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Post by Golden Bluebird on Apr 19, 2021 18:16:04 GMT -5
whales- I don't believe TikTok counts for the Ho 100; exposure there, though, likely impacts streaming via other outlets. It used to have direct impact but then UGC got nuked They did remove UGC streams, but TikTok was not part of that as TikTok has never been counted on the Hot 100.
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Post by oliviafan101 on Apr 19, 2021 18:23:45 GMT -5
Entertainment is dying right before our eyes. The music industry included. One simple look at Youtube daily WW numbers will show you that now is the weakest time for Youtube views since 2014-2015. Only 13 songs have got more than 2 million views in the last 24 hours, with only 6 of them being non-Indian songs. Spotify is at its weakest since early 2017. Grammys has had its lowest viewership in a long time. At least 10% of the Billboard points for top songs, if not more, are propped by stan culture. Also the movie industry and celebrity culture is dying. Obviously the pandemic is a big factor, but even before the pandemic, Oscars’ & Golden Globes’ viewership was declining, and only huge blockbuster movies were doing well in the box office (i.e. : very few original movies were doing well in the box office). Also, while most of the general populace knew about what celebs were doing and were obsessed with them pre-2020, now very few people give an f about celebrities (and tabloid subscriptions are falling off a cliff, good). Also, political “entertainment” is dying after you-know-who left his office 3 months ago (FDT btw). Sports are also dying. Super Bowl has had its lowest ratings in a long time (and NFL viewership is declining), NBA and MLB viewership is slowly dying off, and the european super league is happening in football.
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kingvavis
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Post by kingvavis on Apr 19, 2021 18:30:27 GMT -5
Entertainment is dying right before our eyes. The music industry included. One simple look at Youtube daily WW numbers will show you that now is the weakest time for Youtube views since 2014-2015. Only 13 songs have got more than 2 million views in the last 24 hours, with only 6 of them being non-Indian songs. Spotify is at its weakest since early 2017. Grammys has had its lowest viewership in a long time. At least 10% of the Billboard points for top songs, if not more, are propped by stan culture. Also the movie industry and celebrity culture is dying. Obviously the pandemic is a big factor, but even before the pandemic, Oscars’ & Golden Globes’ viewership was declining, and only huge blockbuster movies were doing well in the box office (i.e. : very few original movies were doing well in the box office). Also, while most of the general populace knew about what celebs were doing and were obsessed with them pre-2020, now very few people give an f about celebrities (and tabloid subscriptions are falling off a cliff, good). Also, political “entertainment” is dying after you-know-who left his office 3 months ago (FDT btw). Sports are also dying. Super Bowl has had its lowest ratings in a long time (and NFL viewership is declining), NBA and MLB viewership is slowly dying off, and the european super league is happening in football. Entertainment is not dying off, it is diversifying.
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Au$tin
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Post by Au$tin on Apr 19, 2021 18:42:29 GMT -5
at the doom and gloom post. It takes a simple Google search to find that overall revenue of the music industry is up*, not down. Those few examples are only down because new competitors are rising. *Well, at the moment no because touring is still virtually non-existent, but factoring that in revenue for everything else is still up. 2020 posted better numbers than 2019, which was better than 2018, which was better than 2017, etc. In fact, revenue from music consumption (touring excluded) has been steadily rising since 2014.
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Post by oliviafan101 on Apr 19, 2021 18:42:40 GMT -5
Entertainment is dying right before our eyes. The music industry included. One simple look at Youtube daily WW numbers will show you that now is the weakest time for Youtube views since 2014-2015. Only 13 songs have got more than 2 million views in the last 24 hours, with only 6 of them being non-Indian songs. Spotify is at its weakest since early 2017. Grammys has had its lowest viewership in a long time. At least 10% of the Billboard points for top songs, if not more, are propped by stan culture. Also the movie industry and celebrity culture is dying. Obviously the pandemic is a big factor, but even before the pandemic, Oscars’ & Golden Globes’ viewership was declining, and only huge blockbuster movies were doing well in the box office (i.e. : very few original movies were doing well in the box office). Also, while most of the general populace knew about what celebs were doing and were obsessed with them pre-2020, now very few people give an f about celebrities (and tabloid subscriptions are falling off a cliff, good). Also, political “entertainment” is dying after you-know-who left his office 3 months ago (FDT btw). Sports are also dying. Super Bowl has had its lowest ratings in a long time (and NFL viewership is declining), NBA and MLB viewership is slowly dying off, and the european super league is happening in football. Entertainment is not dying off, it is diversifying. How?
