So Canada is to join Eurovision. Britain, the colonial master turned supplicant, has lent its support. How very arranged marriage of convenience this all seems. The land of maple syrup and Mounties will now compete with the glitter and glitz of a competition that once was a harmless, if tacky, celebration of European pop culture. But let us not mince words: this is a symptom of something deeper, something far more troubling than a singing contest. It is the slow, agonising decay of the West’s cultural nerve — or perhaps its rebirth through kitsch.
First, the facts. Eurovision, for the uninitiated, is a televised slaughterhouse of musical ambition, where nations parade their worst impulses in sequins and auto-tune. It began in 1956 as a post-war project of unity, a way for Europe to wave its handkerchief of peace. Now, it is a circus of camp and political point-scoring. Canada, a country that could not decide whether it was part of the Empire or simply a reluctant neighbour to the American juggernaut, now wants a seat at this table. Why? Is it a craving for legitimacy? A desperate bid for relevance in a world that has moved on from both the Commonwealth and the old ties?
Britain, of course, is playing its usual role: the aristocratic uncle who nods approvingly at the colonial child’s ambitions. But let us be honest. The UK has been a cultural disaster zone for decades, its music scene a pale shadow of the 1960s, its television exports reduced to baking shows and period dramas. Supporting Canada’s Eurovision bid is not an act of generosity; it is a cry for help. Britain needs Canada as a cultural life raft, a way to pretend that the Anglosphere still matters in a world of K-pop and Bollywood. It is the last gasp of a dying empire, clutching at straws shaped like a microphone.
Critics will say that Eurovision’s expansion to non-European nations is inevitable. Australia joined in 2015, after all. Why not Canada? It is a globalised world, they insist. Culture knows no borders. But this is the language of defeat, the rationalisation of decline. Eurovision was for Europe — a flawed, fractious, but distinct continent with a shared history, however bloody. Adding Canada is like inviting your neighbour to your family dinner because his own kitchen is too quiet. It dilutes the very essence of the thing.
And what of Canada’s own cultural identity? It has spent decades defining itself against the United States, a long and, frankly, exhausting project. Now it seeks to define itself against Europe? Or to join Europe’s circus as a way to flee its own cultural insecurities? Canada’s music scene is respectable enough: Drake, Celine Dion, Neil Young. But Eurovision does not reward respectability. It rewards spectacle, irony, and the sheer audacity of bad taste. Canada is too polite, too earnest for this. It will send a folk singer or a jazz quartet, and it will be politely ignored.
The real question, however, is whether this matters at all. I suspect it does. Cultural events are the scaffolding of identity. When you see a country sing its heart out on a stage, you see its soul. Eurovision is a mirror, and Canada will see reflected something it has long tried to avoid: its own irrelevance, its own lack of a clear place in the world. Britain, meanwhile, will see an old friend clutching its hand, both of them drowning in the same bathtub of nostalgia.
So let them have their Eurovision. It will be glitzy, it will be gaudy, and it will be forgotten the moment the last note fades. But the signal it sends is clear: the West is now a cultural theme park, and the old empires are selling tickets at the gate. Enjoy the show. It is all we have left.









