So Canada is to grace Eurovision with its presence in 2027. One might ask: why would a country that already hosts the most insipid cultural festival of all, the Juno Awards, want to import another platform for mediocrity? But this is not about music.
This is about a nation’s desperate grasping for relevance, a symptom of the broader intellectual decadence that has infected the West. For years, Eurovision has been a delightful circus of continental kitsch, a celebration of Europe’s enduring peculiarities. Now, the Canadians come to dilute the broth.
The British broadcasters, already trembling at the thought of new voting blocs, should be more concerned about the cultural signal this sends. It is the equivalent of inviting the sober cousin to the bacchanal. Canada, a nation that has spent the last decade apologising for its own existence, now seeks validation from a contest that rewards the outlandish.
What next? The United Arab Emirates in the World Cup of Darts? This is not progress; it is the slow dissolution of distinct identity.
We are witnessing the fall of another cultural boundary, and with it, the final shreds of European exceptionalism. Mark my words: Canada’s debut will be a masterclass in blandness, a ten-point plan to homogenise what little eccentricity remains in the global songfest.








