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Post by Lukas on Dec 20, 2019 10:59:05 GMT -5
rockgolf You should use the inverse formula listed here since it's spot on with the already published decade-end/all-time lists. I tried that formula and didn't find it worked any better than the one I use (which also came from Tanooki). The formula I used got 499* of the 500 tracks from the 1980s when SiriusXM did their countdown, so I'm good with the results. (*It would have been a full 500 except I included Stand By Me's points from the 1960s in its 1980s run0
What formula did you get from Tanooki? The two formulas could actually be the same thing, just the points weighted differently.
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rockgolf
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Post by rockgolf on Dec 20, 2019 11:19:36 GMT -5
I just did a comparison on the weights. Multiply the points you have by 21.666 and in most cases you get exactly my points.
There are a few position with minor differences, but the New Tanooki/Old Tanooki ratio is always between 20.62 and 23.12 and the outliers are all outside the top 25.
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Post by Lukas on Dec 20, 2019 11:29:25 GMT -5
I just did a comparison on the weights. Multiply the points you have by 21.666 and in most cases you get exactly my points. There are a few position with minor differences, but the New Tanooki/Old Tanooki ratio is always between 20.62 and 23.12 and the outliers are all outside the top 25. Ah gotcha, I assumed that you were still using the old formula which was close but not as perfect as this one. Thanks!
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rockgolf
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Post by rockgolf on Jan 4, 2020 14:20:11 GMT -5
So we've got the first week of 2020 in place, and there are some... confusing results.
The songs All I Want For Christmas Is You and Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree get a lucky advantage from the rules. They get the complete 2018 & 2019 chart runs combined because their 2018 runs peaked in the first week of 2019, and first reached their new peaks in the last 2 weeks of 2019. So their 2018 re-entry peaked in 2019, and so did their 2019 re-entry.
A number of other Christmas hits didn't peak until the first chart of 2020, like Holly Jolly Christmas and Jingle Bell Rock. So their listings on the 2019 chart are for the chart run that started in 2018. Their 2019 re-entry moves to the 2020 complete chart because they achieved new chart HPs on the Jan 4 2020 chart.
Clear as mud? Good.
Looking to the beginning of 2021, if there are chart runs for the same carols, Carey will definitely not get 2019 & 2020 points merged, since she cannot peak higher than #1, Brenda Lee will only get merged runs if she sneaks past Carey to #1 on a chart dated 2020, and the carols that reached new peaks on the Jan 4, 2020 chart may also double dip if they get higher on a chart dated 2020. I doubt many will. Possibly Last Christmas.
Some songs currently on the 2019 complete chart will move to the 2020 complete chart next week by having achieved new peaks. Roxanne and Dance Monkey are very likely to leap. Circles will not since it already reached #1 in 2019, and therefore will stay on the 2019 chart.
And now I'll just shut up and get on with the damn thing...
For the week of January 4, 2020, based on their complete chart runs to date, here are... The top 100 songs to first reach their highest chart position in 2019: Songs with a plus sign in front of the score are still charting. If they remain on the chart, they'll get more points, but if they reach a new chart peak, they'll move to the chart below:
The much smaller... Top songs to first reach their highest chart position in 2020: The weird part is that, even though they're likely not to spend another week on the charts until next December, the top 3 probably already have enough points to be in the final complete top 100 of 2020. This chart will look very different next week.
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rockgolf
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Post by rockgolf on Jan 19, 2020 15:01:20 GMT -5
January 18, 2020 edition:
complete 2020 list (Songs that peaked on the Billboard Hot 100 on a chart dated 2020)
Two weeks later, and there just haven't been a lot of tracks that climbed to their new chart peak in 2020, so those that have are showing up at the top of the list.
The Box is likeliest to climb to #1 of the songs on here, unless a newcomer takes the #1 spot on the Hot 100 and holds it for months.
complete 2019 list (Full chart points of songs that peaked in 2019. Top 100 + any songs still active that could be added to that list)
It's possible The Weeknd's Blinding Lights could join the list, but I think if it does, it will soon chart above #11 and move to the 2020 list. Old Town Road and Bad Guy could fall off the chart shortly so I wouldn't expect any change near the top before the chart locks.
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pkwonder
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Post by pkwonder on Feb 10, 2020 15:35:25 GMT -5
I have been surprised to see over the last few weeks that "Trampoline" and "Roxanne" may end up stuck on the 2019 list.
