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  • Order, character and time preserved in China’s classical furniture

    Order, character and time preserved in China’s classical furniture

    Stepping into the presence of an authentic Ming horseshoe-back armchair for the first time, a striking dissonance quickly settles in: this centuries-old object does not read like an antique. It feels like a masterpiece of modern design, crafted centuries ahead of its time.

    Unlike the ornate, heavily decorated furniture that defined later Qing Dynasty tastes, Ming-style pieces reject over-the-top ornamentation, flashy inlays of mother-of-pearl, gilded accents, or bulky construction meant to signal status. It stands on four solid legs, with arms that curve gently outward and a back that arcs with deliberate, understated restraint. Bathed in light, the natural grain of the wood seems to shift and breathe, and while the piece remains silent, its intentional structure, balanced proportion, and layered hierarchy speak volumes.

    The enduring value of Chinese classical furniture does not stem from a vague label of “exotic Eastern style.” It emerges from the way that raw timber, generations of craftsmanship, human scale, traditional spatial etiquette, and centuries of collecting history converge in a single everyday object, elevating it to a tangible expression of Chinese civilization.

    ### The Foundation: Precious Tribute Woods
    At the core of this craft lies the choice of wood. According to Shi Hao, founder and director of Wuhan’s Donghu Rosewood Museum, Ming and Qing Dynasty imperial furniture relied on three legendary tribute hardwoods, sourced and offered to the imperial court by local authorities and tributary states. Ranked by value as “first yellow, second purple, third red,” they are huanghuali, zitan, and dahong suanzhi. Each carries distinct qualities that have made them prized for centuries: huanghuali is celebrated for its warm tone and dynamic grain; zitan for its unmatched density, deep dark hue, and imposing gravity; and dahong suanzhi for its rich crimson color, hardness, and dimensional stability.

    Among all Ming-style furniture, huanghuali holds a unique place of honor. The finest old-growth huanghuali from Hainan Island glows with layered hues of amber, honey, and warm reddish-brown, with grain patterns that evoke rolling mountains, flowing rivers, or drifting clouds. Its most iconic markings are the rare guilian (or limian) patterns, widely known as “ghost faces”—dark brown organic clusters that can resemble theatrical masks, leopard spots, or stacks of ancient bronze coins. Across the surface of a chair back or tabletop, these half-formed shapes emerge: half-face, half-shadow, always organic. Unlike carved decorations, these patterns grow naturally from within the wood, leading craftsmen and collectors to describe huanghuali as a living material.

    This reverence for the wood’s inherent beauty explains the iconic plain surfaces of Ming furniture. The lack of elaborate carving is not a failure of craftsmanship—it is an act of respect. The wood already holds its own landscapes and patterns; excessive ornamentation would only disrupt the natural painting that forms within its grain.

    From the mid-to-late Ming Dynasty onward, premium hardwoods flowed into elite Chinese circles through southern overland trade and maritime commerce, fueled by the booming consumer culture of the Jiangnan region. As slow-growing old-growth huanghuali became increasingly scarce, it earned its reputation as “gold among woods.” Jiangnan literati of the era favored its unadorned beauty, arguing that the natural grain alone was enough to make a piece extraordinary.

    Today, institutions like the 2,000-square-meter Donghu Rosewood Museum, which holds more than 400 pieces of rare classical rosewood furniture, are working to preserve and revitalize this lost material knowledge. In collaboration with expert teams from the Palace Museum and Shanghai Museum, the museum revives traditional Suzhou craftsmanship to bring the quiet elegance of Ming furniture back to contemporary audiences. This work extends far beyond a single institution: it signals that Ming-style furniture is no longer merely a collectible category for antique markets. It has reclaimed its place in academic material studies, craft history, museum research, and modern public aesthetic education.

    ### The Hidden Genius: Structure and Proportion
    After material, the defining strength of Chinese classical furniture lies in its hidden structural mastery, most visible in its iconic mortise-and-tenon joinery. This technique is far more than the romantic idea of “furniture built without nails.” It is a sophisticated structural system designed to accommodate the natural expansion and contraction of wood with changes in humidity, distribute weight evenly, and guarantee long-term stability. Metal nails would damage the wood’s natural integrity, but mortise-and-tenon joints allow the wood to “breathe” within controlled limits—a key reason so many Ming pieces have remained intact for more than 500 years.

    To truly understand a Ming horseshoe-back armchair, one must look beyond its graceful outer silhouette. You have to examine how the arms extend seamlessly from the backrest, how the curved splat is shaped to fit the human spine, how the legs splay just enough to balance stability and lightness, how the stretchers distribute weight across the frame, and how aprons and open spaces balance structural support with visual rhythm. Terms like luoguo stretchers, ba wang stretchers, mitered floating panels, waisted construction, and foot supports are not just jargon for antique dealers—they are the grammatical building blocks of Ming furniture design.

    Proportion is everything to the spirit of a Ming piece. If proportions are off, the entire object loses its soul. An armrest set too high feels uncomfortable to the body; a backrest too straight makes sitting uninviting; legs too thick erase the signature lightness of Ming design. Ming furniture is not simply “minimalist”—it is precise, intentional simplicity earned through centuries of refinement. A stripped-back appearance is only surface deep; precision is its true essence.

    In traditional Chinese craft, dimensions were never arbitrary. Ming carpenters, particularly in Jiangnan, relied on the Luban ruler (also called the menguang or bazi ruler) to set measurements for all furniture, doors, and structural elements. Named for Gongshu Ban (better known as Luban), the legendary 5th-century BCE craftsman from the Spring and Autumn period, this tool wove together technical measurement and traditional symbolic order centuries before modern design standards emerged.

    The Luban ruler divides all measurements into auspicious and inausicious categories, with favorable markers for wealth, status, righteousness, and good fortune, and unfavorable markers tied to illness, loss, and calamity. A traditional saying from the *Luban Jing Jiangjia Jing*, Luban’s classic text on craft, holds: “Beds do not leave seven, tables do not leave nine, stools do not leave three, doors do not leave five”—a rule that held that final dimensions should not only serve functional use, but also align with auspicious symbolism.

