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Pop Airplay

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A screenshot of a website for the most popular songs in the United States. Entries display photographs of the performer adjacent numbers inside pink boxes. Off to the right is a caricature of Lady Gaga as a zombie for Halloween.
The "Pop Songs" chart at Billboard.com (on the week ending in November 10, 2012) displays chart entries from 1 through 20 as well as an archive of all top ten hits since the chart began. In the margin, viewers can hop to other prominent charts, such as the Hot 100 or the Hot 200.

The Mainstream Top 40 is an airplay chart from Billboard magazine, and is also known as Pop Songs on billboard.com. It was often mistaken for and confused with the now discontinued Pop 100 Airplay chart. Whereas the Top 40 Mainstream and Pop 100 Airplay charts both measured the airplay of songs played on Mainstream stations playing pop-oriented music, the Pop 100 Airplay (like the Hot 100 Airplay) measures airplay was based on statistical impressions, while the Top 40 Mainstream chart used the number of total detections. Arbitron sometimes refers to the format as Pop Contemporary Hit Radio.

Song records

Highest debut

No. 12: Mariah Carey — "Dreamlover"
No. 14: Lady Gaga — "Born This Way"
No. 16: Britney Spears — "Hold It Against Me", Madonna — "Frozen"

Source[1]

Most weeks at number one

With "The Sign" pop quartet, Ace of Base, holds the record for the most weeks at number one with 14 weeks. The song earned this honor in 1994.

14 weeks

11 weeks

10 weeks

9 weeks

Most weekly plays

Artist records

Artists with most number-one singles

Artists with the most cumulative weeks at number-one

Note: As of November 2012

Artists with most top 10 singles

Artists with most entries

Source[6]

Artist achievements

Chart criteria

There are 40 positions on this chart and it is solely based on radio airplay. This chart ranks the week's hottest pop songs, ranked by mainstream top 40 radio airplay detections as measured by Nielsen BDS Nielsen Broadcast Data Systems. Songs are ranked by the total number of spins detected per week.

Songs that are gaining plays or remaining flat from previous week will receive a bullet. A song will also receive a bullet if its percentage loss in plays does not exceed the percentage of monitored station downtime for the format. If two songs are tied in total plays, the song with the larger increase in plays is placed first. In the week December 3, 2005 songs below No. 20 are moved to recurrent after 20 weeks on the chart. Descending songs below No. 10 are moved to recurrent after 52 weeks on the chart.

Use in countdown shows

From January 9, 1993 up until its last first-run show on January 28, 1995, American Top 40 used this chart as its main source.

See also

References

  1. ^ Trust, Gary. "Taylor Swift's 'Never' Roars Toward Record Sales Debut, Onto Airplay Charts". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved 1 November 2012.
  2. ^ a b "Chart Highlights: Ke$ha Climbs to No. 1 on Pop Songs". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved 26 November 2012.
  3. ^ a b c Trust, Gary. "Katy Perry Notches Record Fifth No. 1 From 'Teenage Dream' On Pop Songs". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved 7 November 2012.
  4. ^ Trust, Gary. "Weekly Chart Notes: Jeff Bridges, Christina Aguilera, Gloria Estefan". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved 1 November 2012.
  5. ^ "Janet Jackson - Awards". Allmusic. Rovi. Retrieved 1 November 2012. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |work= (help)
  6. ^ Trust, Gary. "Weekly Chart Notes: Adele, Rihanna, Guy Lombardo". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved 1 November 2012.
  7. ^ Trust, Gary (2010-03-15). "Lady Gaga, Beyonce Match Mariah's Record". Billboard (magazine). Retrieved 2012-09-21.
  8. ^ Trust, Gary (2011-09-12). "Britney Spears' Sustained Success 'Go'-es On At Pop Radio". Billboard (magazine). Retrieved 2011-09-12.
  9. ^ Katy Perry's Latest Chart Record: A 6th No. 1 From 'Dream' on the Pop Songs (Not Hot 100) Chart

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