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Jennifer Lopez Reveals Her Sweet Surprise for Ben Affleck at Their Wedding Celebration: ‘We Couldn’t Have Been Happier’

It’s been more than a week since Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck held their wedding celebration in Georgia on August 20, and in a newsletter sent out by the “Love Don’t Cost a Thing” singer on Thursday (Sept. 1), she shared all the romantic details.

Lopez opened the newsletter with of her her “favorite lines” from the film Live By Night, which Affleck directed: “This is heaven. Right here. We’re in it now.”

“He also said it the night of our wedding reception in his speech, and I thought…how perfect,” she wrote. “It had rained at sunset every day that week. Everyone was worried about the heat, the aptly named ‘love bugs,’ the details, would the guests all arrive on time, etc. — not to mention the thunder and lightning that arrived almost on cue each day at the exact time the ceremony was supposed to start that Saturday. Oh, and all of us caught a stomach bug and were recuperating ‘til late in the week, that, and along with a few other unexpected setbacks, had all the makings of a doozie of a wedding weekend.”

Lopez assured, “The truth is, I never had one doubt. All week I felt the calm and easy certainty that we were in God’s hands.”

She noted that, thankfully, the wedding day ended up being a gorgeous sunny day. “As the sun set behind the live oaks draped in Spanish moss, a warm breeze swept over the lawn where our closest family and friends sat and, at long-last, I started my walk down the stairs that would become the aisle that would lead me toward the rest of my life. Ahhhhh…it was actually happening…” she wrote.

Lopez shared that she and Affleck discussed “more than twenty years ago” that Marc Cohn’s “True Companion” was their ultimate wedding song, and she ended up surprising her new husband by bringing the singer to sing the track live at their wedding. “Later Ben told me that the chords of the song and seeing Marc Cohn both shocked him and allowed him to feel the way both roads we had walked found their way, inevitably, inexorably, and perfectly together,” she wrote. “And when he saw me appear at the top of the stairs that moment it both made absolute sense while seeming still impossibly hard to believe, like the best dream, where all you want is never to awaken. I would have had many of the same thoughts probably had I not been focusing so hard on not tripping over my dress, but when I got close enough to see his face, it made the same wonderful sense to me. Some old wounds were healed that day and the weight of the past finally lifted off our shoulders. Full-circle — and not at all the way we planned it. Better.”

The multi-hyphenate shared a number of stunning photos from the rehearsal dinner, reception and the next day’s brunch. “Years ago, we had no idea the road ahead would mean navigating so many labyrinths and hold so many surprises, blessings, and delights. It all culminated in this moment, one of the most perfect of our lives,” she concluded her newsletter. “We couldn’t have been happier. I wish all of you the same kind of happiness…the hard-earned kind that’s all the sweeter for the journey that came before it.”

Just a month after the couple officially tied the knot in Las Vegas, Bennifer celebrated their marriage on Saturday (Aug. 20) in front of family and friends at their home in Riceboro on the Hampton Island preserve outside of Savannah, Georgia.

Mr. and Mrs. Affleck first began dating back in 2002 after meeting on the set of Gigli, the first of two movies they would star in together (the second being Jersey Girl in 2004), before getting engaged. The couple delayed their planned 2003 wedding before calling it quits in 2004. Both moved on to marry other people and have kids, destined to be each other’s “the one that got away” — until last year. Lopez and Affleck were spotted together mid-2021 before going public that July. Then in April, they got engaged again.

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Cyndi Lauper & Harvey Fierstein on the Return of ‘Kinky Boots’ & Its Early Production Hurdles

Although Kinky Boots ran for more than 2,500 performances on Broadway and netted six Tony Awards, book writer Harvey Fierstein still believes it “closed a little prematurely” when the curtain came down in spring of 2019. So even though a symptom-less case of COVID-19 kept the Tony-winning scribe from hanging with the show’s director/choreographer Jerry Mitchell and musical mastermind Cyndi Lauper during its off-Broadway premiere at Stage 42 on Aug. 25, he couldn’t be more thrilled about his musical’s return (even if he says that isolation is “driving me f–king nuts”).

“I love off Broadway — it’s my roots,” he tells Billboard over the phone, “And I love that theater. I love how open it is – there’s no balcony to overhang and block your view and mess up the sound. You can balance the sound so well in that space. There’s not a bad seat in the house, and it has a nice airy feeling to it. It plays beautifully in this space.”

A story about the owner of a failing shoe factory (Charlie, played by Christian Douglas at Stage 42) teaming up with a drag queen (Lola, played by Callum Francis, who previously performed the role on Broadway) to save his father’s business, Kinky Boots – which opened at the Al Hirschfeld Theatre in 2013 — was based on a non-musical 2005 British film inspired by a true story. While Fierstein was already an established Broadway player with four Tonys to his name, it was new ground for Lauper, who provided Kinky Boots with its vibrating musical pulse. And for the Billboard Hot 100-topping, Grammy-winning pop singer-songwriter, the offer couldn’t have come at a better time.