I'm personally hoping "Everything I Wanted" can peak on the next chart and end up on the 2020 complete.
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Post by rockgolf on Feb 14, 2020 17:06:15 GMT -5
Everything I Wanted has to climb above its #8 debut to move to 2020. It's at #10 so not impossible.
I think the train has left the station for Trampoline and Roxanne, however.
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Post by rockgolf on Feb 14, 2020 17:43:48 GMT -5
February 5, 2020 edition
complete 2020 list: (Songs that peaked on the Billboard Hot 100 on a chart dated 2020)
Memories still holds the top spot, because all the other hits this year first peaked in 2019. The Box is coming on strong. But it's a sign of how weak this year has been for new music that 2 Christmas songs are still in the top ten even though they fell off the chart in the first week of the year.
complete 2019 list: (Songs that first reached their chart peak in 2019. A + in front of the number indicates they are still charting)
See, this is why I make this list. Realistically, Bad Guy, Truth Hurts, Someone You Loved and very soon Circles all deserve top ten of the year placements based on their chart performance.
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lurker2
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Post by lurker2 on Feb 14, 2020 20:36:42 GMT -5
What’s your guess for the final top ten? I’m assuming the top 8 make, plus Circles and either Sucker or Wow.
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Post by phieaglesfan712 on Feb 14, 2020 22:33:36 GMT -5
I'm glad that Trampoline didn't peak in 2020. That song was more 2018 and 2019 than 2020. I could have sworn I saw that song played in commercials at least 3 times in every game I watched during the 2018 NFL season. The only things surprising about that song is that (1) it took so long for that song to take off and (2) that it is still on the chart.
If anything, Trampoline should have reached its peak in 2018 going into 2019, and not 2019 going into 2020.
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nlechoppa7
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Post by nlechoppa7 on Feb 20, 2020 19:39:42 GMT -5
I think your criteria should be changed so that the song is positioned in the year that it accumulated the most charting points in, rather than its peak. An example is Blinding Lights which has really been a 2020 song yet it peaked in 2019.
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nick64
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Post by nick64 on Feb 20, 2020 22:24:26 GMT -5
I don’t really have a good solution, but having a few Christmas songs showing up twice just feels really weird. Not really a fan of Christmas songs charting in the first place since they take away positions from the year’s defining hits, but taking up two spots seems really excessive.
Also Trampoline peaked back in like October-November, nothing surprising about that one finishing in 2019. Roxanne is certainly a little surprising though.
Oh and YNTCD shouldn’t have a + anymore.
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Post by Lukas on Feb 20, 2020 22:56:22 GMT -5
Guys, Billboard's criteria as to what song goes in what year is when the song peaked. Rockstar and Perfect, for example, peaked in 2017 and are thus counted as 2017 songs. Closer is a 2016 song. Bohemian Rhapsody peaked in the 90s --- it's a 90's song. It makes total sense for rockgolf to make this to be the main criteria as well.
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Post by phieaglesfan712 on Feb 20, 2020 23:19:31 GMT -5
To me, songs like Bohemian Rhapsody, CITW, and Nights In White Satin reached their peak a ridiculous amount of years past its original date. I consider those songs to be in the decade of their original release. I will always consider Bohemian Rhapsody and CITW to be 70's songs, even though they went on to peak in the 90's. Just like I would consider Nights In White Satin to be a 60's song, even though it went on to peak in 1972.
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nlechoppa7
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Post by nlechoppa7 on Mar 2, 2020 4:35:53 GMT -5
Guys, Billboard's criteria as to what song goes in what year is when the song peaked. Rockstar and Perfect, for example, peaked in 2017 and are thus counted as 2017 songs. Closer is a 2016 song. Bohemian Rhapsody peaked in the 90s --- it's a 90's song. It makes total sense for rockgolf to make this to be the main criteria as well. Yeah but the point of these lists is to get a better idea of what song really was the "biggest" of each year. For example, if there's a song that's released in December 2019 and peaks at #1, but then charts for the entirety of 2020 in the top 10 but not at #1, is it really a "2019 song"?
