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Post by Rocky on Jan 30, 2013 16:02:07 GMT -5
Fuckin' Problems top ten! :o Great! It may be higher next week.
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kingofpain
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Post by kingofpain on Jan 30, 2013 16:08:36 GMT -5
F**k, Sweet Nothing didn't make the top 10 but that A$AP trash did.
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Post by josh on Jan 30, 2013 16:23:18 GMT -5
Trust me, when most of us Hot 100 veterans realized that Top 40 airplay was not going to be the sole radio ingredient in the mix anymore, it was jarring, painful, inconsistent and fascinating all at the same time. But we got used to it. I know that crossover airplay sucks, but it IS still more accurately reflecting a song's national reach. But a song not even top 50 on R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay shouldn't be #1 on R&B/Hip-Hop Songs. That's where the problem comes from.
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Au$tin
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Post by Au$tin on Jan 30, 2013 16:25:06 GMT -5
Trust me, when most of us Hot 100 veterans realized that Top 40 airplay was not going to be the sole radio ingredient in the mix anymore, it was jarring, painful, inconsistent and fascinating all at the same time. But we got used to it. I know that crossover airplay sucks, but it IS still more accurately reflecting a song's national reach. But a song not even top 50 on R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay shouldn't be #1 on R&B/Hip-Hop Songs. That's where the problem comes from. This. I mean, if the format that Billboard is trying to claim it to be isn't supporting it that much, then why is it even considered correct for it to be #1 on the overall chart for it? It just makes no sense to me.
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jebsib
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Post by jebsib on Jan 30, 2013 16:48:40 GMT -5
But that's it: Format refers to radio station type. The main chart has switched its mission statement, so that airplay is only a smaller ingredient. The R&B airplay format has its own chart; The Adult R&B radio format has its own chart; The Rhythmic Top 40 format has its own chart. R&B / Hip-Hop airplay has its own chart. Mainstream r&b radio format has its own chart. I think even Rap airplay gets its own formatted radio chart. Airplay is copiously covered.
I think most people would agree that Thrift Shop is a hip-hop song, regardless of whether mainstream r&b radio programmers have added it. And yet it is getting insane streaming and sales points in the country. So what to do? Wait until a song gets to a certain audience threshold, despite millions in sales and streams? Maybe - Billboard's done weirder things!
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Post by Deleted on Jan 30, 2013 16:53:23 GMT -5
The main chart has switched its mission statement, so that airplay is only a smaller ingredient. That's the issue. For over six decades, the chart measured the most popular song among "urban audiences". Now the chart measures the most popular songs that Billboard considers R&B or Hip-Hop regardless of how they're actually performing among "urban audiences". It's measuring something different entirely, so it shouldn't be a continuation of the same chart.
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Au$tin
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Post by Au$tin on Jan 30, 2013 16:53:24 GMT -5
I would call "Thrift Shop" hip-hop, but it's far from r&b. That's another problem I've had. R&B and hip-hop are not the same.
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wavey.
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Post by wavey. on Jan 30, 2013 17:19:03 GMT -5
F**k, Sweet Nothing didn't make the top 10 but that A$AP trash did. You got a Fucking Problem.
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jebsib
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Post by jebsib on Jan 30, 2013 17:40:38 GMT -5
Just like for decades, the Hot 100 was a Top 40 radio format based chart. Then it HAD to change because demographics and technology changed. It could no longer be the top 100 songs played on CHR.
I don't like the current r&b or Country Song chart mix, but I at least see why they did it. And I'm not certain it will stick either (a la the ill-fated Pop 100), because UNLIKE the Hot 100, which is now simply a chart of bragging rights and not a real metric for programmers or digital stores to use (they rely on the component charts of course), who do these charts inform? The Hot 100 stats can at least be used mainstream shows like Entertainment Tonight or American Idol.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 30, 2013 17:50:35 GMT -5
F**k, Sweet Nothing didn't make the top 10 but that A$AP trash did. You got a f**king Problem. I don't know how you can say honestly that that A$AP song is better than Sweet Nothing.
