Lil Nas X's 'Old Town Road' Leads Hot 100 for 14th Week & Lizzo's 'Truth Hurts' Makes it to the Top 10




Lil Nas X's "Old Town Road," featuring Billy Ray Cyrus, leads the Billboard Hot 100 for a 14th week, becoming one of just 10 smashes to dominate for at least that long. It's the first since Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee's "Despacito" (featuring Justin Bieber), which spent a record-tying 16 weeks at No. 1 in 2017.
Meanwhile, Lizzo leaps to her first Hot 100 top 10, as "Truth Hurts" bounds from No. 11 to No. 6.

With a 14th week atop the Hot 100 for "Old Town Road," here's a look at the 10 longest-leading No. 1s in the chart's six-decade history:
Weeks at No. 1, Title, Artist, Date Reached No. 1
16, "Despacito," Luis Fonsi & Daddy Yankee feat. Justin Bieber, May 27, 2017
16, "One Sweet Day," Mariah Carey & Boyz II Men, Dec. 2, 1995
14, "Old Town Road," Lil Nas X feat. Billy Ray Cyrus, April 13, 2019
14, "Uptown Funk!," Mark Ronson feat. Bruno Mars, Jan. 17, 2015
14, "I Gotta Feeling," The Black Eyed Peas, July 11, 2009
14, "We Belong Together," Mariah Carey, June 4, 2005
14, "Candle in the Wind 1997"/"Something About the Way You Look Tonight," Elton John, Oct. 11, 1997
14, "Macarena (Bayside Boys Mix)," Los Del Rio, Aug. 3, 1996
14, "I'll Make Love to You," Boyz II Men, Aug. 27, 1994
14, "I Will Always Love You," Whitney Houston, Nov. 28, 1992


Billie Eilish's "Bad Guy" rebounds from No. 3 on the Hot 100 for a fourth total week at its No. 2 high, while holding at No. 2 on Streaming Songs (41 million, up 1%) and No. 8 on Digital Song Sales (20,000, down 7%) and lifting 8-7 on Radio Songs (75.7 million, up 12%).
Khalid's "Talk" returns to its Hot 100 peak, rising 4-3, as it tops Radio Songs for a fourth week (126.9 million, up 7%), as it leads the streaming-, airplay- and sales-fueled Hot R&B Songs chart for an 11th frame.
Ed Sheeran and Bieber's "I Don't Care" lifts 5-4 on the Hot 100, after debuting at its No. 2 highpoint, and Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello's "Señorita" drops to No. 5 a week after debuting at No. 2; still, the latter track zooms in as the top debut on Radio Songs, at No. 30 (33.2 million).


Courtesy: Billboard.com 

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