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tanooki
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Post by tanooki on Mar 2, 2020 4:43:25 GMT -5
Guys, Billboard's criteria as to what song goes in what year is when the song peaked. Rockstar and Perfect, for example, peaked in 2017 and are thus counted as 2017 songs. Closer is a 2016 song. Bohemian Rhapsody peaked in the 90s --- it's a 90's song. It makes total sense for rockgolf to make this to be the main criteria as well. Yeah but the point of these lists is to get a better idea of what song really was the "biggest" of each year. For example, if there's a song that's released in December 2019 and peaks at #1, but then charts for the entirety of 2020 in the top 10 but not at #1, is it really a "2019 song"? It's how you look at it. Billboard obviously sees peak = year. There's other ways to do it, such as defining its year as the year it had the most points, or simply its year of debut. These lists go by peak = year.
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rockgolf
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Post by rockgolf on Mar 8, 2020 12:40:26 GMT -5
I'm sticking to year the song peaked as being the assigned year, if only because it's so much easier to calculate.
So as of the March 7, 2020 chart here are the biggest songs to peak in calendar year 2020:
The Box charted almost 2 months after Memories and has almost caught up. Life Is Good is the highest song to chart entirely in calendar year 2020.
And here's how things look on the "complete" 2019 chart. Blinding Lights moved to 2020 as it reached a new peak last week and will probably be the last song to move from 2019 to 2020. Several songs (indicated by a + in front of the points) are still charting. Post Malone will probably have both the #2 & #3 song of the year by the time Circles finishes charting.
I don't foresee any of the songs outside the top 100 but still charting will be able to make the top 100. So that's probably locked and all that left is jostling for final positions.
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Post by phieaglesfan712 on Mar 8, 2020 14:33:38 GMT -5
The 2019 list is a mess. AIWFCIY and RATCT are counted twice. AIWFCIY should be #29, with 332,540 points. Please Me through MITG each fall a spot (they should be #'s 30-35). RATCT should be at 186,448 points, placing it at #39. Trampoline through Only Human move down a spot (they should be #'s 40-47). Bandit through Never Really Over move up a spot (they should be #'s 49-90). Rumor should be #91, JBR and HJC should be removed from the 2019 list, since they have now peaked in 2020. Heat through LWGGH should be #'s 92-96, and there is now room for 4 more songs.
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Post by rockgolf on Mar 10, 2020 20:17:41 GMT -5
The 2019 list is a mess. AIWFCIY and RATCT are counted twice. AIWFCIY should be #29, with 332,540 points. Please Me through MITG each fall a spot (they should be #'s 30-35). RATCT should be at 186,448 points, placing it at #39. Trampoline through Only Human move down a spot (they should be #'s 40-47). Bandit through Never Really Over move up a spot (they should be #'s 49-90). Rumor should be #91, JBR and HJC should be removed from the 2019 list, since they have now peaked in 2020. Heat through LWGGH should be #'s 92-96, and there is now room for 4 more songs. More like the chart history of those 2 songs are a mess. Both songs peaked originally in the first week of 2019, so they had the weird situation where the entirety of both their 2018 & 2019 re-entries qualified for the 2019 chart year. I'd say, hey, I don't make the rules, but I actually did, so I have no one to blame but myself. The 2019 listings for Ives & Helms are based on only their chart run that started in 2018 and peaked in early January 2019. The 2020 listings are for the runs that started in 2019 but reached a new peak in the first week of 2020. So the runs were separated.
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inverse
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Post by inverse on Mar 11, 2020 0:19:46 GMT -5
Can you post what it would look like under the old formula that's used for the 2000's and 1990's years? It seems that having a week in the top 10 is greatly inflated in comparison leading to songs like Thotiana being above Speechless
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mikerivera
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Post by mikerivera on Mar 11, 2020 22:34:40 GMT -5
Why don’t you just combine their chart runs into a single entry? Seems like it would be more accurate, especially if you’re counting every single week of the run. If you are gonna break it up into a singular charting period, you should probably only count one run per year.