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Eqbk
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Post by Eqbk on Jan 30, 2013 17:51:27 GMT -5
Kinda like when the #1 song on the Hot 100 hadn't even cracked Hot 100 airplay (4 American Idol coronation songs, 2Pac's How Do U Want It, etc) ... it DOES happen... The difference between the #1's you mentioned and the ones topping the genre charts in their current formulas is that those songs you mentioned hit #1 on an all-genre/all-inclusive chart. Adding sales, which likely resulted from airplay/exposure from other formats on a genre-specific chart is wrong imo. I'll use Rihanna's 'Diamonds' as an example. A good portion of the song's singles sales likely resulted from her airplay on pop (and other non-urban formats). Those sales aren't any indication of how popular the song is among urban listeners yet the sales gets incorporated into that specific genre chart anyway. I think most people would agree that Thrift Shop is a hip-hop song, regardless of whether mainstream r&b radio programmers have added it. And yet it is getting insane streaming and sales points in the country. So what to do? Wait until a song gets to a certain audience threshold, despite millions in sales and streams? Maybe - Billboard's done weirder things! I get what you're trying to get at but this could get messy real quick as it lets Billboard decide what is considered what. I could completely see Rihanna's label/team pushing every song hers as R&B even when its clearly a pure pop song just b/c they want another #1.
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Post by Adonis the DemiGod! on Jan 30, 2013 18:06:09 GMT -5
The Macklemore situation is a strange one. I dont understand how he is not crowning the Alternative charts. Why is it okay for Alternative and rock to be airplay based but not R&B and hip hop?
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HolidayGuy
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Post by HolidayGuy on Jan 30, 2013 18:11:28 GMT -5
Missing from the Billboard article posted:
A notable title departs the top 10 after rocketing 84-4 last week: Justin Timberlake's "Suit & Tie," featuring Jay Z, which falls to No. 13. The lead single from his album "The 20/20 Experience," due March 19, plunges 2-8 in its second week on Digital Songs, dropping by 65% to 109,000 after it stormed the chart last week with 315,000. Still, "Suit" climbs 16-14 on Radio Songs (61 million, up 14%) and enters Streaming Songs at No. 40 (536,000, up 109%). Promotion leading up to the set's release, which includes Timberlake's planned appearance at the Grammy Awards on Feb. 10, could secure the song's momentum in coming weeks.
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jebsib
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Post by jebsib on Jan 30, 2013 18:14:16 GMT -5
Alternative is not seen as a strong enough format to have its own genre chart. That is the all-encompassing Rock Songs, and Thrift Shop is nowhere to be seen on that chart, or Rock Digital songs... and yet the song #16 on Alternative airplay. Issues.
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chartfreak
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Post by chartfreak on Jan 30, 2013 19:34:27 GMT -5
I mean, since Pop caved in and added Thrift Shop because of its immense popularity, maybe they will do so for PIU as well? With Warner Bros. now promoting the song to R&B/hip-hop radio, "Thrift" is approaching the 50-position R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay chart with a 236% gain to 1.6 million format impressions (or less than 1% of its overall audience; 54% of its listenership is owed to mainstream top 40 radio airplay). How did POP cave in, if it's the driving force of it's success right now...airplay wise.
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renfield75
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Post by renfield75 on Jan 30, 2013 19:34:59 GMT -5
That's another potential problem for Billboard. Say "Thrift Shop" goes to number one on the Alternative chart, will it still be excluded from the Rock Songs chart? The song would then be missing from a chart where the programmers are embracing it, yet it will likely spend months at number one on a chart (R&B/Hip-Hop Songs) where programmers aren't fully responding to it. This makes no sense.
And again, why is "I Will Wait" missing from Hot Country songs when it IS in the top 50 of airplay on country radio?
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Agent Yoncé
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Post by Agent Yoncé on Jan 30, 2013 19:38:24 GMT -5
These last few weeks been huge for A$AP Rocky.
