Be Europhorian!
Europhoria, the monthly celebration of
the Eurovision Song Contest re-launched at POSH Bar and Lounge, every second
Thursday of the month
We will be saluting Denmark for winning
this year’s contest, June 13, 7pm, at Posh Bar and Lounge, NYC.
Gilad Mandelboim (giladmandelboim@gmail.com); Saf Dogan (safakidogan@gmail.com)
Europhoria
has been reinventing the night scene in NYC since December 2012, when this
unique concept was launched. Our Europhorian trend has been well received by both
veteran Eurovision fans and locals who have discovered it at our parties. Every
month at Europhoria, fans cheer waving their flags, dancing to unforgettable
performances from the show all night long.
Europhoria: A New Tomorrow will take place on June 13, at POSH Bar and
Lounge (405 West 51st Street, New
York, NY.), starting 7PM and will celebrate Denmark, this
year’s big Eurovision Song Contest winner, among other European great entries
by many countries. Watch the live performances on our screen; raise your flags,
text the screen with your commentary, enjoy our giveaways, our special drinks, and
dance the night away. DJ
This new
emerging nightlife trend will introduce new up-beat dance music, as well as
powerful ballads from the greatest and most talented European performers. Traditionally,
each Eurovision act uses the 3 minutes it’s been given to show powerful vocals,
colorful staging, great chorography and some fun gimmicks! Throughout the long
history of Eurovision, we’ve seen drag queens, transsexuals, flight attendants,
pirates, sailors, monsters, and many hotties and divas.
This contest launched a music career to many
artists such as ABBA, Celine Dion, France Gall, Olivia Newton John, Ofra Haza,
Cliff Richards, Julio Iglesias, Katrina and the Waves, and many more.
Eurovision Song Contest is a cult in Europe and it’s the biggest
music event in the world. It’s viewed by 200+ million people live globally.
European nations of all sizes submit an act every year and the juries and the
viewers crown the best song at the end of the night. The
winning songs become international hits while the winning country hosts it next
year. Since the 1950s, more than 1,200 songs already took part in the
Eurovision Song Contest. Most winning songs were performed in English.
Eurovision has been described by
some of the fans as “The love child of American Idol with the Opening Ceremony
of the Olympics, assuming that child was injected with speed, educated in
international social politics, festooned in sequins, and brought to a pride
parade”