    From a modern perspective, this belongs to traditional feng shui and cultural belief. Within the context of pre-modern Chinese society, it reveals that furniture making was never just manual labor. It integrated human scale, domestic harmony, and psychological order into a single craft discipline. Imperial architecture and court furniture took this commitment to measured, symbolic proportion even further: the Qing Dynasty’s official building standards, the *Gongbu Gongcheng Zuofa Zeli*, devotes entire sections to door dimensions aligned with auspicious Luban positions, categorized by names like “wealth-increasing doors” and “fortune and virtue doors.”

    For traditional Chinese craftsmen, a table, chair, or bed was never just shaped timber. It carried expectations of household stability, intergenerational good fortune, and maintained social order. The balanced proportions of classical Chinese furniture come not just from the trained eye and hand of the carpenter, but from thousands of years of inherited measurement culture. This design logic is exactly why Ming furniture fits so seamlessly into modern 21st-century spaces. Modernist design prioritizes structural honesty, respect for material, functional clarity, and formal restraint—and Ming furniture achieved all of these principles centuries earlier. It lacks the cold rigidity of mass-produced industrial design, but it holds the core of modern design spirit at its center: it does not hide its structure, it does not overindulge in unnecessary decoration, and it does not use bulk to signal authority.

    A well-preserved Ming chair sits naturally in a modern apartment, contemporary gallery, or private study alongside stone accents, concrete walls, abstract painting, and modern lighting without feeling out of place. Its outline is clean, its scale controlled, its material unobscured, its structure obvious.

    ### Furniture as Spatial and Social Order
    Even so, Ming furniture is far more than just timeless design. In the elite literati culture of the late Ming, furniture shaped the entire spatial and social order of the home. A painting table was not merely a surface to work on—it was the central gathering point for reading, writing, appreciating art, burning incense, and receiving guests. A horseshoe-back armchair dictated posture, line of sight, the ritual distance between host and guest, and even the bearing of the person sitting in it. A small incense stand might hold nothing more than a burner, a small vase, or a scholar’s rock, but it gave an entire room room to breathe. A luohan bed functioned as a cross between a bed, couch, and seating piece, used for reclining, conversing, drinking tea, reading, or resting, occupying the gentle space between private leisure and social interaction.

    Furniture for entrance halls prioritized order and ritual; furniture for studies prioritized solitude and self-cultivation; beds and couches connected the daily needs of the body to the inner life of the mind. The placement, scale, and grouping of furniture formed a quiet social language, and Ming design placed unique value on empty space. Emptiness here is not absence—it is intentional control. It creates distance between objects, leaving room for light, air, and movement. A sophisticated Ming-style room is never cluttered with valuable objects; it is a space where every object knows its place.

    ### Value, Authenticity, and the Market
    This holistic framework also shapes how collectors judge the value of classical Chinese furniture. The market price of a piece is never determined by the type of wood alone—wood is only the starting threshold for value. What gives a piece its scholarly and market worth is a combination of age, form, proportion, craftsmanship, condition, provenance, publication history, exhibition record, and collecting pedigree.

    The international auction market has long recognized the value of top-tier classical Chinese furniture. Christie’s has recorded landmark sales: a 16th–17th century huanghuali circular incense stand sold for $5.8475 million, while an 18th-century zitan luohan bed fetched $3.6075 million. These results confirm that top-tier Chinese classical furniture is no longer categorized internationally as mere decorative antique. It is a high-value fine art asset that combines material rarity, technical refinement, aesthetic distinction, and centuries of collecting history.

    When evaluating a huanghuali piece, experts ask a series of critical questions: Is the timber authentic old-growth material? Does the form align with period conventions? Are the mortise-and-tenon joints original, or have components been replaced? Is the patina natural, or has the surface been over-polished, re-waxed, or re-colored? Has the structure undergone major structural alteration? Have dimensions been changed? Is the provenance clearly documented? Has the piece been previously held in significant collections, included in exhibitions, or listed in scholarly catalogues?

    Provenance is particularly critical for high-end pieces. Without a clear documented history, even a piece with beautiful timber will have limited market value. With a verified collecting record, publication history, and scholarly provenance, an old piece of furniture becomes a tested cultural asset, vetted by time, connoisseurship, and the market.

    Authenticity is the skill that demands the most hands-on experience. Classical Chinese furniture cannot be judged by a quick glance at how old it looks: old timber can be used to make new forgeries, new furniture can be artificially aged, old components can be reassembled into fake period pieces, and partial restoration can completely alter the value of an intact original. True authentication depends on verifying that all elements of the piece—wood, structure, proportion, tool marks, patina, wear patterns, and functional logic—align with each other.

    Naturally aged furniture wears unevenly, in patterns shaped by use: armrests grow smooth where generations of hands have rested, seats develop subtle wear from constant body contact, lower legs hold faint traces of centuries of contact with the floor, and drawer edges round softly from repeated opening and closing. Natural wear is never uniform; if a piece looks evenly aged from top to bottom, it is almost certainly a forgery.

    Patina, too, is often misunderstood: it is not just a shiny surface. It is a complex surface condition built up over centuries from contact with hands, air, light, dust, and daily use. Good patina is calm, warm, and layered. Over-polishing erases the evidence of time, while artificial aging fabricates a false history. Old furniture faces two great risks: being over-restored to look like new, or being artificially treated to look falsely old. One destroys authentic historical evidence; the other invents a fake history.

    ### The Imperial Footnote: The Carpenter Emperor of Late Ming
    No discussion of late Ming furniture culture is complete without mentioning the Tianqi Emperor Zhu Youxiao, who reigned from 1620 to 1627 CE. So deeply devoted was he to woodworking that he is widely remembered as the “carpenter emperor”—the most hands-on imperial craftsman in Chinese history. This title is far more than a trivial historical anecdote: it places the extraordinary refinement and popularity of late Ming woodworking alongside the accelerating political decay of the Ming court, creating one of the most haunting contradictions in Chinese dynastic history.