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dlostfan
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Post by dlostfan on Jan 30, 2013 20:06:54 GMT -5
Missing from the Billboard article posted: A notable title departs the top 10 after rocketing 84-4 last week: Justin Timberlake's "Suit & Tie," featuring Jay Z, which falls to No. 13. The lead single from his album "The 20/20 Experience," due March 19, plunges 2-8 in its second week on Digital Songs, dropping by 65% to 109,000 after it stormed the chart last week with 315,000. Still, "Suit" climbs 16-14 on Radio Songs (61 million, up 14%) and enters Streaming Songs at No. 40 (536,000, up 109%). Promotion leading up to the set's release, which includes Timberlake's planned appearance at the Grammy Awards on Feb. 10, could secure the song's momentum in coming weeks. It must have been really close for 10-13. 10. F**ing Problems - 83/12 + 47/7.5 + 1100/150 + 170/300 = 21100 13. Suit & Tie - 109/12 + 61/7.5 + 450/150 + 86/300 = 20500
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Post by wavey. on Jan 30, 2013 20:14:04 GMT -5
You got a f**king Problem. I don't know how you can say honestly that that A$AP song is better than Sweet Nothing. I love Sweet Nothing! I also enjoy Fuckin Problem too.
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pnobelysk
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Post by pnobelysk on Jan 30, 2013 21:03:19 GMT -5
M5 is gunning for their 4th straight Top 10 & 3rd from this era alone! :'( Lucky strike and wipe your eyes could be big hits too .
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Post by areyoureadytojump on Jan 30, 2013 21:06:39 GMT -5
How come no one here posts Paul Grein's weekly Hot 100 column? It's full of sales info.
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Post by areyoureadytojump on Jan 30, 2013 21:16:44 GMT -5
Week Ending Jan. 27, 2013. Songs: Another F**kin’ Top 10 Hit By Paul Grein
There was a day when you wouldn’t see “the F word” in the title of a top 10 hit. Times change. “F**kin Problems” by A$AP Rocky featuring Drake, 2 Chainz and Kendrick Lamar jumps from #15 to #10 in its 13th week on the Hot 100. It’s the third top 10 hit in two years with the once-taboo word in its title. P!nk’s “F**kin’ Perfect” peaked at #2 in February 2011. Cee-Lo Green’s “F**k You!” spent four weeks at #2 the following month.
One difference is that, while P!nk and Cee-Lo were veterans, this is A$AP Rocky’s first Hot 100 entry. (P!nk had amassed 10 previous top 10 hits. Green had scored one previous top 10 hit with Gnarls Barkley’s “Crazy.”)
Both of those earlier hits were embraced by Grammy voters, as well as pop fans. Cee-Lo’s smash was nominated for Record of the Year and Song of the Year. It won for Best Urban/Alternative Performance. P!nk’s hit was nominated for Best Pop Solo Performance.
A$AP Rocky’s debut album, Long.Live.A$AP, entered The Billboard 200 at #1 last week. It drops to #7 this week.
“F**kin Problems” is the first top 10 hit for A$AP Rocky, 2 Chainz and Lamar; the 10th for Drake.
“Thrift Shop” by Macklemore & Ryan Lewis featuring Wanz holds at #1 on the Hot 100 for the second week. The song sold 357K copies this week. The song tops the 2 million mark in digital sales this week. It also becomes the first song to sell 1 million copies in 2013.
The song also holds at #1 on Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs for the third week. This is the longest run at #1 on the R&B chart for a song by a white artist since Robin Thicke’s “Lost Without U” spent 11 weeks on top in 2007.
“Thrift Shop” is #1 on Hot Rap Songs for the fourth week. It jumps from #16 to #14 on Hot Alternative Songs.
The Lumineers’ “Ho Hey” holds at #3 for the fifth (non-consecutive) week. The song is #1 on Hot Rock Songs for the 11th week. It tops the 3 million mark in digital sales this week.
Taylor Swift’s “I Knew You Were Trouble.” rebounds from #5 to #4. The song has climbed as high as #2. The song tops the 3 million mark in digital sales this week. It’s Swift’s fifth song to reach that plateau, following “Love Story” (5,550,000), “You Belong With Me” (4,247,000), “We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together” (3,284,000) and “Our Song” (3,072,000). The current song isn’t listed on Nielsen SoundScan’s running list of the top-selling country songs in its history because it was deemed not to have sufficient country content. (“We Are Never Ever…,” which is also pop-oriented, must have just made the cut.)
