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At the end of a year, Billboard will publish an annual list of the 100 most successful songs throughout that year on the Hot 100 chart based on the information. For 2005, the list was published on December 20, calculated with data from December 4, 2004, to November 26, 2005. [1]
Mariah Carey spent fifteen weeks atop the Hot 100 in 2005, with fourteen of them being "We Belong Together", which became the second longest running number one single on the chart, following Carey's "One Sweet Day". The Billboard Hot 100 is a chart that ranks the best-performing singles of the United States.
List of Billboard Hot 100 top ten singles in 2005 which peaked in 2006 Top ten entry date Single Artist Peak Peak date Weeks in top ten November 26 "Laffy Taffy" D4L: 1 January 14 11 December 24 "Grillz" Nelly featuring Paul Wall and Ali & Gipp: 1 January 21 13 December 31 "Check on It" Beyoncé featuring Bun B and Slim Thug: 1 February 4 14
Throughout the decade, a total of 129 singles claimed the top spot of the Hot 100. While Santana 's " Smooth " featuring Rob Thomas topped the chart in the first two weeks of 2000, it was not counted as a number-one single of the 2000s decade by Billboard because it had topped the chart in October 1999, and thus was counted as a number-one ...
List of number-one Billboard Top Latin Albums of 2005; List of number-one Billboard Latin Pop Airplay songs of 2005; List of Billboard Latin Rhythm Albums number ones of 2005; List of number-one Billboard Hot Latin Songs of 2005; List of Billboard Mainstream Top 40 number-one songs of 2005; List of Billboard number-one R&B/hip-hop albums of ...
It made history when it became the first song to simultaneously occupy the number one position on nine Billboard charts (the week ending August 6, 2005): the Hot 100, Hot 100 Airplay, Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay, Pop 100 Airplay, Top 40 Mainstream, Rhythmic Airplay Chart, Hot Dance Club Songs, and Hot Ringtones.
This is a list of songs that have peaked at number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and the magazine's national singles charts that preceded it. Introduced in 1958, the Hot 100 is the pre-eminent singles chart in the United States, currently monitoring the most popular singles in terms of popular radio play, single purchases and online streaming.
The Pop 100 was conceived by Michael Ellis and was first published in the Billboard issue of February 12, 2005. [1] It was created to focus "on the songs with the greatest mainstream appeal, while the Hot 100 will be driven by the songs with the highest song rotations," according to Billboard chart editor Geoff Mayfield.