Melodi Grand Prix 2007

Melodi Grand Prix 2007
Dates
Semi-final20 January 2007
27 January 2007
3 February 2007
Second chance8 February 2007
Final10 February 2007
Host
VenueSpektrum Arena, Oslo, Norway
Presenter(s)Synnøve Svabø and Stian Barsnes Simonsen
Participants
Number of entries18: 6 in each semi-final; 8 in the final (2 from each semi-final, 2 from the Second Chance round); 4 in the gold final
Vote
Voting systemJury and SMS and telephone voting
Semi-finals
Televoting selects eight finalists over four semi-finals
Final
Televoting selects four of the 8 finalists to progress to a "Gold Final"
3 regional juries awarded the Gold finalists 2,000, 4,000, 6,000 and 10,000 points
Televoting is conducted again, with each televote added to the songs' totals over five regions
Winning song"Ven a bailar conmigo" by Guri Schanke
2006 ← Melodi Grand Prix
Guri Schanke and dancers performing "Ven a bailar conmigo" at Melodi Grand Prix 2007

Melodi Grand Prix 2007 (shortened MGP 2007) was the television show in which the Norwegian entry for the Eurovision Song Contest 2007 was chosen.

Just like in 2006, there were three semifinals held before the final, where televoting decided the top four songs, the top two of which went to the final (in random order), and the songs who were placed 3rd and 4th went to the 'Second Chance' semifinal (also in random order). If NRK follow their traditional ways, it is unlikely we[who?] will ever find out the full results of the semifinals.

On 12 October 2006, NRK announced that it had received 464 songs for the 2007 Melodi Grand Prix, over half of which came from Sweden.[1] However, in the final selection of the 18 participating entries, only five were written partially or entirely by Swedish composers, less than half the number of the 13 Swedish entries in Melodi Grand Prix 2006. This was most probably the results of the heavy criticism NRK received from Norwegian composers due to the heavy Swedish dominance in MGP 2006.[citation needed]

Just like in MGP 2006, Synnøve Svabø and Stian Barsnes Simonsen hosted all five shows. However, 2006's additional side commentator, Jostein Pedersen, was swapped with trend guru and television host Per Sundnes, though Sundnes played a slightly smaller role than his predecessor, primarily being in charge of interval reports from the different host cities. However, he will substitute Jostein Pedersen as the new Norwegian Eurovision commentator for NRK in Helsinki.