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Originally posted by Da beezness!
Not necessarily. It could also mean that RnB appeals to less people thus sells less
Plus not only black people listen to urban/RnB. If anything black people could be the one who buy it while the other races who listen to it actually have it bootlegged.
What you say is your opinion, NOT A FACT. I agree with you though. But Lipton's reasoning was actually right.
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We live in America dear, which is what I was mostly referring to from my experiences. Kelly Rowland is a prime example, she has been #1 on R&B for 5 weeks now and the song hasn't even scanned platinum.
YET, everyone has it on their ipods and it is ALL OVER radio! And I know our numbers so if only black people are buying it then it would still be able to sell at least one million. A no.1 song that's sold 150k or less when its the hottest URBAN song in the country means someone is bootlegging.