“Scream & Shout” by will.i.am featuring Britney Spears jumps from #6 to #5. It’s the 10th top five hit for will.i.am (counting the Black Eyed Peas); the eighth for Spears. The song is #1 on Dance/Electronic Songs for the third week.
Here's the low-down on this week's top 10 songs.
The Top Five: “Thrift Shop” by Macklemore & Ryan Lewis featuring Wanz holds at #1 for the second week in its 17th week on the chart. This is its sixth week in the top 10. Digital sales rank: #1 (357K)…Bruno Mars’ “Locked Out Of Heaven” holds at #2 for the second week in its 17th week on the chart. This is its 14th week in the top 10. Digital sales rank: #7 (126K)… The Lumineers’ “Ho Hey” holds at #3 for the fifth non-consecutive week in its 34td week on the chart. This is its 11th week in the top 10. Digital sales rank: #5 (141K)…Taylor Swift’s “I Knew You Were Trouble.” rebounds from #5 to #4 in its 15th week on the chart. The song has climbed as high as #2. This is its eighth week in the top 10. Digital sales rank: #2 (190K)…“Scream & Shout” by will.i.am featuring Britney Spears jumps from #6 to #5 its ninth week on the chart. This is its fourth week in the top 10. Digital sales rank: #4 (170K)
The Second Five: “Don’t You Worry Child” by Swedish House Mafia featuring John Martin jumps from #7 to #6 in its 19th week on the chart. This is its third week in the top 10. Digital sales rank: #6 (132K)…“Beauty And A Beat” by Justin Bieber featuring Nicki Minaj rebounds from #9 to #7 in its 16th week on the chart. The song has climbed as high as #5. This is its eighth week in the top 10. Digital sales rank: #12 (88K)… Rihanna's “Diamonds” holds at #8 for the second week in its 18th week on the chart. This is its 15th week in the top 10. Digital sales rank: #22 (65K)…Phillip Phillips’ “Home” rebounds from #10 to #9 in its 31st week on the chart. The song has climbed as high as #6. This is its 13th week in the top 10. Digital sales rank: #10 (97K)…“F**kin Problems” by A$AP Rocky featuring Drake, 2 Chainz and Kendrick Lamar jumps from #15 to #10 in its 13th week. This is the first top 10 hit for A$AP Rocky, 2 Chainz and Lamar; the 10th for Drake.
“Suit & Tie” by Justin Timberlake featuring Jay-Z drops from #4 to #13 in its third week. Digital sales rank: #8 (109K).
Maroon 5’s “Daylight,” which was #21 last week, is expected to crack the top 20 in its eighth week. Digital sales rank: #9 (104K).
“Don’t Stop The Party” by Pitbull featuring TJR, which slipped from #17 to #22 last week, may return to the top 20 in its 15th week. The song tops the 1 million mark in digital sales. It’s Pitbull’s ninth million-seller as a lead artist. His top-seller is “Give Me Everything” (featuring Ne-Yo, Afrojack and Nayer), which has sold 4,615,000 copies since its release in 2011.
“Love Me” by Lil Wayne featuring Drake & Future, which was the top new entry at #53 last week, is expected to make a big jump in its second week. Digital sales rank: #3 (171K).
Bruno Mars’ “When I Was Your Man” leaps from #74 to #49 in its sixth week. It’s vying to become his 10th top 10 hit.
Here are key songs that are vying to enter the chart this week.
“Dope” by Tyga featuring Rick Ross. It’s from Tyga’s third studio album, Hotel California, which is due March 26. (Tyga should follow it with The Long Run, just to test Don Henley’s sense of humor.)
“Bad Ass” by Kid Ink featuring Meek Mill & Wale.
Miranda Lambert’s “Mama’s Broken Heart.” It’s from her hit album Four The Record.