“I was just fed up fighting the system,” she recalls, sitting across from Billboard in a diner-style booth in Manhattan’s chic CIVILIAN Hotel. “‘You’re not on the list,’ ‘You didn’t do this,’” she says, imitating various whiny voices from back in the day. “I was like, ‘You know what? Bite me.’” So when Fierstein reached out to his So Unusual friend, she signed on.

The musical’s culture clash dramedy gave her an opportunity to escape from the genre box that record company executives kept trying to keep her trapped inside. “[In Kinky Boots], nobody sings the same jam — so I get a chance to sing all kinds of ways, instead of singing something and having someone from the company tell me, ‘You can’t do that, you’re Cyndi Lauper! You’re supposed to sound like this!’ I could use my whole voice, and write music for all the different people in the show.”

With space to breathe on the Broadway stage, she flourished – particularly when writing the numbers for Lola. Lauper tells Billboard she envisioned Lola’s musical voice as a heady mixture of Cab Calloway and Shirley Bassey, with a sprinkle of Whitney Houston and Tina Turner, which you can hear on sly club numbers like “Sex Is in the Heel” and “Land of Lola.” Billy Porter, who originally played the role on Broadway, won a Tony for best actor in a musical with the role, and Kinky Boots gave Lauper herself a Tony for best original score – marking the first time in history a solo woman won in that category.

“The fact that there were so many different kinds of people in the show was exciting,” Lauper recalls of what made her sign on in the first place. “It was inclusive. It was more like real life.”

Callum Francis, Christian Douglas, Cyndi Lauper, Jerry Mitchell and the cast during the opening night curtain call for “Kinky Boots” at Stage 42 on Aug. 25, 2022 in New York City.

Looking back now, not even a decade after its Broadway premiere, Kinky Boots seems ahead of its time. Certainly, it’s an immediate precursor to drag’s cultural ascendance over the last half decade. “There’s so much misunderstanding. So many people don’t understand the difference between a drag queen and being transgender and someone with gender dysphoria. There’s so much to the human condition,” Fierstein says. “Now look at the stuff we’re aware of – even RuPaul’s Drag Race has had a heterosexual male drag queen, and a woman drag queen. And transgender drag queens. And that doesn’t make them any less drag; a drag queen is a special way people like to perform.”

Fierstein, who also penned poignant portrayals of drag artists in Torch Song Trilogy (1982) and La Cage aux Folles (1983), bristles somewhat at the idea of drag being a throughline in his career. “Nobody says to David Mamet, ‘You have a lot of working people in your shows,’ or to Arthur Miller, ‘What’s with all those heterosexuals?’” Fierstein points out. Even so, he acknowledges that “playing with sexuality is just fun. It’s so theatrical and wonderful on stage — and it’s all drag. If you’re gonna dress up anyway, you might as well dress up pretty!” he adds, cackling.

When Lauper is asked about the art form, she drolly offers, “I am a drag queen.” Hard to argue with her: Not only does she share stories of drag legend Flotilla DeBarge prodding her to stuff her cleavage, but Lauper was decades ahead of the trend when she put a slew of queens in the video for her 1995 Hot 100 hit “Hey Now (Girls Just Want to Have Fun).” While she says European audiences went wild for the video, the powers that be “wouldn’t release it in America.” She shakes her head. “That’s always my rub with record companies. People don’t really need record companies right now, and that’s good. I hope they pull the rug out a little and feel a little shaken, so they know not to be the way they were.”

With Kinky Boots likely to become one of those musicals that’s continually revived on Broadway over the coming generations, Fierstein and Lauper are now able to take a victory lap and look back fondly on some of the play’s early struggles. Recalling a number that involved a bankrupt Charlie firing his employees on one side of the stage while Lola pulled off a disappearing magic act on the other, Fierstein concludes, “Oh, did it suck.” When the number was eventually revamped, it meant that one of Lauper’s songs was cut. “I had some really awful ideas, and she was wonderful, because she wrote songs for all those awful ideas and they’re all in the garbage pail,” Fierstein says with a chortle. “But Cyndi never said to me, ‘F–k you for making me write all these songs.’”

For her part, Lauper remembers the cool reception the cast gave to a Blur-esque song with a punk rock feel she wrote, which didn’t make it to the final production. Her initial reaction to them: “What, you didn’t see Green Day? Rock n’ roll, a little punk is bothering you?”

Speaking of the starts and stops that characterize most plays before they hit the stage, Lauper provides an update on the status of the musical update of 1988’s Working Girl she’s been attached to since 2013. “They had business things to work out,” Lauper says of the first few years. “Then in 2017 we started writing music. There were two writers [attached], but they were television writers, and they were both wonderful, but they were busy with other things. And maybe they didn’t want to write the same story.”

Left with 16 songs for a Broadway-bound musical without a book, Lauper was insistent on finding a female writer for the project. “It had to be a woman; it’s a woman’s story,” she explains. While there’s a tinge of exhaustion in Lauper’s voice as she recounts the play’s long gestation period, it disappears when she brings up Theresa Rebeck, who was recently announced as the book writer for Working Girl: “She’s really wonderful. I feel so privileged to work with her.”