    According to the *Ming Shi* (the official History of the Ming Dynasty) and *Zhuozhong zhi*, a detailed first-person account of late Ming court life by eunuch Liu Ruoyu, Zhu Youxiao was obsessed with carpentry. He personally crafted miniature palace models, folding beds, small screens, lacquered objects, and even mechanical wooden contraptions, often forgetting to eat or sleep when absorbed in his work. Even the most skilled court craftsmen acknowledged the exceptional refinement of his work. Histories even record that he had eunuchs sell his handmade pieces outside the palace, adding an oddly mundane layer to his story: an emperor who did not just admire woodworking, but personally sawed, planed, carved, and shaped timber into finished objects.

    The story quickly takes a dark turn. The emperor’s total absorption in carpentry created a power vacuum that was filled by the powerful, corrupt eunuch Wei Zhongxian, who held key positions including head of the imperial secret police. When Wei would bring state memorials to the emperor for approval while Zhu Youxiao was working on wood, the emperor would repeatedly reply: “I understand the matter fully, handle it as you see fit.” All state affairs quickly fell into the hands of Wei and his faction, leading to widespread court corruption, unpaid military salaries, growing frontier threats, and spreading popular unrest across the empire.

    On one side lay sawdust, shavings, precise mortise-and-tenon joints, lacquer, and exquisitely crafted furniture. On the other lay court corruption, eunuch tyranny, and the slow collapse of the Ming dynasty. The Tianqi Emperor did not create Ming-style furniture, but he became the most extraordinary historical footnote to late Ming wood culture. The fact that an emperor could master woodworking well enough to earn the admiration of professional craftsmen proves how mature and advanced the Ming craft system had become by the early 17th century. The fact that the same emperor abandoned all state affairs to pursue his obsession casts an unavoidable shadow of political contradiction over this chapter of furniture history.

    The maturity of Ming furniture did not come from the Tianqi Emperor alone. It emerged from the growing wealth of Jiangnan, maritime trade that brought precious hardwoods to China, the refined taste of literati elites, imperial demand, and a centuries-old developed craft system. Zhu Youxiao’s legacy lies in the contradiction he embodies: woodworking had become so refined that it could capture the full attention of an emperor, while the dynasty he ruled had become so fragile that it could be undone by abandoned authority. Behind every folding bed, miniature palace, and lacquered mechanism crafted in his era lies not just extraordinary skill, but the deep imbalance of a dying age.

    ### Conclusion
    Chinese classical furniture deserves to be understood through this broad, holistic lens. It is not merely a category of collectible antiques. It is a complete cross-section of Chinese civilization. Its materials come from nature and centuries of trade; its structure from generations of craft experience; its proportion from human scale and traditional measurement culture; its spatial logic from literati social life; its value from centuries of collecting history; its authenticity from trained connoisseurship. It sits at the intersection of technical history, aesthetic history, the global art market, and the larger narrative of dynastic rise and fall in China.

    Truly exceptional classical Chinese furniture does not rely on massive size to intimidate, nor on gold and jewels to seduce. It hides the entire structure of a civilization in its joinery, social status in its balanced proportion, and thousands of years of history in its wood grain. It gives a simple everyday object layers of practical, aesthetic, ritual, and spiritual meaning. Beauty does not need to shout to be felt. Power does not always need to sit on a gilded throne. Sometimes, a single piece of wood, shaped by careful eyes, precise hands, symbolic measurement, and centuries of time, is enough to preserve an entire civilization’s core wisdom.

  • Lights, camera, Bangaranga: Highlights from Eurovision

    Lights, camera, Bangaranga: Highlights from Eurovision

    The world’s most flamboyant and widely watched live music competition, the Eurovision Song Contest, delivered another year of breathtaking performances, viral moments, and surprise outcomes that had global audiences talking for days after the final curtain fell. Among the dozens of talented acts representing nations from across Europe and beyond, two stand-out achievements captured the public’s attention more than any other, cementing their place in Eurovision’s decades-long history.

    First, Bulgaria’s rising pop sensation Dara delivered a powerhouse, electrifying performance of her entry *Bangaranga* that resonated with both the viewing public and the professional juries voting across the competition. Her dynamic stage presence, catchy original production, and seamless vocal control set her apart from a crowded field of competitors, ultimately earning her enough top points to claim the contest’s coveted first-place trophy. The win marks Bulgaria’s first major Eurovision victory in nearly two decades of participation, sending shockwaves of celebration across the Balkan nation.

    But Dara’s triumph was not the only record-breaking moment of the week. In a stunning display of vocal stamina that left the live arena audience and global viewers stunned, Ukraine’s competing act broke a long-standing Guinness World Record for the longest continuous note ever sung in the history of the Eurovision Song Contest. The unprecedented feat, which lasted more than 25 seconds, went viral within hours of the performance, drawing praise from vocal coaches and music fans worldwide for the singer’s exceptional breath control and technical skill. While Ukraine’s act ultimately finished outside the top three, the record-breaking moment will be remembered as one of the most iconic individual achievements in the contest’s modern era.

    For fans who tuned in from across the globe, this year’s Eurovision delivered exactly what it promises every year: a celebration of cultural diversity, musical creativity, and unforgettable live entertainment that brings hundreds of millions of people together across borders. This year’s highlights, from Dara’s breakthrough win to Ukraine’s historic vocal accomplishment, have already set high expectations for next year’s contest, set to be hosted in Bulgaria as a result of Dara’s victory.

  • ‘Look Mum, one point’: Why does the UK keep getting Eurovision wrong?

    ‘Look Mum, one point’: Why does the UK keep getting Eurovision wrong?

    For the fourth year running, the United Kingdom is grappling with another disappointing Eurovision result, after eccentric independent artist Sam Battle — known professionally as Look Mum No Computer — placed dead last at the 2026 contest with just one single point from jury votes and zero public votes. This marks the UK’s third bottom-of-the-table finish since 2020, and only one top 10 ranking across 16 years dating back to 2010, leaving fans and industry observers questioning the country’s long-standing slump in the global song contest.