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Au$tin
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Post by Au$tin on Apr 19, 2021 18:48:02 GMT -5
Entertainment is not dying off, it is diversifying. How? There are more companies than the very few you listed. Not to mention just because the top songs aren't receiving as many streams on those specific services doesn't mean the ones below the charts are as well. Pretty sure of what you listed, YouTube is the only one actually decreasing in overall popularity. (As far as music consumption goes. The company itself has as many users as ever.) TV leadership has been steadily decreasing since the invention of streaming. That's nothing new. People aren't watching the few things you listed as much because they have millions of other options now. The entertainment industry is doing just fine.
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Post by oliviafan101 on Apr 19, 2021 18:50:54 GMT -5
There are more companies than the very few you listed. Not to mention just because the top songs aren't receiving as many streams on those specific services doesn't mean the ones below the charts are as well. Pretty sure of what you listed, YouTube is the only one actually decreasing in overall popularity. (As far as music consumption goes. The company itself has as many users as ever.) TV leadership has been steadily decreasing since the invention of streaming. That's nothing new. People aren't watching the few things you listed as much because they have millions of other options now. The entertainment industry is doing just fine. I feel like the entertainment industry will be much weaker in 5-10 years. I wanna ask you, in 5 years, which song will you remember more, “Up” or “One Last Time”?
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kingvavis
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Post by kingvavis on Apr 19, 2021 18:57:44 GMT -5
There are more companies than the very few you listed. Not to mention just because the top songs aren't receiving as many streams on those specific services doesn't mean the ones below the charts are as well. Pretty sure of what you listed, YouTube is the only one actually decreasing in overall popularity. (As far as music consumption goes. The company itself has as many users as ever.) TV leadership has been steadily decreasing since the invention of streaming. That's nothing new. People aren't watching the few things you listed as much because they have millions of other options now. The entertainment industry is doing just fine. I feel like the entertainment industry will be much weaker in 5-10 years. I wanna ask you, in 5 years, which song will you remember more, “Up” or “One Last Time”? What's One Last Time? And why are you comparing it to Up?
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Gary
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Post by Gary on Apr 19, 2021 18:58:07 GMT -5
"The entertainment industry is dying" is a pretty big statement
Entertainment can be anything from movies to music to books, to sports, cultural events and video games and more
when that all goes away, i guess society becomes what? North Korea?
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Au$tin
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Post by Au$tin on Apr 19, 2021 19:02:52 GMT -5
There are more companies than the very few you listed. Not to mention just because the top songs aren't receiving as many streams on those specific services doesn't mean the ones below the charts are as well. Pretty sure of what you listed, YouTube is the only one actually decreasing in overall popularity. (As far as music consumption goes. The company itself has as many users as ever.) TV leadership has been steadily decreasing since the invention of streaming. That's nothing new. People aren't watching the few things you listed as much because they have millions of other options now. The entertainment industry is doing just fine. I feel like the entertainment industry will be much weaker in 5-10 years. I wanna ask you, in 5 years, which song will you remember more, “Up” or “One Last Time”? That's cool that you feel that, but I disagree and have evidence to back up my claims. You have cherry picked examples that don't hold up to scrutiny. As far as which song do I think will be remembered more? I don't have the faintest idea because you're comparing a brand new hit to a song that was actually out of the collective conscious for years before an actual tragedy that took the lives of innocent people reignited interested in it. That's not even comparing apples and oranges at that point, that's comparing an apple to a shoe. I have no idea why you'd chose to select those two as your one and only example. I could ask you which song you think will be remembered more too: "drivers license" or some random song that peaked at #6 on some random week in 1973 and it would just as much sense as what you did. Fact: Revenue from music consumption has been increasing for several years now, even through the pandemic. Fact: TV viewership is down, but streaming viewership continues to grow and make up for the losses of TV as well as any losses felt at the box office. Fact: Print media is down, but online media is as strong as ever. Media and entertainment isn't going to just... die. It will evolve as society changes and technology changes, just as it always has. Why would people suddenly not want to be entertained or consume media? That doesn't make any sense. What would we do instead, sit quietly in an empty room staring at the walls?
