SIO is already the #1 debut with the most T10 weeks; the runner-up didn't hit 20 iirc.
IGF has 22 weeks, which SIO should get from this week's tracking.
This is really impressive considering that most (or all) of the #1 debuts as of late have had poor longevity in the top ten, let alone the entire Hot 100 - particularly the last 5 (3, We R Who We R, Born This Way, Part of Me, and Harlem Shake).
For example, Part of Me lasted 22 weeks on the Hot 100; SIO has lasted (or will last) that amount of time in the top ten alone
This is really impressive considering that most (or all) of the #1 debuts as of late have had poor longevity in the top ten, let alone the entire Hot 100 - particularly the last 5 (3, We R Who We R, Born This Way, Part of Me, and Harlem Shake).
For example, Part of Me lasted 22 weeks on the Hot 100; SIO has lasted (or will last) that amount of time in the top ten alone
You forgot Hold It Against Me tho, so the last 6!
Shake It Off - 22 weeks (21 weeks in Top 10)
Part Of Me - 22 weeks (9 weeks in Top 10)
We R Who We R - 20 weeks (14 weeks in Top 10)
3 - 20 weeks (11 weeks in Top 10)
Born This Way - 20 weeks (9 weeks in Top 10)
Harlem Shake - 20 weeks (8 weeks in Top 10)
Hold It Against Me - 17 weeks (5 weeks in Top 10)
This is really impressive considering that most (or all) of the #1 debuts as of late have had poor longevity in the top ten, let alone the entire Hot 100 - particularly the last 5 (3, We R Who We R, Born This Way, Part of Me, and Harlem Shake).
For example, Part of Me lasted 22 weeks on the Hot 100; SIO has lasted (or will last) that amount of time in the top ten alone
What about OSD
It had 16 weeks at #1
Did it just collapse after that?
What about OSD
It had 16 weeks at #1
Did it just collapse after that?
Yes. 16 weeks #1, 19 weeks in Top 10, and 27 total weeks on H100.
16 weeks #1, 27 weeks overall. More time at #1, than on the rest of the chart overall.
But the brightside is that OSD fell quick because Always Be My Baby took over. Debuted at #2, spent 9 weeks total at #2, and 2 weeks at #1, and 32 weeks overall.
The H100 longevity was different pre 00's though. Spending 30 weeks on the Hot 100 overall was considered great, because of the fact the airplay was tracked only from Mainstream Top 40 (til 1998) so songs would exit Radio Songs quicker (with only 1 format being tracked, so there couldn't be crossovers). Songs also couldn't spend a year on the Sales Chart, because after a song peaked a label would take it off of shelves. Songs never spent 40,50, or 60 weeks (except for 2 or 3) til this century.
Most #1's spent like 20 weeks on H100 overall, 'cause they would take the single off shelves when it peaked (as a result would leave Single Sales charts) and that would basically be the ending point, as airplay declined overtime.
^^ interesting! Now I see why so many songs had shorter chart lives back then. Now with singles being readily available at your fingertips, it's easier for things to chart longer.
Shake It Off - 22 weeks (21 weeks in Top 10)
Part Of Me - 22 weeks (9 weeks in Top 10) We R Who We R - 20 weeks (14 weeks in Top 10)
3 - 20 weeks (11 weeks in Top 10)
Born This Way - 20 weeks (9 weeks in Top 10)
Harlem Shake - 20 weeks (8 weeks in Top 10)
Hold It Against Me - 17 weeks (5 weeks in Top 10)
Yas at WRWWR having the longest time out of these besides SIO. 14 isn't even that bad though.
Yes. 16 weeks #1, 19 weeks in Top 10, and 27 total weeks on H100.
16 weeks #1, 27 weeks overall. More time at #1, than on the rest of the chart overall.
But the brightside is that OSD fell quick because Always Be My Baby took over. Debuted at #2, spent 9 weeks total at #2, and 2 weeks at #1, and 32 weeks overall.
The H100 longevity was different pre 00's though. Spending 30 weeks on the Hot 100 overall was considered great, because of the fact the airplay was tracked only from Mainstream Top 40 (til 1998) so songs would exit Radio Songs quicker (with only 1 format being tracked, so there couldn't be crossovers). Songs also couldn't spend a year on the Sales Chart, because after a song peaked a label would take it off of shelves. Songs never spent 40,50, or 60 weeks (except for 2 or 3) til this century.
Most #1's spent like 20 weeks on H100 overall, 'cause they would take the single off shelves when it peaked (as a result would leave Single Sales charts) and that would basically be the ending point, as airplay declined overtime.
"One Sweet Day" is one of the biggest songs of all time, so slay anyway
Digital-era songs with 3 weeks on top of both sales and airplay:
III Trouble 3.4; Shake It Off 4.4, Blessed Space 7.6 (From 1989)
Cali Girls 5.3, ET 7.5 (From Teenage Dream); Roar 4.4
II I Gotta Feeling 10.6, Boom Boom Pow 10.5 (From The END)
Single Ladies 3.5; Irreplaceable 4.11
Love the Way You Lie 7.8; Monster 3.6
Grenade 5.3; Locked Out of Heaven 3.7
We Found Love 5.12; Umbrella 5.4
I [Female] Bass 8.3, Tik Tok 6.7, Rolling in the Deep 6.6, Royals 5.6, Fancy 4.3, Hips Don’t Lie 3.3
[Solo Male] Happy 11.8, Whatever You Like 3.8, Sexyback 5.4, Crank That 5.3
[Male Collabs] Blurred Lines 10.11, Low 13.4, Somebody That I Used to Know 4.6, Gold Digger 9.5, Candy Shop 8.7, We Are Young 7.6, Moves Like Jagger 5.7
Here for 1989 getting a 3rd 3+ week topper on both components.
Well, mostly because it kinda implies that Jake is either God or (as other people call the song) Holy.
Which he isn't.
Maybe if it were "Lord Knew You Were Trouble"