“Ready” by Fabolous featuring Chris Brown. It’s from Fabolous’ sixth studio album, Loso’s Way: Rise To Power, which is due in February. The album is a sequel to Fabolous’ chart-topping 2009 album, Loso’s Way.
Florida Georgia Line’s “Get Your Shine On.” It’s the follow-up to “Cruise,” which spent five weeks at #1 on Hot Country Songs. Both songs are featured on the group’s album Here’s To The Good Times, which came out in December.
Christina Perri’s “Arms.” It’s from her 2011 album lovestrong.
“Somebody That I Used To Know” by Gotye featuring Kimbra this week becomes just the fourth song in digital history to top the 7 million mark in sales. It follows the Black Eyed Peas’ “I Gotta Feeling” (8,218,000), Adele’s “Rolling In The Deep” (7,702,000) and “Party Rock Anthem” by LMFAO featuring Lauren Bennett and GoonRock (7,527,000). “Somebody…” took just 56 weeks to top the 7 million mark, which is faster than any of these previous hits. The old record was held by “Rolling In The Deep,” which took 57 weeks. “Somebody…” was #1 for eight weeks last year.
One Direction’s “What Makes You Beautiful” tops the 4 million mark in digital sales this week. Only one other song by a British group or duo has sold 4 million or more digital copies. That’s Coldplay’s “Viva La Vida,” which is up to 5,827,000. “What Makes You Beautiful” reached #4 in April.
PSY’s “Gangnam Style” also tops the 4 million mark in digital sales. It’s the third comic/novelty song to reach this mark, following LMFAO’s “Sexy And I Know It” (5,975,000) and Cee-Lo’s aforementioned “F**k You!” (5,958,000). “Gangnam Style” logged seven weeks at #2 last fall. It was stuck behind Maroon 5’s “One More Night,” which, while a huge seller, has yet to reach 4 million. (It’s up to 3,749,000.)
P!nk’s 2010 smash “Raise Your Glass” tops the 4 million mark. It’s her second song to reach this milestone, following 2008’s “So What” (4,513,000). Both songs reached #1.
Kings of Leon’s “Use Somebody” tops the 4 million mark. This is the band’s best-seller. It reached #4 in September 2009.
To My Readers: I’ll have more to add after I’ve seen the full chart later today.
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stetz
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Post by stetz on Jan 30, 2013 23:01:08 GMT -5
Alternative is not seen as a strong enough format to have its own genre chart. That is the all-encompassing Rock Songs, and Thrift Shop is nowhere to be seen on that chart, or Rock Digital songs... and yet the song #16 on Alternative airplay. Issues. It's #23 on the rock airplay chart. It sucks that with this new methodology means "gray area" songs include those whose style somewhat differs from their audience. Popular songs that blur lines are either near the top of a genre chart or not on it at all. In the debut week of the new methodology, a Train song was #4 on the rock songs chart, then it disappeared after basically because billboard changed its mind about it belonging there. If streaming and digital sales were included, but only format-specific airplay were factored, then that could be a fair middle ground. That way Thrift shop would be somewhere on the r&b/hip hop chart, but not at the top.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jan 31, 2013 1:44:01 GMT -5
Just like for decades, the Hot 100 was a Top 40 radio format based chart. Then it HAD to change because demographics and technology changed. It could no longer be the top 100 songs played on CHR. But the Hot 100 was always intended to measure the most popular songs in the country. Including formats other than Top 40 only made sense to more accurately measure what the Hot 100 actually intends to measure. That's not the case with the new R&B and Country charts. They actually changed what the charts intend to measure rather than changing the way they measure it.
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jebsib
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Post by jebsib on Jan 31, 2013 8:47:09 GMT -5
I do understand what you are saying, and I'm not trying to argue; Just trying to figure out what has happened and why the labels would go along with this change. Because they are consulted MONTHS before every chart revamp. If they say no, it doesn't happen: Witness how long the addition of non-commercoial singles to the Hot 100 was. There are articles suggesting that Billboard wanted to switch to Soundscan as early as 1989, etc...