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Post by Rose "Payola" Nylund on Apr 19, 2021 19:10:40 GMT -5
Yeah, it’s different when the featured artists aren’t mentioned in the year-end lists, but even here Billboard applies different rules. Again, Bey wasn’t mentioned as a featured artist for Savage on last year’s list, when for a majority of the songs chart run she was credited. It’s a mess! Yeah, Billboard's specific crediting for songs that make their YEs is very weird. It's gotten to the point where I trust Wikipedia's articles on each YE more than the ones on Billboard's website. For example, on the 2020 YE, Wiki credits the Beyonce remix of Savage and the Imanbek remix of Roses, neither of which Billboard seems to want to acknowledge on their website, despite clearly being the more popular versions of those songs over the course of the year. It's a mess. Out of curiosity, does Billboard credit BTS on Savage Love?
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Post by Rose "Payola" Nylund on Apr 19, 2021 19:13:16 GMT -5
There are more companies than the very few you listed. Not to mention just because the top songs aren't receiving as many streams on those specific services doesn't mean the ones below the charts are as well. Pretty sure of what you listed, YouTube is the only one actually decreasing in overall popularity. (As far as music consumption goes. The company itself has as many users as ever.) TV leadership has been steadily decreasing since the invention of streaming. That's nothing new. People aren't watching the few things you listed as much because they have millions of other options now. The entertainment industry is doing just fine. I feel like the entertainment industry will be much weaker in 5-10 years. I wanna ask you, in 5 years, which song will you remember more, “Up” or “One Last Time”? What does that have to do with anything tho? The biggest hits today might not be as big as the biggest hits from 20 or 30 years ago, but there are also more hits these days than back then because there are more outlets for music.
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𝕡𝕙𝕖𝕖𝕓𝕤
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Post by 𝕡𝕙𝕖𝕖𝕓𝕤 on Apr 19, 2021 19:14:11 GMT -5
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lurker2
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Post by lurker2 on Apr 19, 2021 19:27:32 GMT -5
Spotify's recovering, IDK what you're on. It isn't at the 2018 peak (what an amazing year to start chart watching), but we're back at 2019/2020 levels this past month. YT dieing off is because of the growth of audio streams - YouTube's decline in LatAm is happening at the same time as Spotify's rise. In any developing market I's expect the same to happen.
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iggyamo
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Post by iggyamo on Apr 19, 2021 21:02:09 GMT -5
There are more companies than the very few you listed. Not to mention just because the top songs aren't receiving as many streams on those specific services doesn't mean the ones below the charts are as well. Pretty sure of what you listed, YouTube is the only one actually decreasing in overall popularity. (As far as music consumption goes. The company itself has as many users as ever.) TV leadership has been steadily decreasing since the invention of streaming. That's nothing new. People aren't watching the few things you listed as much because they have millions of other options now. The entertainment industry is doing just fine. I feel like the entertainment industry will be much weaker in 5-10 years. I wanna ask you, in 5 years, which song will you remember more, “Up” or “One Last Time”? No one remembers One Last Time now, what makes you think in 5 years.
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dremolus - solarpunk
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𝙁𝙧𝙤𝙢 𝙋𝙖𝙡𝙚𝙨𝙩𝙞𝙣𝙚 𝙩𝙤 𝙩𝙝𝙚 𝙋𝙝𝙞𝙡𝙞𝙥𝙥𝙞𝙣𝙚𝙨, 𝙎𝙩𝙤𝙥 𝙩𝙝𝙚 𝙐.𝙎. 𝙒𝙖𝙧 𝙈𝙖𝙘
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Post by dremolus - solarpunk on Apr 19, 2021 21:26:01 GMT -5
I feel like the entertainment industry will be much weaker in 5-10 years. I wanna ask you, in 5 years, which song will you remember more, “Up” or “One Last Time”? No one remembers One Last Time now, what makes you think in 5 years. WTF do you mean no one remembers One Last Time? One Last Time has 822M streams on Spotify. It's the most streamed song on My Everything.
