Anyway, it only took "Judas" nine hours, so this should be a hell of a lot faster.
Blurred Lines has double the lead the #1 song did when Judas was released, and Roar will have almost triple Blurred Lines popularity by the time the song is released. We're talking like 6x as much popularity needed to get to the top.
If you're calling "Applause" generic, and you stan for artists like Dr. Kety Lukey, Gimmicki Garbaj and Emergency Please, save yourself the embarrassment and take several seats.
Blurred Lines has double the lead the #1 song did when Judas was released, and Roar will have almost triple Blurred Lines popularity by the time the song is released.
But its a rolling chart, meaning that it's based on sales in the last 24 hours only - both BL and "Roar" will be decreasing while Gaga will only increase for her first day, and very quickly.
Lions are only praised and regarded as King of the Jungle in America and the UK
Almost everywhere else regards Tigers as top cat...it wins best animal almost every year (and the years it doesn't win is because house dogs or cat win)
But its a rolling chart, meaning that it's based on sales in the last 24 hours only - both BL and "Roar" will be decreasing while Gaga will only increase for her first day, and very quickly.
Yes, but songs do not decrease as fast as they rise. They rise relative to 0 popularity throughout the entire frame; they decline with respect to their popularity over the first window. Katy won't tumble off #1. It's going to require like 4-6x as much popularity as the Judas release, depending on when she meets Katy in the middle of her decline.
In a poll conducted by Animal Planet, the tiger was voted the world's favourite animal, narrowly beating the dog. More than 50,000 viewers from 73 countries voted in the poll. Tigers received 21% of the vote, dogs 20%, dolphins 13%, horses 10%, lions 9%, snakes 8%, followed by elephants, chimpanzees, orangutans and whales.[169][170][171]
Quote:
The Bengal tiger is the national animal of India and Bangladesh.[citation needed] The Malaysian tiger is the national animal of Malaysia.[164] The Siberian tiger is the national animal of South Korea.
The tiger replaces the lion as King of the Beasts in cultures of eastern Asia representing royalty, fearlessness and wrath.[165] Its forehead has a marking which resembles the Chinese character 王, which means "king"; consequently, many cartoon depictions of tigers in China and Korea are drawn with 王 on their forehead.