    Battle entered the competition with his unapologetically quirky synth-pop track *Eins, Zwei, Drei*, a high-energy track about leaving a 9-to-5 office job to move to Germany that he performed in a bright pink boiler suit, bringing an unfiltered, distinctly British eccentricity to the Eurovision stage. Pre-contest predictions were already grim for the entry, but even so, Battle gave an unforgettable, high-octane performance that commentators framed as a welcome break from the UK’s history of safe, generic polished pop entries.

    Adrian Bradley, a commentator for the Eurovision-focused *Euro Trip* podcast, praised the BBC’s ambitious choice to select an unconventional act. “They took a risk on something that maybe people won’t like, but which some people might pick up the phone and vote for,” he noted. Satoshi, this year’s Moldovan contest representative, echoed that praise, pointing out that the track’s distorted vocals and unique synth work carried a clear, authentic British creative identity — even if it was never going to appeal to every voter across Europe. Battle himself acknowledged the gamble ahead of the final, comparing his entry to Marmite: “You either love it or hate it – but I think there’s a slot open for our sort of thing.” Ultimately, that open slot never materialized, as the track’s hiccuping beat and quirky British cultural references left European voters and juries bewildered.

    Many critics point to deep structural issues that have held the UK back for decades. Established British recording artists widely view representing the UK at Eurovision as a “poisoned chalice,” fearing a poor result will damage their mainstream careers. When established stars do participate, they often face harsh backlash: 2024 entrant Olly Alexander finished 18th with 46 total points, receiving zero public votes, and later called the experience “brutal,” advising future participants to seek mental health support after going into debt to fund his staging. This reputation has pushed the BBC to rely on emerging independent artists without major label backing, like Battle and 2025’s Remember Monday, leaving entries without the industry support that many competing countries enjoy.

    International contestants and Eurovision insiders say the UK could turn its fortunes around by looking to Finland, which overcame a 15-year post-victory slump after 2006’s win by Lordi to reemerge as a consistent top contender. After the 2020 breakthrough of pop star Erika Vikman at Finland’s national selection contest Uuden Musiikin Kilpailu (UMK), a growing number of established Finnish artists have embraced the contest, creating a self-reinforcing cycle of success. Finland now leans into its unique creative identity, leading to viral breakout hits like 2023’s runner-up *Cha Cha Cha* by Käärijä, which cemented the country’s new reputation for bold, memorable entries.

    Matti Myllyaho, Finland’s Eurovision show producer and organizer of UMK, says the key to Finland’s turnaround was embracing national quirkiness rather than shying away from it. When asked what advice he would give the UK, he noted: “In Finland, we started to realise our strengths, and own our slight weirdness. It’s hard to speak for the UK, but I think the path I’d recommend any Eurovision project to follow would be to, like, just own your quirkiness.”

    Still, Battle’s bold quirky entry failed to deliver a better result, leading observers to note that a successful Eurovision bid requires far more than a unique identity: it needs alignment across 10 key factors, from a strong accessible song and a seasoned performer to impressive staging, pre-show promotion, favorable running order placement, and a dose of good luck. The BBC has consistently come close to putting all the pieces together, only to miss critical elements that sink its entry year after year.

    With the good will built by 2022’s runner-up finish from Sam Ryder — the UK’s only major success in over a decade — now faded, the BBC faces the daunting task of rebuilding its Eurovision strategy. Recommendations from pundits and fans include courting major labels and established songwriters year-round instead of relying on outside collaborators, bringing in heads of music from UK’s leading radio networks to leverage their industry insight and connections, and adopting an open national selection format similar to Finland’s UMK or Sweden’s Melodifestivalen to draw broader public and industry engagement. Fans on the ground in Vienna offered their own takes, calling for bigger, more engaging stage productions, viral-friendly hooks, better embrace of multiple languages, and even a return of legendary British contest participants like Cliff Richard.

    As the BBC begins preparations for 2027, the question remains: can the UK reverse its long Eurovision slump, or will last place finishes become the norm for one of the world’s most influential music industries?

  • Anthony Albanese to receive ‘global citizen’ award at United Nations

    Anthony Albanese to receive ‘global citizen’ award at United Nations

    Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is scheduled to receive one of the international community’s most high-profile global leadership honors this September, when he accepts the Atlantic Council’s Global Citizens Award on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly in New York.

    The award, an annual honor granted by the nonpartisan Washington D.C.-based global think tank, recognizes current and emerging leaders whose work advances solutions to pressing cross-border challenges. The awarding ceremony has long been framed by the Atlantic Council as a leading convening space that brings together sitting heads of state, senior diplomats, top corporate executives, philanthropic leaders, and figures from the entertainment and social impact sectors.

    Albanese will join a long and diverse roster of past honorees that spans global politics, entertainment, sports governance and public service. Recent and past recipients include Argentine libertarian President Javier Milei, French President Emmanuel Macron, FIFA President Gianni Infantino, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Black Eyed Peas frontman and innovator will.i.am, former Israeli President Shimon Peres, Academy Award-winning actor Robert De Niro, and former U.S. President Bill Clinton, who received the organization’s separate Distinguished International Leadership Award in 2010.

    According to initial reporting from the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, which first broke news of Albanese’s selection, the think tank selected the Australian prime minister for the honor in recognition of three key areas of his leadership: his direction of Australia’s national government, his longstanding commitment to shoring up the AUKUS security partnership and expanding collective security cooperation across the Indo-Pacific, and his sustained efforts to deepen diplomatic and economic engagement with nations across Southeast Asia and the Pacific Islands region.

    The award announcement comes as Albanese prepares to address world leaders at the annual UN General Assembly, a key global diplomatic gathering that draws heads of state from across the globe to address shared challenges from climate change to geopolitical instability.

  • Bangaranga! Bulgaria wins Eurovision – but UK comes last

    Bangaranga! Bulgaria wins Eurovision – but UK comes last

    The 2026 Eurovision Song Contest, held in Vienna to mark the iconic competition’s 70th platinum anniversary, delivered a stunning upset when Bulgarian pop star Dara claimed the nation’s first ever victory with her high-energy dance track *Bangaranga* — a surprise win that capped a night of political tension, unexpected results, and memorable live performances.