Wasn't the Hot R&B Singles chart always trying to measure the most popular R&B song in the country? Or the Country Singles chart always trying to measure the most popular Country & Western song in the USA? These are the revenue generating answers that the labels wanted. If they wanted demographic reactions, they could look at the component charts.
So it has now gone from "what Urban / African American or Rural / Country radio listeners like to hear" to "what is the most popular song among ALL Americans (that happen to be r&b or country based)".
Again, I'm not thrilled with the abrupt change (It could have been staggered a bit - or occurred at the break of the chart year) .. but I also don't get the outrage.
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stetz
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Post by stetz on Jan 31, 2013 12:36:34 GMT -5
Wow at "Sail" reentering! Pleasant surprise, especially since I thought tracks only could reenter with 20 weeks under its belt if it landed in the top 50. This tune has found itself on the digital songs chart several times since its initial run - I wonder what about this occasion warrented it reentering.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 31, 2013 13:25:37 GMT -5
Billboard Hot 100
01 01 17 Macklemore & Ryan Lewis Featuring Wanz, Thrift Shop 02 02 17 Bruno Mars, Locked Out Of Heaven 03 03 34 The Lumineers, Ho Hey 04 05 15 Taylor Swift, I Knew You Were Trouble 05 06 09 will.i.am Featuring Britney Spears, Scream & Shout 06 07 19 Swedish House Mafia Featuring John Martin, Don't You Worry Child 07 09 16 Justin Bieber Featuring Nicki Minaj, Beauty And A Beat 08 08 18 Rihanna, Diamonds 09 10 31 Phillip Phillips, Home 10 15 13 A$AP Rocky Featuring Drake, 2 Chainz & Kendrick Lamar, F**kin' Problems
11 13 14 P!nk, Try 12 14 21 Alicia Keys Featuring Nicki Minaj, Girl On Fire 13 04 03 Justin Timberlake Featuring Jay-Z, Suit & Tie 14 17 12 Calvin Harris Featuring Florence Welch, Sweet Nothing 15 16 34 Imagine Dragons, It's Time 16 53 02 Lil Wayne Featuring Drake & Future, Love Me 17 21 08 Maroon 5, Daylight 18 11 32 Maroon 5, One More Night 19 12 18 Flo Rida, I Cry 20 18 49 Fun., Some Nights
21 19 29 Ed Sheeran, The A Team 22 24 14 Kelly Clarkson, Catch My Breath 23 25 36 Of Monsters And Men, Little Talks 24 20 18 Ke$ha, Die Young 25 23 24 Kendrick Lamar, Swimming Pools (Drank) 26 29 17 Gary Allan, Every Storm (Runs Out Of Rain) 27 22 15 Pitbull Featuring TJR, Don't Stop The Party 28 30 06 Ke$ha, C'mon 29 28 13 The Band Perry, Better Dig Two 30 26 18 The Script Featuring will.i.am, Hall Of Fame
31 32 25 Mumford & Sons, I Will Wait 32 34 40 Hunter Hayes, Wanted 33 27 11 2 Chainz, I'm Different 34 36 22 Imagine Dragons, Radioactive 35 33 26 Ne-Yo, Let Me Love You (Until You Learn To Love Yourself) 36 38 26 Miguel, Adorn 37 31 21 Psy, Gangnam Style 38 37 24 Florida Georgia Line, Cruise 39 35 21 Kanye West, Jay-Z, Big Sean, Clique 40 42 07 Trinidad James, All Gold Everything
41 44 12 Jason Aldean With Luke Bryan & Eric Church, The Only Way I Know 42 47 17 Randy Houser, How Country Feels 43 41 49 Carly Rae Jepsen, Call Me Maybe 44 45 56 Gotye Featuring Kimbra, Somebody That I Used To Know 45 39 11 One Direction, Little Things 46 58 04 Rihanna, Pour It Up 47 40 44 Alex Clare, Too Close 48 51 03 Blake Shelton, Sure Be Cool If You Did 49 74 06 Bruno Mars, When I Was Your Man 50 43 21 Lil Wayne Featuring Detail, No Worries