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rockgolf
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Post by rockgolf on Mar 12, 2020 10:41:04 GMT -5
Why don’t you just combine their chart runs into a single entry? Seems like it would be more accurate, especially if you’re counting every single week of the run. If you are gonna break it up into a singular charting period, you should probably only count one run per year. Possibly so. When I take on these types of projects, I try to set fixed rules ahead of time so my own personal preferences aren't used to fiddle with the results. But I can't (or at least didn't) foresee the kind of ridiculous circumstances like those with the Xmas songs. The problem with your solution is it sets no limits with how far back I could go. The 4 songs have all charted in (at least) chart weeks dated 2018, 2019 & 2020. Mariah and Brenda's songs reached peaks in 2019, and by my rules that would include the late 2018 run too. Burl & Bobby hit new peaks in the first week of 2020, so by the same rules, they could only get the 2019 points added in. The problem is really that the first chart of any new year really reflect actual activity entirely in the previous year, because of the advanced dates that Billboard uses. Here's what I'll try. I'll subtract 7 days from the first date of peak on all songs, effectively moving any songs that peak in the first "chart" week of a year to the previous year. That will (almost certainly) give more accurate and consistent values on (in particular) Christmas tracks, which get practically no action after Dec 25. I think that's actually reasonable to do. I'll let you know the results a.s.a.p., but it will probably be several days. In those cases, all 4 of the 2019 Xmas tracks you discuss will get only the points for the song's actual sales, stream and radio performances of those years. I'm kinda looking forward to that.
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Post by Lukas on Mar 12, 2020 22:16:57 GMT -5
Can you post what it would look like under the old formula that's used for the 2000's and 1990's years? It seems that having a week in the top 10 is greatly inflated in comparison leading to songs like Thotiana being above Speechless they use the exact same formula
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mikerivera
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Post by mikerivera on Mar 12, 2020 22:51:48 GMT -5
Can you post what it would look like under the old formula that's used for the 2000's and 1990's years? It seems that having a week in the top 10 is greatly inflated in comparison leading to songs like Thotiana being above Speechless they use the exact same formula Not exactly true. The addition of streaming in 2012 and YouTube in 2013 caused a massive influx in the number of points that songs accumulated each week. That’s why Locked Out of Heaven is only #11 on the 2013 year end and We Found Love is only #8 in 2012. Both songs would have ranked #4 (or at least be close to that) in their respective years had the point totals not made dramatic increases during each year. So everything from March 2012 all the way up to the 90s had a different inverse formula than it currently does.
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rockgolf
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Post by rockgolf on Mar 13, 2020 10:04:23 GMT -5