    Going into the grand final, Dara was far from the favorite to win, with bookmakers having favored Finnish duo Pete Parkkonen and Linda Lampenius for weeks and many commentators tipping Australian star Delta Goodrem to take the trophy. But the 27-year-old Bulgarian talent, already a household name in her home country with more than 80 million combined streams and views and a coaching role on Bulgaria’s *The Voice*, defied all pre-contest expectations. She dominated both the jury and public vote to finish with a massive 516 points, a nearly 200-point lead over second-place finisher Israel’s Noam Bettan. Third place went to Romania’s Alexandra Căpitănescu, followed by Goodrem and Italy’s Sal Da Vinci to round out the top five.

    Beyond its catchy, unforgettable chorus and high-impact choreography, *Bangaranga* carries a deeply personal meaning for Dara. The track’s title, often mislabeled as just another whimsical Eurovision nonsensical phrase, translates to “uproar” in Jamaican patois, and its lyrics explore her journey managing anxiety and ADHD, a diagnosis she received just one year prior. Her dynamic performance drew inspiration from Bulgaria’s ancient Kukeri tradition, where masked performers drive out evil spirits, with whiplash-inducing choreography that earned her the pre-final award for best staging, voted on by contest commentators including the UK’s Graham Norton. After accepting the crystal microphone trophy, Dara told backstage reporters: “I want to thank everybody who felt the Bangaranga and felt connected to the force.” Bulgarian National Television has since confirmed that the 2027 Eurovision contest will be hosted in the country’s capital, Sofia.

    This year’s contest was overshadowed by significant political controversy surrounding Israel’s participation, sparked by widespread anger over the Gaza war’s civilian death toll. Five countries including Spain, Iceland and seven-time winners Ireland boycotted the event, and large public protests were held in central Vienna in the lead-up to the grand final. Anti-Israel chants interrupted Bettan’s semi-final performance, and the singer was booed during the final when he briefly held the top spot on the leaderboard, though no major disruptions marred his performance of the heartfelt Mediterranean love song *Michelle*. Bettan ultimately held on to secure second place.

    For the United Kingdom, the contest brought another disappointing result, marking the third time since 2020 that the nation has finished in last place. UK entry Look Mum No Computer, a YouTube creator best known for building unusual musical contraptions, earned just one single point for his synth-driven track *Eins, Zwei, Drei*. The artist had pre-emptively acknowledged the song’s divisive appeal, calling it “Marmite — you either love it or hate it”, and maintained a positive attitude after the results, saying “I always say to expect nothing, because if you expect nothing, you lose nothing.” Norton noted after the final that “He gave it his all, it just clearly didn’t shine with the audiences across Europe.”

    Several other unexpected moments shaped the night’s competition. Pre-contest favorites Parkkonen and Lampenius failed to meet expectations, their duet *Liekinheitin (Flamethrower)* finishing in sixth place, outside the top five. Goodrem, tipped to become Australia’s first ever Eurovision champion, delivered a viral vocal performance of her power ballad *Eclipse* from a stage platform borrowed from Beyoncé, but the track was ultimately seen as too dated to claim the top spot, finishing fourth. Romania’s Căpitănescu faced controversy over her track *Choke Me*, with campaigners accusing the song of glorifying sexual violence, but the artist explained the track is actually about the suffocating weight of self-doubt. Her nu metal-influenced performance resonated with voters, pushing her to a surprise third-place finish.

    A minor technical disruption interrupted Czech entrant Daniel Žižka’s performance, when a camera error distorted the video feed and briefly cut away from the singer. Žižka requested an opportunity to restart his performance, but contest organizers declined, noting that the audio and core performance had not been affected by the “small camera issue”.

    To mark the 70th anniversary of the contest, which launched in 1956 as the European Grand Prix with just seven participating nations, organizers put together a star-studded tribute to seven decades of iconic Eurovision music. Former winners joined special guests to reimagine classic hits: Finnish rock winners Lordi performed a heavy metal rework of Brotherhood of Man’s *Save Your Kisses For Me*, Ukrainian icon Verka Serduchka delivered a playful version of Sandie Shaw’s *Puppet On A String* accompanied by an Oompah band, Finnish star Erika Vikman recreated ABBA’s iconic 1974 winning performance of *Waterloo*, and Norwegian winner Alexander Rybak gave Cliff Richard’s *Congratulations* a hoedown twist. The tribute closed with a mass audience singalong of *Nel blu, dipinto di blu*, the 1958 Italian winner that has sold more than 18 million copies worldwide, and remains the only Eurovision track to ever top the US Billboard charts.

    Across the 26 competing entries, the 2026 final showcased a wide range of themes and styles, from the opening number from Denmark’s Søren Torpegaard Lund that set a tone of raw passion, to Croatia’s folk band Lelek, who told the untold story of Catholic women’s resistance during the Ottoman Empire through haunting harmonies and symbolic face paint. Lithuania’s Lion Ceccah delivered a commentary on algorithmic culture, painting his entire body silver to illustrate his message of reclaiming humanity from digital systems, while Greece’s Akylas wove a sweet story of working to lift his parents out of poverty into a high-energy techno performance full of theatrical stunts.

  • ‘Market is cooked’: Housing Minister backs tax changes amid Labor poll shock

    ‘Market is cooked’: Housing Minister backs tax changes amid Labor poll shock

    Australia’s housing market is fundamentally broken and failing to deliver accessible homeownership for ordinary working people, according to the nation’s Housing Minister Clare O’Neil, as the center-left Albanese Labor government pushes forward with high-stakes tax reforms targeting the sector, despite early polling that suggests the move could cost it support to the benefit of right-wing populist party One Nation.

    In an interview with Sky News on Sunday, O’Neil delivered a blunt assessment of Australia’s decades-long housing affordability crisis, stating plainly: “This market is cooked. It’s not serving the Australian people anymore … We want people on normal incomes around our nation to have a fair shot at getting into housing.”

