BASEL, Switzerland — One song generating a lot of froth at the Eurovision Song Contest is ''Espresso Macchiato,'' a dance-pop ditty by Estonian rapper and visual artist Tommy Cash.
Estonia's entry in the pan-continental pop competition, which holds its grand final on Saturday in Basel, Switzerland, is a playful dance-pop track that reels off a string of Italian cliches — including references to spaghetti and ''sweating like a mafioso'' — before a singalong chorus: ''Espresso macchiato, macchiato, macchiato.''
The song has some fans singing it in the streets of Basel. But it raised a few eyebrows in Italy, where a consumers' association branded it offensive and complained to Eurovision organizer the European Broadcasting Union.
Cash said that he's seen media articles about a backlash, but ''I see only the love.''
''Everyone coming to me is like ‘I'm from Italy, you're a legend there and we're so happy to have your song,''' he told The Associated Press on Friday amid rehearsals for the Eurovision final.
Cash said that if U.S. singer Sabrina Carpenter can have a hit about espresso in her Grammy Award-winning 2024 hit of that name, he too should be able to sing about coffee.
''She should be singing about Big Gulps,'' he joked. As Europeans, ''we're the OGs. (Coffee) originated from Italy.
''The thing is, coffee is for the world,'' he said. ''Everyone can drink coffee. Americans, Europeans, and this brings us together.''