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Gary
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Post by Gary on Apr 19, 2021 21:41:01 GMT -5
who remembers what 5 years from now really depends on the individual and personal tastes. I may "remember" some songs here no one else does and vice versa
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Choco
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Post by Choco on Apr 19, 2021 23:07:57 GMT -5
Using viewership for awards shows as some sort of indicator is dumb too. For one, TV viewership in the old, Nielsen way is down for everyone. On the other hand people have been calling for several reforms to awards shows for years and they may have finally gotten tired. The Grammys have gotten more press for negative reasons than good press in the last five or so years.
When the Oscars hit a record low this year you can be surprised and act like movies are dead or you can think about how TV viewership declines across every single network and genre, pandemic-era ambivalence over watching privileged individuals get recognition while most people are still struggling, and easily the least popular group of nominees ever are all factors that contribute to the ratings.
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Post by Naos on Apr 19, 2021 23:12:09 GMT -5
Notable gains: #19 - The Good Ones (+10) #30 - Mr. Perfectly Fine (+60) #43 - Made For You (+23)
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dremolus - solarpunk
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Post by dremolus - solarpunk on Apr 19, 2021 23:39:08 GMT -5
Now that Blinding Lights is gone, this is the first Top 10 with all songs that hit the Top 10 for the first time this year
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Post by Naos on Apr 20, 2021 0:08:47 GMT -5
Guessing these are the dropouts: - "Whoopty" by CJ (#10 peak, 22 weeks) - "Body" by Megan Thee Stallion (#12 peak, 20 weeks) - "Put Your Records On" by Ritt Momney (#30 peak, 25 weeks) - "Buss It" by Erica Banks (#47 peak, 13 weeks) - "Girl Like Me" by Black Eyed Peas & Shakira (#67 peak, 13 weeks)
The only one from here that I see surviving is "Put Your Records On" maybe.
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Post by nathanalbright on Apr 20, 2021 4:45:29 GMT -5
Spoiler Alert: None of them survived. F's in the chat.
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dremolus - solarpunk
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𝙁𝙧𝙤𝙢 𝙋𝙖𝙡𝙚𝙨𝙩𝙞𝙣𝙚 𝙩𝙤 𝙩𝙝𝙚 𝙋𝙝𝙞𝙡𝙞𝙥𝙥𝙞𝙣𝙚𝙨, 𝙎𝙩𝙤𝙥 𝙩𝙝𝙚 𝙐.𝙎. 𝙒𝙖𝙧 𝙈𝙖𝙘
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Post by dremolus - solarpunk on Apr 20, 2021 4:46:17 GMT -5
Notable Gains: #19. Gabby Barrett - The Good Ones (+10) #30. Taylor Swift - Mr. Perfectly Fine (+60) #43. Jake Owen - Made for You (+23) #61. Luke Bryan - Down to One (+16)
Notable Losses: #42. Chris Stapleton - Starting Over (-16) #53. Rod Wave - Street Runner (-14) #54. Thomas Rhett - What's Your Country Song (-17) #69. Dustin Lynch - Momma's House (-10) #70. Justin Bieber - Anyone (-17) #73. Ava Max - My Head & My Heart (-10) #79. Lil Tjay feat. Offset and MoneyBagg Yo - Run It Up (-29) #82. DaBaby - Masterpiece (-10) #84. 42 Dugg and Roddy Ricch - 4 Da Gang (-17) #85. Morray- quicksand (-12) #93. Demi Lovato feat. Ariana Grande - Met Him Last Night (-32) #97. Morgan Wallen - Wasted on You (-17) #100. Lil Baby feat. EST Gee - Real As It Gets (-17)
Re-Entries: #16. DMX - Ruff Ryders' Anthem #40. DMX - Party Up #46. DMX - X Gon' Give It to Ya #52. Taylor Swift - Love Story (Taylor's Version) #75. Taylor Swift feat. Maren Morris - You All Over Me
Biggest Airplay Gain: Peaches Biggest Sales Gain: The Good Ones Biggest Streaming Gain: Mr. Perfectly Fine
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Post by Lost In Musical Reverie on Apr 20, 2021 5:07:49 GMT -5
Ouch! I was not expecting such a big drop for "Met Him Last Night"...this has not been a good week for Demi... Hopefully it can rebound next week, even if I would have much preferred for "Dancing With The Devil" to stick around instead.
