tbolt:As I recall, there were many music and Teen magazines back then. David Cassidy was a Pop Idol. People could SEE what the Jacksons and Osmonds looked like. Radio DJs would announce the records they played. Hard to confuse those two groups unless people really weren't paying attention at all (which is possible)...
It's early 1971. You're in a car. You've never heard "One Bad Apple" before. The AM radio is on. A commercial is playing. The station jingle follows, cold into "One Bad Apple".
Are you clairvoyant enough, first listen on an AM radio, to say "Hey! That's the Osmonds!"?---an act that has NEVER been played on Top 40 radio? An act that was on TV exactly three times in the year leading up to this---twice with Andy Williams, once with Glen Campbell, one year, ten months and four months earlier---doing material that didn't sound like this?
Assuming you're not an adolescent girl, you probably don't have your nose in Tiger Beat magazine, which probably didn't write about the Osmonds until "One Bad Apple" was a hit (that's research I don't have the stomach for).
Nobody is saying people continued to get them mixed up. But what is a fact is that people, on first listen, if a DJ didn't tell them otherwise over the intro, thought they were hearing a Jackson 5 record.
And even after the reveal, the record went #6 R&B and #1 pop, outperforming (on the pop chart), the legitimate Jackson 5 single ("Mama's Pearl") that was released three weeks later.
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