51 55 14 Kendrick Lamar Featuring Drake, Poetic Justice 52 54 09 Tim McGraw, One Of Those Nights 53 63 07 Carrie Underwood, Two Black Cadillacs 54 57 13 The Weeknd, Wicked Games 55 60 15 T.I. Featuring Lil Wayne, Ball 56 59 12 Little Big Town, Tornado 57 61 17 Brad Paisley, Southern Comfort Zone 58 48 20 Juicy J Featuring Lil Wayne & 2 Chainz, Bandz A Make Her Dance 59 62 10 Hunter Hayes, Somebody's Heartbreak 60 64 16 Ellie Goulding, Anything Could Happen
61 65 23 Muse, Madness 62 52 15 Nicki Minaj, Va Va Voom 63 RE 21 AWOLNATION, Sail 64 66 05 Anna Kendrick, Cups 65 87 02 Olly Murs Featuring Flo Rida, Troublemaker 66 56 16 Zac Brown Band, Goodbye In Her Eyes 67 69 07 Kacey Musgraves, Merry Go 'Round 68 NE 01 Tyga Featuring Rick Ross, Dope 69 68 10 Wiz Khalifa Featuring The Weeknd, Remember You 70 78 07 The Lumineers, Stubborn Love
71 72 08 Future, Neva End 72 77 10 Dierks Bentley, Tip It On Back 73 76 07 Jonn Hart Featuring iamSU, Who Booty 74 70 13 Chris Brown, Don't Judge Me 75 81 04 Fun., Carry On 76 80 04 Lee Brice, I Drive Your Truck 77 67 07 Chief Keef, Love Sosa 78 73 17 Taylor Swift, Begin Again 79 71 07 Big Sean, Guap 80 79 05 One Direction, Kiss You
81 88 05 Lupe Fiasco & Guy Sebastian, Battle Scars 82 89 04 Thompson Square, If I Didn't Have You 83 83 19 Kip Moore, Beer Money 84 93 21 Passion Pit, Take A Walk 85 92 05 The Barden Bellas, Bellas Finals: Price Tag/Don't You (Forget About Me)/Give Me Everything/Just The Way You Are/Party In The U.S.A./Turn The Beat Around 86 91 04 The Barden Bellas, The Treblemakers & The Bu Harmonics, Riff Off: Mickey / Like A Virgin / Hit Me With Your Best Shot / S&M / Let's Talk About Sex / I'll Make Love To You / Feels Like The First Time / No Diggity 87 75 10 Ludacris Featuring Usher & David Guetta, Rest Of My Life 88 95 06 Casey James, Crying On A Suitcase 89 NE 01 Miranda Lambert, Mama's Broken Heart 90 NE 01 Kid Ink Featuring Meek Mill & Wale, Bad Ass
91 82 02 A$AP Rocky Featuring Skrillex & Birdy Nam Nam, Wild For The Night 92 98 04 George Strait, Give It All We Got Tonight 93 97 03 Imagine Dragons, Demons 94 85 20 Justin Moore, Til My Last Day 95 90 12 Game Featuring Chris Brown, Tyga, Wiz Khalifa & Lil Wayne, Celebration 96 NE 01 Florida Georgia Line, Get Your Shine On 97 NE 01 Chris Cagle, Let There Be Cowgirls 98 RE 02 Kendrick Lamar, Bitch, Don’t Kill My Vibe 99 NE 01 Pitbull Featuring Christina Aguilera, Feel This Moment 100 84 17 Adele, Skyfall
Drop outs will be added in later
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kingofpain
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Post by kingofpain on Jan 31, 2013 13:56:31 GMT -5
Oh well, so long Ellie Goulding! Gotye still hangs in there... and damn, it sucks that Pink was the one shut out at #11. Hopefully next week she'll crack the top 10?
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Post by areyoureadytojump on Jan 31, 2013 16:17:18 GMT -5
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forg
2x Platinum Member
Joined: May 2009
Posts: 2,356
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Post by forg on Jan 31, 2013 16:58:27 GMT -5
Too bad for Try :(
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