Outside of "Mr. Perfectly Fine", that list of gains isn't looking too promising. At least we'll be finally getting rid of Morgan Wallen on the Hot 100 once "Wasted On You" leaves.
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Enigma.
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Post by Enigma. on Apr 20, 2021 5:10:47 GMT -5
I don't get how three DMX songs re-entered and RRA that high! Wayyyyy bigger legacy than previous chart success suggested.
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gikem
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Post by gikem on Apr 20, 2021 6:45:24 GMT -5
Good riddance Put Your Records On and Girl Like Me. Even with the former likely scraping onto the 2021 YE, they will not be missed.
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Gary
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Post by Gary on Apr 20, 2021 6:45:41 GMT -5
Hot 100
TW LW 2W WOC TITLE PEAK 1 - - 1 Rapstar, Polo G 1 2 2 1 3 Montero (Call Me By Your Name), Lil Nas X 1 3 1 3 6 Leave The Door Open, Silk Sonic (Bruno Mars & Anderson .Paak) 1 4 3 2 4 Peaches, Justin Bieber Featuring Daniel Caesar & Giveon 1 5 6 6 18 Save Your Tears, The Weeknd 4 6 7 7 28 Levitating, Dua Lipa Featuring DaBaby 5 7 - - 1 Kiss Me More, Doja Cat Featuring SZA 7 8 4 4 10 Up, Cardi B 1 9 5 5 14 Drivers License, Olivia Rodrigo 1 10 10 12 9 Astronaut In The Ocean, Masked Wolf 10 11 9 8 71 Blinding Lights, The Weeknd 1 12 19 24 13 Beat Box, SpotemGottem Featuring Pooh Shiesty Or DaBaby 12 13 11 18 9 Calling My Phone, Lil Tjay Featuring 6LACK 3 14 12 10 32 What You Know Bout Love, Pop Smoke 9 15 8 - 2 Deja Vu, Olivia Rodrigo 8 16 - - 5 Ruff Ryders' Anthem, DMX 16 17 14 17 14 Best Friend, Saweetie Featuring Doja Cat 14 18 13 9 36 Mood, 24kGoldn Featuring iann dior 1 19 29 32 16 The Good Ones, Gabby Barrett 19 20 18 20 15 Back In Blood, Pooh Shiesty Featuring Lil Durk 13 21 15 14 24 34+35, Ariana Grande 2 22 16 15 49 Go Crazy, Chris Brown & Young Thug 3 23 21 21 34 You Broke Me First., Tate McRae 17 24 20 19 23 Therefore I Am, Billie Eilish 2 25 17 13 6 What's Next, Drake 1 26 22 28 9 Heartbreak Anniversary, Giveon 22 27 25 33 6 Beautiful Mistakes, Maroon 5 Featuring Megan Thee Stallion 25 28 28 29 35 My Ex's Best Friend, Machine Gun Kelly X blackbear 21 29 23 23 19 You're Mines Still, Yung Bleu Featuring Drake 18 30 90 - 2 Mr. Perfectly Fine (Taylor's Version) (From The Vault), Taylor Swift 30 31 24 25 25 Positions, Ariana Grande 1 32 30 31 19 Without You, The Kid LAROI 30 33 27 26 19 On Me, Lil Baby 23 34 31 27 24 Dakiti, Bad Bunny & Jhay Cortez 5 35 36 47 8 Track Star, Mooski 35 36 33 37 41 For The Night, Pop Smoke Featuring Lil Baby & DaBaby 6 37 34 39 10 No More Parties, Coi Leray Featuring Lil Durk 26 38 32 11 4 Tombstone, Rod Wave 11 39 35 40 16 Good Days, SZA 9 40 - - 22 Party