Sunday, May 27, 2007

Top 40 Music Countdowns - Random Trivia Answers

  • A1) 1958 (August 9). Billboard magazine had published other singles charts since January 1, 1955.
  • A2) 1970 (July 4). The #1 song in the first countdown was Three Dog Night's "Mama Told Me Not to Come".
    • A3) He was born in Detroit on April 27, 1932 as Kemal Amin Kasem (yeah, that's K.A., not K.C.).
    • A4) Casey's Top 40 (1989-98). Casem also hosted America's Top 10 on television from 1980 until 1993.
  • A5) Rick Dees. The show will mark its 25th anniversary next year and is now broadcast on over 350 radio stations in the U.S. and 37 other countries.
    • A6) He was born on March 14, 1950 as Rigdon Osmond Dees III in Jacksonville, Florida but began his career as a DJ as a teenager in Greensboro, North Carolina.
    • A7) Disco Duck. The disco novelty song includes quacking ducks, an unauthorized Donald Duck impersonation, and Rick's Cast of Idiots.
  • A8) Shadoe Stevens (1988-95). He now hosts the radio programs "Top of the World" and "Rock the World".
    • A9) He was born on November 3, 1947 as Terry Ingstad in Jamestown, North Dakota.
    • A10) The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson. He replaced Richard Malmos on the CBS show in 2005.
  • A11) Ryan Seacrest. He was born in Georgia on December 24, 1974, and it's actually his real name.
    • A12) He has hosted television's American Idol since 2002.

What I found especially interesting is how the major Top 40 countdowns have been tabulated over the years. The following table comes from several sources:

American Top 40Casey's Top 40Rick Dees' Weekly Top 40*
HostCasey Kasem (1970-88 and 1998-2004**)
Shadoe Stevens (1988-95)
Ryan Seacrest (2004-present)
Casey Kasem (1989-98)Rick Dees (1983-present)
Data SourceBillboard Hot 100 (1970-91)
Top 40/Top 100 Radio Monitor (1991-92)
Top 40/Mainstream (1992)
Radio and Records CHR***/Pop (1998-2001 and 2002-03)
Mediabase 24/7 unpublished chart (2001-02)
Mediabase custom chart (2004-present)
Radio and Records CHR***/Pop (1989-98)Cashbox (1983-84)
Radio and Records (1984-2005?)
Mediabase (2004?-present)

* Countdown was briefly available as a podcast (no iPod required). There is also an AT40 podcast, but it only contains the interviews.

** 75-year-old Casey Kasem still counts down the American Top 20 (adult contemporary) and American Top 10 (soft adult contemporary).

*** CHR stands for Contemporary Hit Radio (CHR/Pop basically means Top 40). Radio and Records ended its countdowns in August 2006 as the company merged with the Billboard Information Group.

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