Well if we take into account the 'Little You Know' track and how much it's sold so far because you get it instantly after pre-ordering the album. The pre-orders currently stand at 2.5k
Anyways when do we find out where BO$$ debuted on BB?
Maybe in a few hours, early tomorrow at latest (when the full hot100 is out).
I think they should all harmonize the chorus because Normani just doesn't sound good on it. I can't believe Dinah doesn't sing. Not even one ****ing line. Anyways, that was cute. Imma need Lauren to look a little...alive. At least a little
Slay a bit. I wonder why they gave Dinah's verse to Ally and Lauren.
They should just divide the "Michelle Obama, purse so heavy gettin' Oprah dollars" lines, or at least don't let Normani sing all of them. It's not easy to sing all of them and go to the 2nd verse fast.
Slay a bit. I wonder why they gave Dinah's verse to Ally and Lauren.
They should just divide the "Michelle Obama, purse so heavy gettin' Oprah dollars" lines, or at least don't let Normani sing all of them. It's not easy to sing all of them and go to the 2nd verse fast.
I actually hear all three of them in that bit so it makes a little bit of sense to me.
This is very interesting and I hope this happens to BOSS
Quote:
It all starts with the brand managers at the top of the Clear Channel chain, who listen to hundreds of songs and filter them down to about five or six favorites from various formats (top 40, urban, country, adult contemporary, etc.) and send those selections to program directors across the country.
From there, the program directors vote on which ones they think their listeners will like the most. “It’s purely a gut feeling what they think our listeners will react to,” Tom Poleman, Clear Channel Radio’s president for national programming platforms explained. That’s another thing that sets “On the Verge” apart, he added: “It’s really driven from our programmers and what they’re passionate about.”
So when a lucky newbie’s single is chosen by program directors to be an “On The Verge” song, all 840 Clear Channel radio stations are committed to play the song a minimum of 150 times, the average number of times it takes before listeners usually form an opinion about a record, according to Poleman. Generally, this goes on for six weeks before another song is chosen. As Washington Post points out, the station can play the song more than the committed 150 times, which is often the case when a song becomes popular or…when checks get cut, allegedly.