Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on Jun 7, 2017 22:44:15 GMT -5
Speaking of Torn, when the airplay only songs were finally allowed to chart, it entered the top 100 for two weeks between 41-50. I really doubt the song dropped from that range to 101. Why the song was treated like it was charting before? Really dumb. That also might explain why Black Hole Sun didn't debut on Hot 100 or even bubbling under.
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Post by Baby Yoda Hot100Fan on Jun 7, 2017 23:01:58 GMT -5
^Yeah. The only recent song to debut in the Hot 100 after an artist died not to be within the Top 50 was Leonard Cohen's Hallelujah. All other song have been treated as recurrent songs that require to be within the Top 50 to chart regardless of whether the song had charted before or even gotten 20 weeks in the Hot 100.
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Post by Leaf on Jun 8, 2017 0:39:05 GMT -5
Speaking of Torn, when the airplay only songs were finally allowed to chart, it entered the top 100 for two weeks between 41-50. I really doubt the song dropped from that range to 101. Why the song was treated like it was charting before? Really dumb. That also might explain why Black Hole Sun didn't debut on Hot 100 or even bubbling under. I guess because the song had run its course by that point and it was likely not going to peak much higher than its official chart entry. So removing it once it left the top 50 would make room for another song, which is really one of the objectives of the recurrent rules. I noticed the same thing happen with some songs on the first few Canadian Hot 100 charts.
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Harx
5x Platinum Member
Joined: August 2016
Posts: 5,049
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Post by Harx on Jun 8, 2017 1:02:04 GMT -5
Clearly flops of the decade Dude. A song not eligible for charting can under no definition be a hit, in terms of chart success. It literally didn't chart. Sorry but this is the "The ground I'm standing on is flat, therefore the Earth is flat." kind of logic...
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Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on Jun 8, 2017 1:15:19 GMT -5
Speaking of Torn, when the airplay only songs were finally allowed to chart, it entered the top 100 for two weeks between 41-50. I really doubt the song dropped from that range to 101. Why the song was treated like it was charting before? Really dumb. That also might explain why Black Hole Sun didn't debut on Hot 100 or even bubbling under. I guess because the song had run its course by that point and it was likely not going to peak much higher than its official chart entry. So removing it once it left the top 50 would make room for another song, which is really one of the objectives of the recurrent rules. I noticed the same thing happen with some songs on the first few Canadian Hot 100 charts. I wish they could have given the real peak of those songs just like they did with the amount of weeks they would have stayed on the chart Examples: Torn - 31 weeks total, "peaked" at 42, couldn't even make the girl a one hit wonder Iris - 43, "debuted" at 9, so it managed to still be a hit lol
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