Y'all don't understand that once F*** Yourself (with Ginger Legend) dethrones Hello, Adele will lose the #1 exposure and automatically drop a few percents and there's huge chance she'll be neck to neck with Sorry
So anyone who wants Sorry #1 betta support F*** Yourself
Not like having a #1 on Christmas is any more important than having a #1 during any other week. I don't really understand the significance of a "Christmas #1."
it's UK Charts thing and I also don't understand that
Y'all don't understand that once F*** Yourself (with Ginger Legend) dethrones Hello, Adele will lose the #1 exposure and automatically drop a few percents and there's huge chance she'll be neck to neck with Sorry
So anyone who wants Sorry #1 betta support F*** Yourself
In the United Kingdom, Christmas number ones are singles that are top of the UK Singles Chart in the week in which Christmas Day falls. Novelty songs, charity songs or songs with a Christmas theme have regularly been at the top of Christmas charts. Traditionally the volume of record sales in the UK peaks at Christmas, with the Christmas number one being considered especially prestigious, more so than any other time of year. Many of the Christmas number ones were also the best-selling song of the year
The emergence of a serious contest for the Christmas number-one spot began in 1973 when the band Slade deliberately released "Merry Xmas Everybody" as an effort to reach the top of the charts on Christmas
Can We Fix It by Bob the Builder was the #1 in 2000