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Scoring all the points for Eurovision

For the 12th consecutive year, communications and signal distribution solutions from Riedel played a role in the Eurovision Song Contest. The company is talking about its work with some of the most eclectic singers in Europe here at IBC.
Riedel’s MediorNet realtime media network provided the redundant and decentralised signal routing and transport infrastructure from start to finish of the production, broadcast live from the International Exhibition Centre in Kiev, Ukraine in May.

Tetra digital radio systems along with Riedel’s new Bolero wireless intercom system was relied on heavily for all crew communications.

For all three broadcasts, including the two semi-final shows and the finals competition, Riedel supplied a fibre-based communications backbone for its partner NEP Sweden, which produced the show’s world feed on behalf of EBU and the Public Broadcasting

Company of Ukraine, and deployed the recently launched MediorNet MultiViewer. Riedel supported the event with a 25-member onsite engineering team.

The Riedel MediorNet backbone consisted of four MetroN core routers and dozens of MicroN high-density media distribution network devices in a mesh topology. This decentralised configuration ensured full redundancy of all video and audio signals for commentary, intercom, signal distribution and radio communications, including the feeds for monitors in commentary booths and for displays and projectors in the centre.

Forty commentary booths for various countries were equipped with Riedel Artist digital matrix intercom CCP-1116 commentary panels. The Riedel network linked numerous other production components, including critical control points for sound, lighting and pyrotechnics.

In all, more than 150 comms panels and 600 analogue and digital Tetra radios were used for the show.

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