Siracusa, Johnny Logan and Niamh Kavanagh.
Controversy In February 2011, the Anti-Discrimination Alliance of All Dads (T.A.T.A.) proposed TVR and the head of the Romanian delegation at the Eurovision Song Contest Marina Almăşan for the removal of Hotel FM's lead singer David Bryan after social media leaks of pornographic videos between Bryan and his girlfriend, which "damages Romania's image". Almăşan later stated that the broadcaster and Romania's image had nothing to do with Bryan's personal affairs and discussions on the Internet.
Promotion Hotel FM made several appearances across Europe to specifically promote "Change" as the Romanian Eurovision entry. On 23 and 26 February, Hotel FM performed "Change" during the
Bulgarian Eurovision national final and the
Moldovan Eurovision national final, respectively. Between 22 and 24 April, Hotel FM took part in promotional activities in
Brussels and
Ghent,
Belgium and performed during the
Eurovision "de luxe" event held at the Cocteau venue. ==At Eurovision==