Eurovision 2025 Needs FPV Drones - Here’s Why
The Eurovision Song Contest 2025 will great, but FPV drones could’ve made it unforgettable. AerialJohnny explains how drones can transform live events with cinematic impact.

Why the Eurovision song contest needs a little more Johnny in the air
A missed opportunity? You bet your glitter-studded mic stand it was.
At AerialJohnny, we’ve seen firsthand how FPV drones can transform an event. Not just flying cameras – but agile, cinematic storytellers that thrive in chaos and make the impossible shot feel effortless. Eurovision, for all its production flair, barely scratched the surface of what aerial creativity can do.
Picture This: Drones With Rhythm
Let’s play armchair director for a moment.
Opening Scene:
An FPV drone dives through the Swiss Alps, dives into Basel’s winding streets, and bursts through the doors of St. Jakobshalle just as the music kicks in. Cue goosebumps.
Artist Entrances
Forget awkward walk-ons. Imagine a high-speed drone chase from dressing room to backstage, tracking every anxious smile, every fist bump - like a music video in one glorious, continuous shot.
Live Performances
While cranes and jibs do the slow sweep, FPV drones could’ve danced around backup singers, threaded through LED arches, and pulled back at the exact beat drop. Fluid, live, and fully immersive.
We’re not talking sci-fi.
This tech exists. We fly it. And yes - we’re fully certified with CAA, NATS, and ENAC, so no one's sweating the paperwork while we carve corkscrews through stadium rafters.
Streaming like pros, because we ARE!
Modern FPV rigs don’t just shoot - they stream. Live. In 4K.
With latency so low, your audience sees the action as fast as your camera does. That’s a game-changer for broadcasters and fans alike.
The AerialJohnny Approach
Phone
+44 74 158 37118
johnathan (@) aerialjohnny.co.uk
London and Manchester
We don’t just fly drones. We tell stories at 100 km/h. We blend technical precision with cinematic instinct, which makes us ideal for events where the stakes are sky-high and the margin for error is somewhere around zero.