Up (Up In Here), DMX 27 41 44 50 13 Heat Waves, Glass Animals 41 42 26 41 33 Starting Over, Chris Stapleton 25 43 66 75 8 Made For You, Jake Owen 43 44 45 54 25 Forever After All, Luke Combs 2 45 42 48 9 We're Good, Dua Lipa 42 46 - - 17 X Gon' Give It To Ya, DMX 46 47 38 34 6 Wants And Needs, Drake Featuring Lil Baby 2 48 41 35 14 Streets, Doja Cat 16 49 40 44 19 Cry Baby, Megan Thee Stallion Featuring DaBaby 28 50 47 56 13 Goosebumps, Travis Scott & HVME 47 51 49 58 10 Time Today, Moneybagg Yo 37 52 - - 2 Love Story (Taylor's Version), Taylor Swift 11 53 39 16 5 Street Runner, Rod Wave 16 54 37 42 17 What's Your Country Song, Thomas Rhett 29 55 46 22 3 Richer, Rod Wave Featuring Polo G 22 56 51 53 8 Telepatia, Kali Uchis 39 57 52 60 16 Just The Way, Parmalee x Blanco Brown 31 58 64 67 14 Hell Of A View, Eric Church 58 59 62 66 13 Somebody Like That, Tenille Arts 59 60 54 45 15 Long Live, Florida Georgia Line 45 61 77 74 16 Down To One, Luke Bryan 36 62 60 59 18 Willow, Taylor Swift 1 63 57 46 6 Hold On, Justin Bieber 20 64 55 68 4 Headshot, Lil Tjay, Polo G & Fivio Foreign 42 65 - - 1 Forever & Always (Taylor's Version), Taylor Swift 65 66 58 52 14 Lady, Brett Young 52 67 68 73 7 Breaking Up Was Easy In The 90's, Sam Hunt 67 68 65 64 18 Damage, H.E.R. 44 69 59 62 14 Momma's House, Dustin Lynch 59 70 53 36 15 Anyone, Justin Bieber 6 71 - - 1 Fearless (Taylor's Version), Taylor Swift 71 72 - 51 2 You All Over Me (Taylor's Version) (From The Vault), Taylor Swift Featuring Maren Morris 51 73 63 57 10 My Head And My Heart, Ava Max 45 74 75 78 12 La Noche de Anoche, Bad Bunny & Rosalia 53 75 - - 1 You Belong With Me (Taylor's Version), Taylor Swift 75 76 71 90 5 Settling Down, Miranda Lambert 71 77 69 76 5 Hellcats & Trackhawks, Lil Durk 69 78 85 92 10 Glad You Exist, Dan + Shay 63 79 50 - 2 Run It Up, Lil Tjay Featuring Offset & Moneybagg Yo 50 80 78 91 12 Almost Maybes, Jordan Davis 73 81 - - 1 Big Gangsta, Kevin Gates 81 82 72 77 12 Masterpiece, DaBaby 55 83 74 86 8 The Business, Tiesto 69 84 67 - 2 4 Da Gang, 42 Dugg & Roddy Ricch 67 85 73 83 10 Quicksand, Morray 73 86 79 84 12 Pick Up Your Feelings, Jazmine Sullivan 75 87 - - 1 Shy Away, twenty one pilots 87 88 - - 1 Fifteen (Taylor's Version), Taylor Swift 88 89 82 69 3 Big Purr (Prrdd), Coi Leray & Pooh Shiesty 69 90 89 - 3 Famous Friends, Chris Young + Kane Brown 89 91 91 99 7 Nobody, Dylan Scott 85 92 93 - 4 Lil Bit, Nelly & Florida Georgia Line 92 93 61 - 2 Met Him Last Night, Demi Lovato Featuring Ariana Grande 61 94 - - 1 The Way I Loved You (Taylor's Version), Taylor Swift 94 95 86 80 16 Monsters, All Time Low Featuring Demi Lovato & blackbear 55 96 88 95 18 One Too Many, Keith Urban Duet With P!nk 62 97 80 79 14 Wasted On You, Morgan Wallen 9 98 56 - 2 Dancing With The Devil, Demi Lovato 56 99 97 - 5 Gone, Dierks Bentley 97 100 83 82 6 Real As It Gets, Lil Baby Featuring EST Gee 34