So I took my own advice, and added a "Practical Year" field, based on Peak Date -7 days. That puts Christmas songs full runs in the year the songs are actually played. As a result there are now no Xmas songs in 2020: Rank | Track | Act | Points | 1 | Memories | Maroon 5 | 540,765 | 2 | The Box | Roddy Ricch | 468,694 | 3 | Dance Monkey | Tones and I | 337,570 | 4 | Life Is Good | Future and Drake | 207,999 | 5 | Don't Start Now | Dua Lipa | 194,996 | 6 | Ballin' | Mustard and Roddy Ricch | 171,348 | 7 | Yummy | Justin Bieber | 108,272 | 8 | Blinding Lights | Weeknd, The | 105,238 | 9 | Hot Girl Bummer | Blackbear | 93,099 | 10 | The Bones | Maren Morris | 83,201 | 11 | Adore You | Harry Styles | 64,506 | 12 | Godzilla | Eminem and Juice WRLD | 62,284 | 13 | Falling | Daniel Trevor | 58,064 | 14 | High Fashion | Roddy Ricch and Mustard | 47,721 | 15 | Intentions | Justin Bieber and Quavo | 43,968 | 16 | Juicy | Doja Cat and Tyga | 43,040 | 17 | My Oh My | Camila Cabello and Dababy | 42,139 | 18 | Kinfolks | Sam Hunt | 40,421 | 19 | Suicidal | Ynw Melly | 35,886 | 20 | You Should Be Sad | Halsey | 34,322 | 21 | ON | BTS | 31,200 | 22 | What A Man Gotta Do | Jonas Brothers | 30,740 | 23 | Heartache Medication | Jon Pardi | 30,717 | 24 | What If I Never Get Over You | Lady Antebellum | 27,732 | 25 | RITMO (Bad Boys For Life) | Black Eyed Peas x J Balvin | 25,290 | 26 | Homesick | Kane Brown | 24,804 | 27 | Sum 2 Prove | Lil Baby | 24,467 | 28 | Ridin' Roads | Dustin Lynch | 23,004 | 29 | Tusa | Karol G and Nicki Minaj | 22,147 | 30 | South of the Border | Ed Sheeran featuring Camila Cabello and Cardi B | 20,794 |
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rockgolf
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Post by rockgolf on Mar 13, 2020 10:18:51 GMT -5
And the 2019 chart contains only the chart performance of Christmas songs during 2019. Rank | Track | Act | Points | 1 | Old Town Road | Lil Nas X featuring Billy Ray Cyrus | 1,290,068 | 2 | Sunflower | Post Malone and Swae Lee | 1,163,344 | 3 | Without Me | Halsey | 1,093,148 | 4 | Bad Guy | Billie Eilish | 1,046,812 | 5 | Happier | Marshmello and Bastille | 933,074 | 6 | Truth Hurts | Lizzo | 913,231 | 7 | Someone You Loved | Lewis Capaldi | 883,589 | 8 | Circles | Post Malone | 875,650 | 9 | Senorita | Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello | 850,369 | 10 | Wow. | Post Malone | 794,237 | 11 | Sucker | Jonas Brothers | 789,843 | 12 | 7 Rings | Ariana Grande | 767,373 | 13 | No Guidance | Chris Brown and Drake | 711,556 | 14 | Talk | Khalid and Disclosure | 698,262 | 15 | I Don't Care | Ed Sheeran and Justin Bieber | 624,077 | 16 | High Hopes | Panic! At the Disco | 624,071 | 17 | Ran$om | Lil Tecca | 440,325 | 18 | Dancing With A Stranger | Sam Smith and Normani | 427,751 | 19 | 10,000 Hours | Dan+Shay & Justin Bieber | 419,118 | 20 | Shallow | Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper | 409,746 | 21 | Good As Hell | Lizzo | 405,190 | 22 | Roxanne | Arizona Zervas | 397,857 | 23 | Eastside | Benny Blanco featuring Halsey and Khalid | 381,608 | 24 | Goodbyes | Post Malone and Young Thug | 372,724 | 25 | Middle Child | J. Cole | 366,277 | 26 | Lose You To Love Me | Selena Gomez | 363,130 | 27 | Panini | Lil Nas X | 361,776 | 28 | Suge | Dababy | 340,844 | 29 | Please Me | Cardi B and Bruno Mars | 285,157 | 30 | Sweet But Psycho | Ava Max | 254,506 | 31 | If I Can't Have You | Shawn Mendes | 251,180 | 32 | HIGHEST IN THE ROOM | Travis Scott | 248,814 | 33 | Better | Khalid | 240,771 | 34 | Money In The Grave | Drake and Rick Ross | 209,840 | 35 | All I Want For Christmas Is You | Mariah Carey (2019 re-entry) | 204,563 | 36 | break up with your girlfriend, I'm bored | Ariana Grande | 189,071 | 37 | You Need To Calm Down | Taylor Swift | 188,927 | 38 | Me! | Taylor Swift and Brendon Urie | 188,405 | 39 | Trampoline | Shaed | 175,502 | 40 | Beautiful People | Ed Sheeran and Khalid | 172,311 | 41 | Everything I Wanted | Billie Eilish | 161,948 | 42 | Thotiana | Blueface | 159,863 | 43 | BOP | DaBaby | 151,366 | 44 | Heartless [Weeknd] | The Weeknd | 144,124 | 45 | Speechless | Dan+Shay | 139,660 | 46 | Only Human | Jonas Brothers | 135,425 | 47 | Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree | Brenda Lee (2019 re-entry) | 132,283 | 48 | A Lot | 21 Savage | 131,786 | 49 | Bandit | Juice WRLD & YoungBoy Never Broke Again | 127,452 | 50 | Hot | Young Thug and Gunna | 122,918 | 51 | Pop Out | Polo G and Lil Tjay | 122,558 | 52 | God's Country | Blake Shelton | 119,623 | 53 | The Git Up | Blanco Brown | 114,222 | 54 | Beautiful Crazy | Luke Combs | 113,245 | 55 | You Say | Lauren Daigle | 111,932 | 56 | Lover | Taylor Swift | 109,512 | 57 | Look Back At It | A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie | 109,381 | 58 | Whiskey Glasses | Morgan Wallen | 104,340 | 59 | The London | Young Thug featuring J. Cole and Travis Scott | 102,725 | 60 | Hey Look Ma, I Made It | Panic! At the Disco | 102,330 | 61 | Beautiful | Bazzi and Camila Cabello | 100,588 | 62 | Beer Never Broke My Heart | Luke Combs | 99,255 | 63 | Pure Water | Mustard and Migos | 97,625 | 64 | Leave Me Alone | Flipp Dinero | 97,428 | 65 | Be Alright | Dean Lewis | 95,602 | 66 | One Man Band | Old Dominion | 94,621 | 67 | Close To Me | Ellie Goulding featuring Diplo and Swae Lee | 93,150 | 68 | A Holly Jolly Christmas | Burl Ives (2019 re-entry) | 92,068 | 69 | Baby | Lil Baby and Dababy | 91,922 | 70 | On Chill | Wale and Jeremih | 90,602 | 71 | Woah | Lil Baby | 88,945 | 72 | Even Though I'm Leaving | Luke Combs | 88,271 | 73 | How Do You Sleep? | Sam Smith | 86,724 | 74 | Murder On My Mind | Ynw Melly | 86,602 | 75 | Envy Me | Calboy | 86,071 | 76 | Con Calma | Daddy Yankee and Katy Perry featuring Snow | 80,905 | 77 | Act Up | City Girls | 80,804 | 78 | Boyfriend | Ariana Grande and Social House | 80,095 | 79 | My Type | Saweetie | 77,027 | 80 | Jingle Bell Rock | Bobby Helms (2019 re-entry) | 74,388 | 81 | Hot Girl Summer | Megan Thee Stallion and Minaj | 73,993 | 82 | Bury A Friend | Billie Eilish | 71,176 | 83 | Take What You Want | Post Malone featuring Ozzy Osbourne and Travis Scott | 71,102 | 84 | Baby Shark | Pinkfong | 68,029 | 85 | When The Party's Over | Billie Eilish | 67,973 | 86 | She Got The Best Of Me | Luke Combs | 64,993 | 87 | Playing Games | Summer Walker | 58,696 | 88 | Knockin' Boots | Luke Bryan | 58,346 | 89 | One Thing Right | Marshmello and Kane Brown | 58,195 | 90 | Swervin | A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie featuring 6ix9ine | 55,629 | 91 | Graveyard | Halsey | 55,457 | 92 | Never Really Over | Katy Perry | 54,994 | 93 | Rumor | Lee Brice | 52,993 | 94 | It's The Most Wonderful Time of the Year | Andy Williams (2019 re-entry) | 50,669 | 95 | Heat | Chris Brown and Gunna | 48,956 | 96 | Futsal Shuffle 2020 | Lil Uzi Vert | 48,692 | 97 | Cash S#!t | Megan Thee Stallion and Dababy | 47,705 | 98 | Worth It | Yk Osiris | 47,009 | 99 | Look What God Gave Her | Thomas Rhett | 46,034 | 100 | Clout | Offset and Cardi B | 46,008 | 101 | Good As You | Kane Brown | 45,230 | 102 | Shotta Flow | Nle Choppa | 44,502 | 103 | Earfquake | Tyler the Creator | 44,391 | 104 | Robbery | Juice Wrld | 44,363 | 105 | Time | NF | 42,449 | 106 | Homicide | Logic and Eminem | 41,626 | 107 | Camelot | Nle Choppa | 41,168 | 108 | Best Shot | Jimmy Allen | 41,157 | 109 | VIBEZ | DaBaby | 40,691 | 110 | All To Myself | Dan+Shay | 40,350 | 111 | 223's | Ynw Melly and 9Lokknine | 39,111 | 112 | Boy With Luv | BTS and Halsey | 39,009 | 113 | Here With Me | Marshmello and Chvches | 38,268 | 114 | Eyes On You | Chase Rice | 38,141 | 115 | Follow God | Kanye West | 38,115 | 116 | Backin' It Up | Pardison Fontaine and Cardi B | 37,390 | 117 | Prayed For You | Matt Stell | 36,571 | 118 | Enemies | Post Malone featuring Dababy | 35,340 | 119 | Press | Cardi B | 35,253 | 120 | This Is It | Scotty McCreery | 34,832 | 121 | Go Loko | YG featuring Tyga and Jon Z | 34,756 | 122 | Nightmare | Halsey | 34,010 | 123 | I Don’t Know About You | Chris Lane | 33,935 | 124 | Drunk Me | Mitchell Tenpenny | 33,079 | 125 | Walk Me Home | Pink | 32,916 | 126 | Twerk | City Girls and Cardi B | 32,437 | 127 | Girl Like You | Jason Aldean | 31,861 | 128 | Cross Me | Ed Sheeran featuring Chance The Rapper and PnB Rock | 31,629 | 129 | Lucid Dreams | Juice Wrld (2019 re-entry) | 31,575 | 130 | Here Tonight | Brett Young | 31,382 | 131 | Last Christmas | Wham! (2019 