I did. I started actively, daily listening to Top 40 the summer I was 11 (1967). SO much new material to look forward to every week, and not much chance of getting sick to death of songs. Ten weeks on the chart was unusual---most lasted eight or nine, The Beatles "Hey Jude", which was HUGE, lasted 11.
By this week in 1973, it was VERY different:
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FIFTEEN weeks for Three Dog Night's "Shambala". It stayed on for two more weeks, making 17---the record to that point. That was tied later in the year by, of all things, the DeFranco Family's "Heartbeat-It's A Lovebeat".
And that record was broken by Barbra Streisand's "The Way We Were", which managed 18. And then that record fell weeks later to Redbone's "Come and Get Your Love", which lasted 21 weeks.
The topper? Morris Albert's "Feelings", which stayed on the KHJ Thirty for 24 weeks.
That was a LONG five and a half months.