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Gary
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Post by Gary on Apr 20, 2021 6:46:19 GMT -5
Radio Songs
TW LW 2W WOC TITLE PEAK 1 2 5 6 Leave The Door Open, Silk Sonic (Bruno Mars & Anderson .Paak) 1 2 1 1 13 Drivers License, Olivia Rodrigo 1 3 5 6 13 Save Your Tears, The Weeknd 3 4 3 2 18 What You Know Bout Love, Pop Smoke 2 5 4 3 22 Therefore I Am, Billie Eilish 3 6 6 4 45 Go Crazy, Chris Brown & Young Thug 1 7 10 12 17 You Broke Me First., Tate McRae 7 8 7 7 19 34+35, Ariana Grande 3 9 9 11 64 Blinding Lights, The Weeknd 1 10 8 8 25 Positions, Ariana Grande 2 11 11 9 32 Mood, 24kGoldn Featuring iann dior 1 12 16 34 3 Peaches, Justin Bieber Featuring Daniel Caesar & Giveon 12 13 13 13 14 My Ex's Best Friend, Machine Gun Kelly X blackbear 13 14 14 16 27 Levitating, Dua Lipa Featuring DaBaby 6 15 19 20 11 The Good Ones, Gabby Barrett 15 16 18 23 8 Without You, The Kid LAROI 16 17 15 14 10 Up, Cardi B 14 18 17 19 9 Best Friend, Saweetie Featuring Doja Cat 17 19 23 27 6 Beautiful Mistakes, Maroon 5 Featuring Megan Thee Stallion 19 20 26 32 7 Made For You, Jake Owen 20 21 22 21 11 You're Mines Still, Yung Bleu Featuring Drake 20 22 20 15 18 What's Your Country Song, Thomas Rhett 13 23 29 36 8 We're Good, Dua Lipa 23 24 24 18 12 Lady, Brett Young 15 25 30 28 17 Willow, Taylor Swift 17 26 33 31 5 What's Next, Drake 26 27 35 39 9 Somebody Like That, Tenille Arts 27 28 27 22 16 Just The Way, Parmalee x Blanco Brown 12 29 34 30 23 For The Night, Pop Smoke Featuring Lil Baby & DaBaby 14 30 31 38 6 Cry Baby, Megan Thee Stallion Featuring DaBaby 30 31 39 40 5 Breaking Up Was Easy In The 90's, Sam Hunt 31 32 32 25 19 Dakiti, Bad Bunny & Jhay Cortez 20 33 40 41 6 Hell Of A View, Eric Church 33 34 36 35 7 On Me, Lil Baby 34 35 37 37 18 Down To One, Luke Bryan 16 36 28 17 16 Long Live, Florida Georgia Line 17 37 42 44 4 Goosebumps, Travis Scott & HVME 37 38 25 26 12 Momma's House, Dustin Lynch 25 39 43 42 6 Nobody, Dylan Scott 39 40 50 - 2 Astronaut In The Ocean, Masked Wolf 40 41 44 47 3 Calling My Phone, Lil Tjay Featuring 6LACK 41 42 41 43 12 How They Remember You, Rascal Flatts 41 43 48 - 2 Forever After All, Luke Combs 43 44 - - 1 Beat Box, SpotemGottem Featuring Pooh Shiesty Or DaBaby 44 45 49 - 2 Track Star, Mooski 45 46 47 50 3 Pick Up Your Feelings, Jazmine Sullivan 46 47 - 48 2 Almost Maybes, Jordan Davis 47 48 - - 1 Settling Down, Miranda Lambert 48 49 - - 1 pov, Ariana Grande 49 50 - - 1 Gone, Dierks Bentley 50
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Gary
Diamond Member
Joined: January 2014
Posts: 45,891
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Post by Gary on Apr 20, 2021 6:46:47 GMT -5
