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Any CHR's play "Try That In A Small Town"?

These are people who weren't listening to country radio and had no idea who Aldean was before the video controversy exploded, and I doubt that one song has made country radio listeners out of them since.

There's a way to target the testing in a way that focuses on P1 and not the day trippers. The catch is will P1 stick with this song for the two or three months it will take to get it to #1? Aldean was quickly replaced in the Hot 100 by Morgan Wallen and Luke Combs. That tells me that this was a quick burn song and may not have the passion to go beyond Top 10. It's a very dark song, in terms of imagery and tone. Not the kind of summer song that gets people on the dance floor. Luke Bryan has them beat there.
 
I still recall watching this episode of "Top Gear" that aired about a decade ago. Their "challenge" was to paint pro-gay, anti-Nascar and similar language on their vehicles and drive through Alabama (or some such - it's been years since I viewed this since it first aired). From the accents of the guys on this show, they're obviously Brits. Maybe they didn't understand how seriously folks in the deep south take Nascar and how deeply their anti-LGBTQ+ hatred runs, but these guys are lucky they didn't get shot.
Top Gear also trolled Argentinians about losing the Falklands War, and protesters forced them to abandon their cars and leave the country:

 
There's a way to target the testing in a way that focuses on P1 and not the day trippers. The catch is will P1 stick with this song for the two or three months it will take to get it to #1? Aldean was quickly replaced in the Hot 100 by Morgan Wallen and Luke Combs. That tells me that this was a quick burn song and may not have the passion to go beyond Top 10. It's a very dark song, in terms of imagery and tone. Not the kind of summer song that gets people on the dance floor. Luke Bryan has them beat there.
Summer is fading away. By the time "Try That in a Small Town" enters the top five, it will likely be early October and the slower songs will be in the ascendancy. Look at what's being sent to radio now and you'll find a bunch of tunes that are targeting colder-weather airplay. The new Carly Pearce tune was sent a couple of weeks ago and hasn't even cracked the top 40 yet. Watch it accelerate as soon as the kids are back in school.
 
Summer is fading away. By the time "Try That in a Small Town" enters the top five, it will likely be early October and the slower songs will be in the ascendancy.

If it lasts that long. The buzz has already faded, according to these stories:


The devoted culture warriors dedicated to taking Jason Aldean’s “Try That in a Small Town” to the top of the charts appear to have already grown bored of the song as it plummeted from Number One to Number 21 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart this week.


After having a reputation as one of the most polarizing songs in radio airplay, the sizzle from Jason Aldean’s most recent single, “Try That in a Small Town”, might be fading.

That's the problem with a quick rise like this. We've seen it before with songs that shoot to the top, and then disappear.
 
If it lasts that long. The buzz has already faded, according to these stories:


Again, the stories refer to the Hot 100, which largely represents those numerous non-country Looky Lous I described in my previous post. Maybe the song will fade, as you predict, but all I know is what I see in the airplay chart and hear on the country stations I listen to regularly here.
 
Mediabase charts are airplay only. Billboard has both.
Today's Mediabase country chart update has "Try That in a Small Town" with a bullet number of 382, higher than any song in the top 50 other than Luke Combs' "Love You Anyway" and Bailey Zimmerman's "Religiously," although that number has slipped 104 points since yesterday, so maybe the cool-off has begun. It did gain 48 spins in the last 24 hours, putting it midpack among the songs gaining airplay. Parmalee's "Girl in Mine" was up 98 and "Religiously" was up 81, but other chart climbers barely moved the meter. Morgan Wallen's "Everything I Love" added only 1 spin, Lainey Wilson's 'Watermelon Moonshine" just 13. Maybe you can clarify these numbers, and their significance, further. You'll find them at the bottom of this page.
 
Maybe you can clarify these numbers, and their significance, further.

That looks like the building chart, which is the week to date. The airplay chart isn't going to show the kind of big movement you see in a daily all-genre streaming chart. Things move slower because other songs are growing at the same time.
 
Billboard's CHR Radio Songs chart was released today, and no sign of Jason Aldean. In Billboard's country airplay chart, the song held its spot at #20, with a large increase in spins, but not enough for it to move up the chart.
 
Billboard's CHR Radio Songs chart was released today, and no sign of Jason Aldean. In Billboard's country airplay chart, the song held its spot at #20, with a large increase in spins, but not enough for it to move up the chart.
Why does anyone think the Aldean track should become a hit on CHR? It's rubbish and not exactly the kind of song that most CHR listeners would relate to...
 
Why does anyone think the Aldean track should become a hit on CHR? It's rubbish and not exactly the kind of song that most CHR listeners would relate to...
It doesn't hit me as a modern CHR super track, but neither does "Fast Car" by Luke Combs. As for the song, itself, I think it's really good.
 
Because as stated in the OP, it went to #1 in the Billboard Hot100. That's usually an indication of a hit.
But as you stated, this #1 ranking is driven by You Tube views and other sources (not Radio airplay). There's no upside for any CHR stations deciding to play the song. I doubt the audience on those stations are clamoring for it...
 
But as you stated, this #1 ranking is driven by You Tube views and other sources (not Radio airplay). There's no upside for any CHR stations deciding to play the song. I doubt the audience on those stations are clamoring for it...
Totally agree. Besides the message, the whole feel of the song is wrong for today's CHR. Those crunchy guitar chords would be as out of place on a CHR station as a mandolin solo would be.
 
Can someone tell me how Morgan Wallen is getting played at CHR? All I know about him is that he was caught using a racial slur and was briefly banned by country stations. I guess they all rescinded the ban which I guess is not surprising. But how in the world is the CHR audience able to tolerate his apparent racism? I’m not trying to start anything here, I am just really perplexed and trying to understand. How did he get from racial slur to CHR spins?
 
Can someone tell me how Morgan Wallen is getting played at CHR? All I know about him is that he was caught using a racial slur and was briefly banned by country stations. I guess they all rescinded the ban which I guess is not surprising. But how in the world is the CHR audience able to tolerate his apparent racism? I’m not trying to start anything here, I am just really perplexed and trying to understand. How did he get from racial slur to CHR spins?
YouTube, or Spotify, is your friend. Listen to "You Proof" or "Last Night," his two crossover hits. He's not singing about white pride or vigilantism. He's singing about relationships and drinking, hardly controversial topics in pop or country music, to a trap beat with country undertones. In "You Proof," Wallen is drinking to erase a memory; in "Last Night," it's more complex and he's wondering if the relationship is over or not after both of them "let the liquor talk" last night.

You're assuming that pop fans -- at least the white ones -- were aware of, and outraged by, his use of the N-word while drunk. My guess is that most of them don't care and just like a new (to them) artist making a different kind of pop music. As for Black fans, who knows? Again, he's not going off against Black people in his music.
 
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