    The federal government’s planned reforms, set to be formally introduced following the release of the 2026-27 May federal budget, roll back the 50% capital gains tax discount for existing properties and restrict negative gearing — a tax break for property investors that allows rental losses to be offset against other income — to only newly constructed housing and properties already held by investors (grandfathered assets). O’Neil emphasized that the changes will not resolve the nation’s housing shortage overnight, but framed them as a critical, balanced step toward redressing systemic housing inequality, paired with a suite of additional policies designed to increase overall housing supply.

    Treasury modelling cited by O’Neil projects the reforms will help roughly 75,000 current renter households transition into first home ownership, by gently cooling the rapid pace of national house price growth. While prices will continue to rise under the policy framework, modelling predicts growth will moderate enough to deliver an average $20,000 reduction in the final purchase price for first-time buyers, striking a balance between inaction on affordability and overly drastic intervention that would disrupt market stability. “We’ve got the balance right,” O’Neil said, noting that demand for reform extends far beyond young aspiring buyers: “I am just as likely to get stopped in the street by a grandparent or a parent who is desperately concerned about their kids and their ability for their kids to set down roots, grow wealth, and raise a family in this country.”

    The government’s priority on expanding first home ownership comes as it faces early political headwinds from the changes. The first major public polling released since the policy was unveiled, conducted by Roy Morgan, shows One Nation has pulled ahead of Labor on primary votes in a key contested area, representing a significant threat to Labor’s electoral standing. Dismissing the poll result, Treasurer Jim Chalmers told the ABC the government did not advance the reforms to earn short-term polling gains, but to deliver long-term progress for younger Australians locked out of homeownership by decades of policy failure.

    Chalmers also defended the government’s decision to apply the capital gains tax changes to shares as well as property, noting that 90% of Australians under 25 hold no equities. He argued the current tax system is distorted, overfavoring investment in existing housing while underinvesting in new supply and other asset classes. The reforms will create a far fairer, more neutral capital gains tax regime, he said, correcting a broken status quo that has locked millions out of the market. “Some people will pretend that the current arrangements in the housing market and the tax system are working just fine. We don’t agree. We think the status quo is broken and that’s why we’re fixing it,” Chalmers said.

    To pass the Senate, the government will need support from either the center-right opposition Coalition or the left-wing Greens, neither of which have signaled they will back the changes. Opposition Leader Angus Taylor has already announced the Coalition would scrap most of Labor’s core housing policies if elected, and has proposed a new policy that would peg annual net overseas migration levels directly to the number of new housing completions each year. Taylor criticized Labor for setting migration targets without accounting for existing housing supply, public services, and infrastructure, telling Sky News: “This must change, and what we’re proposing here is each year the housing minister would say we’ve built this many houses and so the immigration number, the net overseas migration number, can be X.”

  • Foreign tourists are falling out of love with Goa – here’s why

    Foreign tourists are falling out of love with Goa – here’s why

    On a blazing midday at crescent-shaped Palolem Beach, tucked along the southern edge of Goa’s sweeping sun-kissed coastline, crowds still jostle for space on the sand and cool off in the gentle Arabian Sea waves. Beachside food shacks and budget-friendly backpacker hostels that line the bay of India’s self-styled party capital are at full capacity. The biggest shift from a decade ago, however, is striking: the crowds of European and Russian travelers that once packed these shoreline villages are nowhere to be found. Today, nearly every visitor is domestic, a visible marker of a dramatic shift in Goa’s decades-old tourism economy.

    Official data from Goa’s state tourism department quantifies this stark divide. In 2017, the state welcomed nearly 900,000 international tourists, a pre-pandemic peak. By 2025, that number has fallen to roughly 500,000 – a drop of nearly 45% that cuts the international visitor count in half. The reverse trend holds for domestic travel: domestic tourist arrivals have surged from 6.8 million in 2016 to more than 10 million in 2024, as growing numbers of travelers from across India turn to Goa for their coastal getaways.

    State officials have cited ongoing global geopolitical volatility as a core headwind slowing international arrivals, but industry insiders and long-time visitors note the decline began well before recent global conflicts. A range of interconnected challenges have eroded Goa’s long-held appeal for international travelers, who have flocked to the state’s laid-back, budget-friendly shores since the hippie movement of the 1960s and 1970s.

    Economic pressure tops the list of barriers. Multiple foreign visitors interviewed by the BBC point to widespread post-pandemic cost-of-living crises across Europe and Russia, combined with spiking airfare driven by global energy instability and Middle East tensions, that have put long-haul trips to Goa out of reach for many. “Some of my friends are choosing Turkey or Egypt over Goa this year because it’s closer to home and cheaper,” explained Sophie, a Russian ballet dancer on her fifth visit to the state. Rico, a regular visitor from Newcastle, United Kingdom, added that most Europeans now prioritize domestic holidays to cut costs.

    Beyond rising travel costs, cumbersome and increasingly expensive visa processes are another major deterrent. Many international travelers blame extended processing wait times and a recent hike in five-year visa fees for pushing them to choose alternative destinations. Ernest Dias, a member of Goa’s tourism advisory committee and owner of a large travel charter firm, notes that rival destinations across South and Southeast Asia – including Sri Lanka and Vietnam – offer convenient on-arrival visas that cater to modern travelers’ preference for spontaneous, last-minute getaways. Just this year, a large Russian charter group canceled a planned Goa trip and rebooked to Vietnam, where inbound travel demand has skyrocketed, Dias confirmed.

    Affordability of accommodation is another key pain point. The boom in domestic tourism and the fast-growing MICE (meetings, incentives, conferences, exhibitions) sector has driven up prices for three- and four-star hotels, pricing out many budget-focused international travelers. Compared to regional competitors like Thailand, Sri Lanka and Vietnam, Goa also has far less supply of low-cost beachfront resorts, where all-inclusive package deals can cost half as much as comparable stays in Goa. The cancellation of a direct Air India route between London Gatwick and Goa has compounded these issues, forcing many European travelers to arrange inconvenient layovers in Mumbai that detract from their trip experience.

