This week there’s a major shakeup on the Billboard 200, which ranks the week’s top albums: Not only has Taylor Swift’s 12-week reign at the top of the chart come to end, but a whopping four new records make their debut in the Top 10. The Hot 100 songs chart offers a bit more stability, though Shaboozey does return to the top spot, displacing Kendrick Lamar.
TOP SONGS
Last week, Kendrick Lamar’s Drake diss track “Not Like Us” returned to No. 1 after a long time away: The song entered the chart at the top spot more than two months ago, only to settle in for a long run lower down within the Top 10. It’s recent boost was thanks in part to the release of an official video (and also the ongoing fact that lots of people dislike Drake).
This week, Shaboozey’s “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” further makes its case for “song of the summer” status by returning to No. 1 after that week away — a brief pause in the chart dominance of a track that’s resided in the Top 5 for months. Post Malone’s “I Had Some Help,” which enjoys an assist from last year’s song-of-the-summer champ Morgan Wallen, came in at No. 2, followed by “Not Like Us,” Tommy Richman’s “Million Dollar Baby” and Sabrina Carpenter’s “Espresso.”
The bottom half of the Top 10 feels awfully familiar — Carpenter’s other summer smash (“Please Please Please”), plus sturdy staples by Hozier, Teddy Swims and Benson Boone — but there is one new/old entry. Eminem’s “Houdini,” not to be confused with Dua Lipa’s “Houdini,” made a chart climb from No. 18 to No. 10 as the rapper’s new album, The Death of Slim Shady (Coup de Grace), entered the world.
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TOP ALBUMS
Say, remember the previous sentence — the one that mentions the release of Eminem’s new album? Turns out that’s relevant to this week’s Billboard 200. The Death of Slim Shady (Coup de Grace) has done what many recent albums couldn’t: It unseated Taylor Swift’s seemingly untouchable The Tortured Poets Department from the top of the chart after a record-setting 12-week run at No. 1. (As my colleague Anastasia Tsioulcas noted in this column last week, Poets now holds the record for longest run at the top by a Swift album, as well as the longest run at the top by a female artist who’s made her debut at No. 1 and stayed there.)
As a concept album in which Eminem does lyrical battle with his long-running id/alter-ego Slim Shady, The Death of Slim Shady was perhaps destined to dislodge Swift’s three-month-old opus — especially given that it’s his 11th consecutive album to top the chart. But there are three other new entries on the Top 10 by artists who aren’t quite so venerated. With Romance: Untold bowing at No. 2, the South Korean boy band Enhypen instantly scored its highest-ever Billboard 200 position — 2021’s Dimension: Dilemma peaked at No. 11 and its EPs have charted as high as No. 4 — while two enormously promising (and very different) singer-songwriters also made their first-ever visit to the Top 10.
Like Enhypen, Clairo hit the Top 20 with her previous album — 2021’s Sling hit No. 17 — only to see its follow-up exceed that performance in week 1. Charm entered this week’s chart at No. 8. And country singer Megan Moroney has enjoyed an even more precipitous rise: Her 2023 debut, Lucky, peaked at No. 38 last year. Am I Okay? just bowed at No. 9.
As for the remainder of the Top 10, everyone’s slipping to make room for the new faces: Zach Bryan’s The Great American Bar Scene (from No. 2 to No. 3), The Tortured Poets Department (from No. 1 to No. 4), Morgan Wallen’s One Thing at a Time (from No. 3 to No. 5), Billie Eilish’s Hit Me Hard and Soft (from No. 4 to No. 6), Chappell Roan’s The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess (from No. 5 to No. 7) and Noah Kahan’s Stick Season (from No. 7 to No. 10).
WORTH NOTING
It’s fun to pull apart the various metrics that go into gauging the popularity of a given artist, album or song: radio airplay, sales, streaming audio, streaming video, TikTok and so on. But other factors can be crucial to a kind of sustainable success that doesn’t dent the highest reaches of the charts, including live performances and depth of fan engagement. If you were to scan the Billboard 200, you might notice relatively modest chart debuts for Cigarettes After Sex’s new album X’s (No. 32) and Phish’s Evolve (No. 69). But when those bands head out on tour, they’ll perform in arenas, first-week streaming and airplay numbers be damned.
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Still, some disappointing numbers are impossible to place in a positive light: Just three weeks into its existence, Camila Cabello’s new album (C,XOXO) plunged from its debut at No. 13 to No. 82, and now all the way down to No. 191. It’s tempting to suggest that the letters X, C and X are cursed, but Charli XCX’s Brat is still holding strong at No. 13.
The intersection of Routes 11 and 85, Webbs Mills in Casco, is one of several intersections in the Lakes Region that will receive temporary traffic-calming measures in 2025. Rory Sweeting / Lakes Region Weekly
The Lakes Region towns of Gray, Casco and Sebago will install temporary traffic-calming measures next year as part of a wider initiative to curb vehicle crashes in Maine.
