If two songs got EXACTLY the same sales, airplay, radio spins, and anything else needed to chart on the Billboard Hot 100, would it be possible for both songs to be #1? Is there a chart rule against it?
Idk, I'd say the one that achieved it first in a charting week (like it got all those stats by Wednesday, while the other song got them by Friday) would be the one BB considers #1
Idk, I'd say the one that achieved it first in a charting week (like it got all those stats by Wednesday, while the other song got them by Friday) would be the one BB considers #1
But what if they were both released on the same day?
You mean if they had the same exact amount of chart points?
I think they're may be some caveat to it (IF that even happens) - for example, the song that had the biggest increase in chart points from the previous week would probably end up at #1.
You mean if they had the same exact amount of chart points?
I think they're may be some caveat to it (IF that even happens) - for example, the song that had the biggest increase in chart points from the previous week would probably end up at #1.
In 2003, Lil Kim's "Magic Stick" ended up charting below #2 over "Crazy In Love" because they were so damn close in points Billboard gave CIL the lead because stations they do not monitor reported playing the song more.