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But user demand, now measurable with regards to any song available digitally and not just those deemed as important by label executives and programmers, is more directly measured than it was 25 years ago. Radio airplay still plays a role in Hot 100 placement, and radio programmers are still fairly conservative when it comes to adding non-anglophone artists to playlists. Since the turn of the century, the Hot 100 has updated its methodology multiple times, first to include paid digital downloads at outlets like the iTunes Music Store in 2005 data from streaming services was added in a significant way in 2012, and YouTube streams were added a year later.
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Adding to that, customized stations and highly specific genre playlists allow listeners to completely immerse themselves in a particular style of music.Īt the same time, it also shows how the notion of “popularity” has splintered and become a lot less beholden to the whims and biases of radio programmers and record-store merchandisers. In a way, this is indicative of how streaming-era music has become a lot more chaotic, with widespread availability of music on services like Apple Music and Spotify as well as platforms like the white-label service Bandcamp and the crate-diggers’ paradise Discogs - not to mention traditional record stores like Newbury Comics and Coolidge Corner’s Village Vinyl & Hi-Fi. (Previous holders include former Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski, the masked EDM DJ Marshmello, and former Boston College and NFL quarterback Doug Flutie.) 15 episode of “WWE Raw” true to its name, the 24/7 Championship can be won - and lost - at any time, inside or outside the ring. He’s been the 24/7 Championship holder since pinning the Japanese grappler Akira Tozawa backstage during the Feb. That wasn’t just pop-star posturing the Puerto Rico-born Bad Bunny is, as of this writing, among the roster of champions in World Wrestling Entertainment. When the Latin trap superstar Bad Bunny performed on “Saturday Night Live” this month, he appeared in a couple of sketches - including a turn as a wisdom-dispensing plant in the pandemic-panic throwdown “Loco” - and performed two tracks from his latest album, last year’s chart-topping, rock-tinged “El Último Tour Del Mundo.” As he perched on a step and sang “Te Deseo lo Mejor,” a bummed-out ballad punctuated by fluttery snares, a championship belt, green leather with gold plating, lay across his lap.