re-entry) | 31,342 | 132 | Rearview Town | Jason Aldean | 30,884 | 133 | China | Anuel Aa featuring Daddy Yankee, Karol G, J. Balvin and Ozuna | 30,528 | 134 | Mixed Personalities | Ynw Melly and Kanye West | 30,458 | 135 | Otro Trago | Sech | 30,391 | 136 | Cool | Jonas Brothers | 29,526 | 137 | Girl | Maren Morris | 29,415 | 138 | Who Do You Love | The Chainsmokers and 5 Seconds of Summer | 29,359 | 139 | This Feeling | The Chainsmokers and Kelsea Ballerini | 28,805 | 140 | Miss Me More | Kelsea Ballerini | 28,134 | 141 | Callaita | Bad Bunny and Tainy | 28,027 | 142 | Heart On Ice | Rod Wave | 28,011 | 143 | Sanguine Paradise | Lil Uzi Vert | 27,180 | 144 | Put A Date On It | Yo Gotty and Lil Baby | 27,089 | 145 | Easier | 5 Seconds Of Summer | 27,087 | 146 | Girls Need Love | Summer Walker x Drake | 26,887 | 147 | INTRO [2] | Dababy | 25,825 | 148 | Burning Man | Dierks Bentley and Brothers Osborne | 25,768 | 149 | Just Us | DJ Khaled and SZA | 25,529 | 150 | Sixteen | Thomas Rhett | 25,300 |
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Post by Lukas on Mar 13, 2020 10:21:56 GMT -5
they use the exact same formula Not exactly true. The addition of streaming in 2012 and YouTube in 2013 caused a massive influx in the number of points that songs accumulated each week. That’s why Locked Out of Heaven is only #11 on the 2013 year end and We Found Love is only #8 in 2012. Both songs would have ranked #4 (or at least be close to that) in their respective years had the point totals not made dramatic increases during each year. So everything from March 2012 all the way up to the 90s had a different inverse formula than it currently does. No, these use the decade-end list points system, which is an inverse points system and is constant throughout the entire existence of the Hot 100 chart. You're talking about the year-end lists, which are way different lmao
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pkwonder
Charting
Joined: May 2019
Posts: 39
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Post by pkwonder on May 2, 2020 18:50:36 GMT -5
Hope everyone's safe and well!
I imagine the next complete update for 2020 will be somewhat substantial! "Stupid Love" "Say So" "Savage" and (ugh) "Toosie Slide" will all debut, with "Yummy" presumably getting passed by several songs.
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rockgolf
2x Platinum Member
Pop music fanatic since the days of 7" 45 RPM records.
Joined: August 2018
Posts: 2,120
Pronouns: he/him/his
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Post by rockgolf on May 6, 2020 17:25:57 GMT -5
It's been a minute since I updated these lists.
Quick recap: These are the top songs of the year, but all points from the song's complete chart run are included and the song is placed in the year when it first reached its chart peak. A "+" in the points indicates the song is still charting and still collecting points.
So here are the top 50 songs to peak in calendar year 2020.
And here's the top 100 of 2019. There are still songs that peaked in calendar 2019 in the charts, and they are still affecting the chart rankings.
Post Malone looks to be close to pushing himself out of #2 on this list (climbing from #8 the last time I posted this). It's quite possible with Circles' longevity, it will end up as the #1 song on the 2019 complete list. Summer Walker's Come Thru is currently the only song outside the 2019 top 100 to still be charting and not having reached a new peak in 2020. It's charted for 18 non-consecutive weeks, and since it's below #50, will likely be dropped in another two weeks.
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jebsib
Platinum Member
Joined: September 2004
Posts: 1,927
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Post by jebsib on May 7, 2020 16:49:38 GMT -5
Any idea what artist has accumulated the most points so far on the 2020 Hot 100?
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