Well, nothing but another year of endless waiting ahead of me. Ever-shortening days, those cold, empty feelings inside, the deep yearning for my favourite night of the year to approach once more - yes, Eurovision 2011 is over.
I endured an evening of terrible picture quality and a drunken friend from Woking in order to stream it online from the BBC just to get Graham Norton's commentary. He was, as always, hilarious.
I didn't only go for the English coverage to see Graham ripping everything and everyone to shreds, but also because I am off Norwegian commentary after their coverage of Wills's and Kate's wedding. I can't remember the names of the commentators, so I'll improvise. It went something like this.
Archbishop of Canterbury "Dearly beloved...."
Bjørn Olsen: "Well, Hilde, the crowd are scintillated, aren't they?"
Hilde Larssen: "They are indeed, Bjørn - but then they have to grasp at this seldom opportunity to be happy, being that they're British.
Wills: "I, William Archibald Godfrey Plantagenet Tollemach-Tollemach James Harold Fortinbras..."
Bjørn Olsen: "You're right there, Hilde. I mean, a glimpse of a white frock and a trumpet fanfare is probably all they have to hope for as a respite from their bleak, debt-ridden, indigent credit-crunch-ravaged existence, I would imagine.
Kate: "I, Kate Sharon Kylie T'quesha Paris Britney..."
Hilde Larssen: "Indeed, Bjørn. Of course, I suppose Kate might have had to run up her own dress -I mean, I wouldn't have thought anyone in Britain could stretch to a whole dress right now, would you?"
Bjørn Olsen: "I wouldn't have thought, so, Hilde, what with all that money being spent in Afghanistan whilst the economy nosedives and the whole country languishes in a pit of destitute pestilence. Still, it seems as if she has managed to cobble a half-decent frock together, doesn't it?"
Hilde Larssen: "Well, it's reasonable. I think perhaps if she'd lived somewhere, like, say, Norway, she'd probably have managed to jazz it up a little - look how thin she is, I imagine she's had to eat gruel for the best part of three months to pay for it. She even had to borrow a tiara."
Bjørn Olsen: "My, what a big cathedral."
I, of course, loved every moment of both the wedding and Eurovision. The Eurovision presenters were actually rather less embarassing than the norm. I mean, still buttock-clenchingly awful, but not quite chewing your own arm off behind the sofa because you can't bear to watch any longer as per usual. I loved the Hungarian song, I thought she should've done much better.
I was, however, hugely underwhelmed by the interval act. Never, in my many years of near-constant underwhelmment, have I been less whelmed, now I come to think of it. As Graham said, it would've been alright for a wedding, but for an audience of 120 million I think they could have managed more than a man in a sequin suit with a kazoo and a ukelele. It was like something from Great Yarmouth's Got Talent. To be fair, he did have rather a lot to live up to, what with the Norwegian flash mob affair of last year. I mean, I found it so moving just to think of it makes come over a little queer from the knees upwards. Here it is, if you haven't seen it. (Try to ignore the crap Alfaz del Pi bit and move on).
I mean, all of Europe (practically) dancing to the same song? A video link to a homely Eurovision party in every participating country (including that of Crown Princess Mette-Marit of Norway). Crown Princess Mette-Marit! I mean, it was as if all of my gay Christmasses had come at once! You wouldn't get Beatrice and Eugenie doing that, would you? Whilst I think of it, what were they wearing to the wedding? Eugenie looked like she'd just inexplicably woken up in the excess fabric bin in the BHS upholstery department. It was as if she'd been planning to run up her own dress but hadn't actually got around to running it up.
Speaking of upholstery, I can't say I'd have liked to have been at the Albanian party (look at that three-piece suite) but otherwise I think it is one of the most heartwarming pieces of television I have ever seen and I don't care how naff anyone thinks it is (or I am) for that matter.
Well, that blog entry wasn't really about anything, was it? Still, I'm just getting back into it and it's half past one in the morning and I have just finished watching an online lecture about Common Principles of Primary and Secondary Share Issues. And nobody is reading this anyway. Throw me a f***ing rope here.