    Infrastructure and cleanliness gaps have also pushed visitors away. While the state government has increased efforts to clear litter from Goa’s beaches, many access roads remain blighted by uncollected garbage – an unwelcome sight for international travelers who prioritize high cleanliness standards. Prohibitively expensive taxi fares, driven by local union opposition to app-based ride-hailing services that would offer transparent, competitive pricing, create another persistent headache for visitors. “It’s like living in the Stone Age,” Dias noted, explaining that travelers cannot book rides through popular apps due to aggressive pushback from local taxi associations.

    These challenges have hit Goa’s tourism-dependent local economy hard. Shervyn Lobo, who operates a 100-room hotel near popular Baga Beach, reports international footfall has dropped by at least 10% at his property. While strong domestic demand has offset revenue losses, international travelers are far more valuable to local businesses: they typically stay longer, fill hotel rooms during off-peak periods, and spend more on local excursions, motorbike rentals and meals at independent beach shacks, unlike many domestic travelers who opt for all-inclusive package deals. This shift means the drop in international visitors ripples through the entire local tourism ecosystem, from small street vendors to activity operators.

    State officials have acknowledged the problem after years of inaction, and have launched new efforts to win back international travelers. The tourism department is hosting international promotional road shows in emerging source markets, with recent events in Poland and upcoming outreach across Scandinavia. Officials are also targeting new non-European source markets in Asia and Africa to diversify Goa’s international visitor base. Even so, the challenge is steep: as regional competitors offer cheaper, cleaner, and more traveler-friendly experiences, Goa will need to enact major reforms to reclaim its status as a top global budget beach destination and win back the international travelers that built its global reputation.

  • Venezuela says it deported a close ally of Maduro to face judicial proceedings in US

    Venezuela says it deported a close ally of Maduro to face judicial proceedings in US

    MIAMI — In a striking political shift that caps years of international legal wrangling, Venezuela’s transitional government confirmed Saturday it has deported Alex Saab, a once-powerful close associate of ousted Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro, to the United States to face federal criminal proceedings. The move comes less than three years after Saab was pardoned by U.S. President Joe Biden as part of a high-stakes prisoner exchange between the two nations.

    The 54-year-old Colombian-born businessman has long been labeled by U.S. officials as Maduro’s personal “bag man,” and his deportation marks a dramatic reversal of fortune. Just years ago, Maduro mounted an aggressive, all-out diplomatic and legal campaign to secure Saab’s release after his initial 2020 international arrest. Today, Saab’s transfer opens the door for U.S. prosecutors to compel his testimony against Maduro himself, who was captured in a surprise U.S. military raid in January and is currently awaiting trial on federal drug trafficking charges in a Manhattan courtroom.

    In a brief official statement released Saturday, Venezuela’s national immigration authority did not explicitly name the country Saab was sent to, but confirmed the deportation order was issued in direct response to multiple active criminal investigations being conducted by U.S. authorities. The statement’s choice to identify Saab solely as a “Colombian citizen” is widely viewed as a deliberate workaround of Venezuelan national law, which explicitly bans the extradition of Venezuelan-born citizens. This framing also marks a sharp break from the previous Maduro administration’s claims, when officials including then-acting President Delcy Rodríguez (now Venezuela’s current transitional leader) insisted Saab was a Venezuelan diplomat carrying out an urgent humanitarian mission to Iran when he was detained during a refueling stop in 2020.

    U.S. federal prosecutors have been scrutinizing Saab’s role in an alleged bribery and kickback conspiracy tied to Venezuelan government food import contracts for months, The Associated Press has confirmed. The investigation traces back to a 2021 federal prosecution filed in Miami against Saab’s long-time business partner, Alvaro Pulido, according to a former U.S. law enforcement official familiar with the case. The probe centers on activities tied to the CLAP program, a signature Maduro administration initiative launched to distribute subsidized staple goods including rice, corn flour and cooking oil to low-income Venezuelans grappling with devastating hyperinflation and a collapsed national economy.

    Saab amassed a massive personal fortune through his exclusive access to Venezuelan government contracts during Maduro’s tenure, but he fell out of favor rapidly following Maduro’s ouster in January. Since taking office as the head of Venezuela’s new transitional government on January 3, Rodríguez has moved systematically to cut Saab from power: he was removed from the cabinet, stripped of his influential position as the primary gatekeeper for foreign companies seeking investment access to Venezuela, and has been the subject of conflicting reports for months claiming he was either imprisoned or placed under house arrest.

    As of Saturday evening, the U.S. Department of Justice had not issued an immediate response to requests for comment on Saab’s deportation. Associated Press reporter Eric Tucker contributed additional reporting for this story from Washington, D.C.

  • ‘Price you pay’: Immigrants facing citizenship ‘choice’ under Coalition benefits plan

    ‘Price you pay’: Immigrants facing citizenship ‘choice’ under Coalition benefits plan

    Australia’s federal opposition leader, Angus Taylor, has sparked fierce political debate by announcing a hardline new immigration policy that would bar permanent residents who do not pursue Australian citizenship from accessing the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) and 17 other key social welfare programs. Under the plan, Taylor confirms, there is a tangible consequence for permanent residents who choose not to take up citizenship.

    The proposal formed a core plank of Taylor’s budget reply speech delivered to Parliament Thursday, where the Liberal-National Coalition also outlined two other flagship policies: linking annual net overseas migration levels directly to national housing construction completion rates, and indexing Australia’s two lowest income tax brackets to inflation to offset bracket creep. If the Coalition wins the upcoming federal election, the citizenship-linked benefit restrictions will go into effect.

    Appearing on SkyNews Sunday, Taylor pushed back against criticism that the policy would coerce long-term permanent residents – some of whom have lived in Australia for decades – into naturalizing. He framed the change as a matter of personal choice, not coercion. “It is their choice to become an Australian citizen,” Taylor said. “But if you don’t want to become a citizen, there is a price you pay for that. Australian citizenship has to matter. We live in one of the greatest countries in the world, and those who come here and decline citizenship still reap enormous benefits from being part of this nation.”

