Several countries start their second rehearsals. As we still donât have access to the rehearsals, we will do something else. Per entry, we highlight one subject and give you some more information. That can be something about the artist, the song, the lyrics or even something completely different.  Finland â Linda Lampenius x Pete Parkkonen, âLiekinheitinâ Running order: 7 | Rehearsal: 15:00â15:25 CEST Finland has moved to the top of the Eurovision 2026 betting odds, putting extra attention on Linda Lampenius and Pete Parkkonenâs entry âLiekinheitinâ. For Finnish fans, that leading position will inevitably bring back memories of the countryâs greatest Eurovision night. In 2006, Lordi shocked and thrilled Europe with âHard Rock Hallelujahâ, a hard-rock anthem performed in monster costumes. The band won the contest in Athens with 292 points, giving Finland its first, and so far only, Eurovision victory. It was a turning point for a country that had often struggled at the contest and had waited decades for a win. Lordi proved that Eurovision could reward something loud, theatrical and completely different. Now, twenty years later, Finland once again finds itself at the centre of the race. The odds may still change, but the comparison with 2006 gives this yearâs Finnish campaign an extra layer of excitement and expectation too.  Montenegro â Tamara ĆœivkoviÄ, âNova Zoraâ Running order: 8 | Rehearsal: 15:35â16:00 CEST Pinkove Zvezdice, literally âPinkâs Little Starsâ, was a Serbian television talent show for young singers, broadcast by RTV Pink from 2014. The format was aimed at children and teenagers up to 15, and quickly became a regional platform across the former Yugoslav area. Contestants performed well-known Balkan and international songs in front of a star jury, often turning emotional performances into viral moments. For Eurovision fans, the show has become a useful talent-map. Montenegroâs Tamara ĆœivkoviÄ was one of the young singers who took part, years before her Eurovision journey. Two Croatian Eurovision acts went even further: Marko BoĆĄnjak, Croatia 2025, won the second season after breaking through as an 11-year-old, while Roko BlaĆŸeviÄ, Croatia 2019, also won Pinkove Zvezdice before moving on to Dora and Eurovision. The programme therefore helped shape several Balkan pop careers, and its name still carries recognition among regional viewers with strong musical memories today.  Estonia â Vanilla Ninja, âToo Epic To Be Trueâ Running order: 9 | Rehearsal: 16:10â16:35 CEST âClub Kung Fuâ was the explosive first calling card of Vanilla Ninja. The Estonian girl band entered the song in Eurolaul 2003, Estoniaâs national selection for Eurovision. Written by Sven LĂ”hmus and Piret JĂ€rvis, it mixed pop-rock guitars with a cheeky party lyric and a martial-arts gimmick that made the performance instantly memorable. The jury was not convinced: the song finished near the bottom with 32 points. The public, however, reacted very differently. âClub Kung Fuâ became the moment that introduced Vanilla Ninja to a wider audience and helped turn them from a new Tallinn band into a national pop phenomenon at home and soon abroad. Later that year it appeared on their self-titled debut album, which launched their early career. In hindsight, the song is classic Vanilla Ninja: playful, loud, slightly absurd and impossible to ignore. It was less a Eurovision failure than the start of a European story. đ· EBU/Sarah Louise Bennett  Israel â Noam Bettan, âMichelleâ Running order: 10 | Rehearsal: 16:45â17:10 CEST There are more songs called ‘Michelle’. Yet the best-known remains the tender ballad introduced by The Beatles on their 1965 album Rubber Soul. Written mainly by Paul McCartney, with John Lennon contributing part of the middle section, it blends English lyrics with a few French lines, giving the song its unmistakable continental charm. Although The Beatles did not release it as a single in Britain, it quickly became one of their most covered compositions. The Overlanders, a British harmony group, seized the opportunity in 1966 and turned Michelle into a major hit, reaching number one on the UK Singles Chart. Their version is smoother and more folk-pop than the Beatles recording, but it keeps the melodyâs quiet elegance. The songâs success shows how strong the composition was: even without The Beatlesâ name on the label, Michelle could captivate listeners worldwide and become part of sixties pop history forever.  Â