I don't get how three DMX songs re-entered and RRA that high! Wayyyyy bigger legacy than previous chart success suggested. Different music environment 20 years ago --- no rap-dominated streaming and rap was not quite yet in the mainstream and less radio friendly
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Gary
Diamond Member
Joined: January 2014
Posts: 45,891
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Post by Gary on Apr 20, 2021 6:47:36 GMT -5
digital songs
TW LW 2W WOC TITLE PEAK 1 3 2 3 Montero (Call Me By Your Name), Lil Nas X 1 2 - - 1 Ruff Ryders' Anthem, DMX 2 3 - - 1 Party Up (Up In Here), DMX 3 4 2 4 6 Leave The Door Open, Silk Sonic (Bruno Mars & Anderson .Paak) 2 5 4 3 9 Astronaut In The Ocean, Masked Wolf 3 6 18 20 17 The Good Ones, Gabby Barrett 6 7 - - 2 X Gon' Give It To Ya, DMX 7 8 8 8 14 Best Friend, Saweetie Featuring Doja Cat 8 9 5 7 4 Peaches, Justin Bieber Featuring Daniel Caesar & Giveon 3 10 - - 63 I Hope, Gabby Barret Featuring Charlie Puth 3 11 - - 1 Kiss Me More, Doja Cat Featuring SZA 11 12 - - 1 Anywhere Away From Here, Rag'n'Bone Man & P!nk 12 13 10 11 29 Levitating, Dua Lipa Featuring DaBaby 4 14 14 13 6 Beautiful Mistakes, Maroon 5 Featuring Megan Thee Stallion 9 15 - - 1 Slippin', DMX 15 16 - - 1 Salt, Lime & Tequila, Ryan Griffin 16 17 - - 1 Strawberry Wine, Deana Carter 17 18 12 10 10 Up, Cardi B 1 19 - - 1 I Hope You Dance, Lee Ann Womack 19 20 - - 27 10,000 Hours, Dan + Shay & Justin Bieber 1 21 - - 1 Rapstar, Polo G 21 22 17 18 15 Save Your Tears, The Weeknd 5 23 - - 1 Where The Hood At, DMX 23 24 - - 1 What's My Name, DMX 24 25 - - 2 What These Bitches Want, DMX Featuring Sisqo 25 26 23 21 7 Drunk (And I Don't Wanna Go Home), Elle King & Miranda Lambert 2 27 - - 1 Forever And Ever, Amen, Randy Travis 27 28 13 16 14 Drivers License, Olivia Rodrigo 1 29 22 22 69 Blinding Lights, The Weeknd 1 30 - - 1 Copperhead Road, Steve Earle 30 31 7 - 2 Deja Vu, Olivia Rodrigo 7 32 - - 3 Glad You Exist, Dan + Shay 11 33 - - 1 Your Man, Josh Turner 33 34 - - 1 Talking To Jesus, Elevation Worship & Maverick City Music Featuring Brandon Lake 34 35 - - 58 Speechless, Dan + Shay 9 36 49 50 6 We're Good, Dua Lipa 34 37 - - 2 Good God Almighty, Crowder 33 38 - - 47 Bless The Broken Road, Rascal Flatts 20 39 - - 1 How's It Goin' Down, DMX Featuring Faith Evans 39 40 32 32 5 The Business, Tiesto 10 41 39 - 3 Heat Waves, Glass Animals 39 42 - - 2 Cover Me In Sunshine, P!nk + Willow Sage Hart 4 43 27 35 18 Forever After All, Luke Combs 1 44 - - 1 Waves, Luke Bryan 44 45 34 48 15 Lil Bit, Nelly & Florida Georgia Line 4 46 31 31 8 My Head And My Heart, Ava Max 3 47 - - 47 Tequila, Dan + Shay 9 48 38 45 33 Starting Over, Chris Stapleton 4 49 - - 2 Single Saturday Night, Cole Swindell 8 50 29 37 9 Opportunities (Let's Make Lots Of Money), Pet Shop Boys 25
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