These installations, which will last from June to October, allow planners to test out potential safety measures in the real world, and are part of the wider Vision Zero effort. In development for about a year, Vision Zero is focused on reducing fatalities and serious injuries on Maine’s roadways, with the ultimate goal of eliminating them entirely by 2045.
The Greater Portland Council of Governments has completed two plans as part of this effort. One of these plans is specifically designed for the city of Portland and its surrounding suburbs, while the other, tailored towards rural and island communities, is the basis behind the upcoming Lakes Region projects.
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According to GPCOG Transportation Director Christopher Chop, the new projects are among several traffic-calming demonstration projects that have been implemented throughout the Portland area and some of the surrounding area. Within the Lakes Region, the Bicycle Coalition of Maine previously worked with Gray to install advisory bike lanes as a way to indicate that a street is designed for all modes of transportation.
These pilot projects, both in the urban area and the Lakes Region, will help GPCOG collect data to inform decisions on the most effective measures. Should the measures prove successful, GPCOG plans to replicate them elsewhere. However, if the measures are unsuccessful, Chop hopes that they can understand the reasons why (for example, if they used the wrong tool for the wrong area, or if there were maintenance issues) and avoid them in future projects. These measures, Chop noted, not only make travel safer for cyclists and pedestrians, but for everyone just by slowing traffic down.
The Lakes Region project costs $100,000, funded by a grant from the United States Department of Transportation. Chop said that the temporary measures provide a low-cost opportunity to test out different treatments, as opposed to the more expensive prospect of immediately installing permanent infrastructure. If successful, the GPCOG could look to provide permanent infrastructure to make the region safer.
“In the long run,” Chop said, “the Greater Portland Council of Governments and the Portland Area Comprehensive Transportation System … both are very committed to the Vision Zero effort, and there’s a number of different strategies to make our roads safer for all transportation users.”
Public reception to the traffic-calming measures has been mixed. While the measures were only recently made public in Gray, Town Manager Michael Foley noted that over the years, many residents have been pushing for safety improvements, and that they will be designed and shared with the public before being put into place. In Casco, Town Manager Anthony Ward said that while some in the town are very supportive of the measures, others are a little more hesitant because a previous traffic-calming effort was not well received.
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However, Ward remained optimistic and said, “There was some hesitation about (the measures), but I think the vast majority will support (them).”
Ward also noted that since most of the roads in Casco where the temporary measures will be implemented are state highways, full implementation would take place in conjunction with the Maine Department of Transportation.
The efforts in Gray will focus on the area of Gray Village where three state highways converge, and will likely involve West Gray Road, Portland Road, Yarmouth Road, Main Street, Shaker Road and Brown Street. While Casco has not finalized the areas in which the measures will be implemented, it also plans to focus around the village, with some of the proposed areas including Pike Corner, Webbs Mills, and Cook Mills. Sebago will see measures implemented in East Sebago Village, Mac’s Corner, and a 2-mile section of Route 11 connecting the two areas.
BANGOR, Maine (WABI) – One local organization is looking to improve the holidays for hundreds of veterans in the Greater Bangor area
The Maine Veterans Project hosted their Thanksgiving distribution event this morning from 8am until 12pm at their office in Bangor.
Any veteran in the Greater Bangor area was welcome to stop by and get some food for free to help feed them and their families this Thanksgiving.
Meals were also delivered to those who couldn’t make it to the event in person.
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Over 200 large bags of non-perishable food were available as well as turkeys, milk, eggs, burgers, and bacon.
They also had some cold weather gear available to those who needed it including jackets, socks, and gloves.
Hermon elementary school students also made some heartwarming cards for the veterans who would be picking up food at the event.
Maine Veterans Project vice president Anthony Murano said their goal was just to help as many veterans as they could.
“As you can see we do have a lot of moving parts going on out here. Today is our Thanksgiving distribution event, and the goal of today is to feed as many veteran’s families as we possibly can for the Thanksgiving season. We do have a small food pantry that we do keep stocked throughout the year, so if we have any vets that are looking for a little food assistance, we can help in that aspect,” said Murano.
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Maine Veterans Project partnered with several local businesses and organizations to help make this event possible including Evan’s Veterans Project and the Not Your Average Nurses Foundation.
And for more information on everything that the Maine Veterans Project does, you can visit maineveteransproject.org or check them out on Facebook.
Erik Stevenson was fouled making a 3-pointer and completed the four-point play with 3.5 seconds left to lift the Capital City Go-Go to a 96-93 win over the Maine Celtics on Sunday at the Portland Expo.
Stevenson finished with 36 points for Capital City. Ruben Nembhard Jr. added 13 points. 14 rebounds and seven assists, while Michael Foster Jr. had 14 points.
Ron Harper Jr. had 21 points and six rebounds for the Celtics. JD Davison added 11 points and 10 assists, while Baylor Scheierman finished with 16 points and six rebounds. Drew Peterson scored 18 for Maine.