    The policy has drawn particular concern from Chinese Australian and Indian Australian communities, whose home countries do not recognize dual citizenship. For permanent residents from these nations, taking up Australian citizenship would require them to renounce their original citizenship, a step many are unwilling to take. Taylor rejected claims the policy targets any specific national group, noting that Australia itself permits dual citizenship, and restrictions on dual nationality are choices made by other governments that Canberra cannot control.

    “Other countries make choices about that, we don’t control that. That is up to them. But we must attach privileges to Australian citizenship. That’s what we’re proposing here,” Taylor said. He added that while Australia will continue to recognize dual citizenship for those who are eligible, some permanent residents from non-dual citizenship countries will ultimately have to decide whether they want to access full social benefits and commit to Australia.

    Taylor also dismissed suggestions the policy shift was a response to surging support for the right-wing One Nation party, arguing the Coalition’s agenda is driven by anger at the incumbent Labor government’s policy failures, not a panic over competing right-wing parties. “We are upset and deeply, deeply concerned by the failures of this Labor government. That’s the real issue,” he said.

    Beyond the citizenship policy, key details of the Coalition’s immigration and fiscal plans remain undisclosed. Taylor has yet to confirm a specific numerical target for net migration, nor has he released full costings for the proposed social benefit changes. He did confirm the policy changes would generate “many billions of dollars” in savings, and pledged to release full costings before the election in line with standard political convention, per Australia’s pre-election transparency norms.

    On migration levels, which the Coalition will tie directly to how many new homes are completed each year, Taylor said the plan would cut net migration by at least 70 percent from the peak levels recorded under the Labor government, pushing annual numbers well below 200,000. Responding to concerns that lower overall migration would worsen existing skilled labor shortages in the trades sector, Taylor argued the Coalition’s policy would focus not just on cutting total numbers but also on raising quality standards to ensure migrants bring the skills Australia actually needs.

    In a move that avoids immediate parliamentary conflict, Taylor confirmed the Coalition will not oppose Labor’s proposed $250 Working Australians Tax Offset in the Senate, guaranteeing the legislation will pass through both houses of parliament and become law.

    Treasurer Jim Chalmers, the incumbent Labor government’s top finance minister, has lambasted Taylor’s budget reply as the “least responsible” he has ever witnessed in Australian politics. Chalmers argued that indexing the lower tax brackets to inflation, the Coalition’s signature fiscal proposal, would add a quarter of a trillion dollars in cumulative national debt over a 10-year period. He criticized the plan for injecting massive new stimulus into the Australian economy at a time when inflation remains elevated, warning it would drive up cost of living pressures further.

    Chalmers countered that the Labor government is already committed to addressing bracket creep – the phenomenon where inflation pushes workers into higher tax brackets even as their real wage growth stalls – noting the recent federal budget created fiscal space to deliver relief in the future in a responsible and economically sustainable way.

  • ‘Momentum is building’: Labor leader Steven Miles’ boast after claiming knife-edge victory in Stafford by-election

    ‘Momentum is building’: Labor leader Steven Miles’ boast after claiming knife-edge victory in Stafford by-election

    Queensland’s political landscape has been left reeling after a tight and high-stakes by-election in the northern Brisbane seat of Stafford, where the state opposition Labor party has claimed a narrow victory despite a substantial swing toward the incumbent Liberal National Party (LNP) government.

    The contest, triggered by the sudden passing of former member Jimmy Sullivan in April 2024, was widely framed as an early test of leadership for new Labor opposition leader Steven Miles, coming just months after Labor suffered a bruising defeat at the 2024 Queensland state election. Sullivan, a 44-year-old who had been sitting on the crossbench after expulsion from Labor’s caucus over personal scrutiny, died of non-suspicious causes at his Brisbane home earlier this year, vacating the seat that Labor has held almost continuously since 2015.

    Latest official data from the Queensland Electoral Commission shows Labor candidate Luke Richmond holds a slim two-party-preferred lead of 51.2 per cent over LNP challenger Fiona Hammond, a former Brisbane City Councillor, who trails on 48.8 per cent. After all preferences are distributed, just over 700 votes separate the two front-running candidates. While the result still leaves Richmond ahead, the LNP secured a 4.1 per cent swing away from Labor in the historically safe Labor seat, which only fell to the LNP once before, during the party’s 2012 state landslide victory.

    Despite the narrow margin, LNP Premier David Crisafulli publicly conceded defeat to a gathering of party supporters in Brisbane’s Fortitude Valley on Saturday night. Acknowledging the result would leave the government “agonisingly short”, Crisafulli nonetheless celebrated the swing his party achieved, noting the outcome exceeded internal party expectations. “If you had said to me at the start of this that we will be here with a result like this, I think it is probably beyond all of our dreams,” he told attendees.

    For Labor, however, the narrow win is being framed as a sign of growing momentum ahead of the 2028 state election. In a victory statement Saturday night, Miles drew clear battle lines for the next statewide poll, pointing to the massive grassroots campaign Labor ran to hold the seat. “We have seen that momentum right here on the ground in Stafford, and tonight has drawn the battle lines for the 2028 election,” Miles said. He went on to note that the campaign marked the largest grassroots organising effort in Queensland Labor history, with volunteers knocking on more than 34,000 doors and making more than 27,000 direct voter calls.

    Miles also highlighted unusual context that benefited the LNP in the by-election, noting the party gained its modest swing after the government spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in taxpayer funds on political advertising, and struck a deal with One Nation that saw the right-wing party avoid running a candidate and openly endorse Hammond. Miles also praised Hammond for running what he called a respectful campaign.

    The seat of Stafford covers Brisbane’s inner-northern suburbs including Stafford, Chermside and Kedron, and has been held by Labor continuously since Anthony Lynham reclaimed it for the party in the 2015 state election. Sullivan succeeded Lynham as the member in 2020, before his expulsion from the Labor caucus and subsequent death earlier this year. While official formal declaration of the result is still pending, both major parties have already positioned the razor-thin outcome as a sign of shifting political tides in Queensland ahead of the next state poll.