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Post by Rose "Payola" Nylund on Mar 25, 2019 23:14:50 GMT -5
Iβve been saying that for a couple years now. Well, I applaud your consistency. In that case, I would agree with the streaming system, at least for the most part. Taking it even further, I think all songs that are in any way in the public sphere should count. If weβre accounting for popularity, why should radio play count but not when people hear a song in a movie, or as part of a tv performance or even in the newest Apple commercial?
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Post by Naos on Mar 25, 2019 23:33:47 GMT -5
Well, I applaud your consistency. In that case, I would agree with the streaming system, at least for the most part. Taking it even further, I think all songs that are in any way in the public sphere should count. If weβre accounting for popularity, why should radio play count but not when people hear a song in a movie, or as part of a tv performance or even in the newest Apple commercial? Is there actually a way to track that though?
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ddlz
2x Platinum Member
Joined: June 2011
Posts: 2,165
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Post by ddlz on Mar 26, 2019 0:19:51 GMT -5
Billboard 200 is literally turning into a t-shirt chart (very soon artists will start bundling albums with sex toys and condoms). Streaming system is the least of our worries at the moment.
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Post by Rose "Payola" Nylund on Mar 26, 2019 5:57:30 GMT -5
Taking it even further, I think all songs that are in any way in the public sphere should count. If weβre accounting for popularity, why should radio play count but not when people hear a song in a movie, or as part of a tv performance or even in the newest Apple commercial? Is there actually a way to track that though? It already is.
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