And while Lauper admits to missing her old Kinky Boots pals Fierstein and Mitchell as she navigates the waters of this show’s troubled birth, she remains as steely eyed as ever. “It’s my journey,” she says, still dedicated to her creative growth after decades in the game. “To get better at what I do, I have to learn to stand on my own.”

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Ghost’s ‘Mary on a Cross’ Rides TikTok Trend to No. 1 on Hard Rock Streaming Songs Chart

Swedish rockers Ghost earn their first No. 1 on Billboard‘s Hard Rock Streaming Songs chart, as “Mary on a Cross” crowns the list dated Sept. 3.

In the Aug. 19-25 tracking period, the song vaulted by 48% to 4.9 million official U.S. streams, according to Luminate.

Originally released as part of a two-song single in 2019 (longside “Kiss the Go-Goat”, “Cross” has been revitalized in recent weeks due to a trend using both the original and an altered version of the song on TikTok.

“Cross” also debuts at No. 11 on Rock Streaming Songs.

Concurrently, the track ranks at No. 13 on Hard Rock Digital Song Sales with 1,000 downloads sold (also up 48%). It originally hit No. 2 in 2019.

The track additionally tops both the LyricFind U.S. and LyricFind Global surveys for a third straight week.

Globally, “Cross” debuts at Nos. 102 and 158 on the Billboard Global 200 and Billboard Global Excl. U.S. rankings, respectively.

“Cross” is not currently being promoted as a radio single. In March, Ghost released its latest album, Impera, which debuted at No. 1 on Top Rock & Alternative Albums and Top Hard Rock Albums and No. 2, the band’s best rank, on the Billboard 200. The set’s third single, “Spillways,” lifts into the top 20 on Mainstream Rock Airplay (22-20); it follows two No. 1s: “Call Me Little Sunshine,” for two weeks in May, and “Hunter’s Moon” (one, January).

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Nicki Minaj Lives Her Suburban Barbie Fantasy in ‘Super Freaky Girl’ Video

F-R-E-AK! Nicki Minaj dropped a Barbie-inspired music video for her new single “Super Freaky Girl” on Thursday (Sept. 1).

In the technicolor clip, the rapper plays house with Hunger Games heartthrob Alexander Ludwig as the Ken to her Barbie. “I can lick it, I can ride it while you slippin’ and slidin’/ I can do all them little tricks and keep the di– up inside it/ You can smack it, you can grip it, you can go down and kiss it/ And every time he leave me ‘lone, he always tell me he miss it,” she raps on the chorus, casually brandishing a kitchen knife on the counter while the actor caresses her legs.

The pair’s perfectly plastic domesticity starts to take a turn, however, when Ludwig begins running down other neighbors on the street in his magenta sports car. Soon enough, Minaj is lighting him up with a bright pink blowtorch as he leaves for work and the house goes up in flames as the happy couple throws a backyard barbecue for two.

The video arrives just days after Minaj closed out her performance at the 2022 MTV Video Music Awards with the track. The medley — which celebrated the rapper receiving this year’s Video Vanguard Award — also included a litany of her biggest hits like “Anaconda,” “Super Bass,” “Chun-Li,” “Beez in the Trap” and more. During her acceptance speech, she shouted out Whitney Houston and Michael Jackson, and made a call for viewers to take mental health “seriously.”

“Super Freaky Girl” marks the rapper’s first solo No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 following “Trollz” and “Say So,” her respective collaborations with 6ix9ine and Doja Cat, both reigning atop the chart in 2020.

Watch Minaj’s music video for “Super Freaky Girl” below.

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Stacey Dash Gets Emotional After Just Learning DMX Died Over a Year Ago: ‘It Breaks My Heart’

Stacey Dash broke down in an emotional video after just recently finding out rapper DMX died of a heart attack triggered by a drug overdose back in April 2021.

The Clueless actress took a moment to reflect on TikTok Wednesday (Aug. 31) about his tragic passing. “OK y’all. I’m ashamed. I didn’t know… I didn’t know DMX died. I didn’t know from a cocaine overdose,” she said in between sobs with Kim Hitt and Advocate’s “You Don’t Know” playing in the background of the clip. “I am, today, six years and one month clean… and it breaks my heart. It breaks my heart he lost to it. He lost. He lost to that demon of addiction…. Please, please don’t lose.”

After being rushed to White Plains Hospital in New York, the Ruff Ryders rapper was on life support for days, and was pronounced dead on April 9, 2021. His death was confirmed to be from a cocaine-induced heart attack.

Six months after DMX’s passing, in October 2021, the 55-year-old actress went on The Dr. Oz Show to reveal her own drug addiction, opening up about how she was “taking 18 to 20 pills a day” while also discussing what she learned from being five years sober. “The greatest blessing is that not only have I been able to be honest with myself and become a better person, I’ve been able to understand my parents and that they did love me and that they were doing the best they could and they were just sick. They were addicted,” Dash told Dr. Oz at the time.

“I was strolling through #tiktok and found a #DMX song that has saved me many times. Suddenly it says #RIP i know I am late, i did not know he passed away, he #OD I am heartbroken – he was such a great guy,” she captioned the emotional clip, which she reposted on her Instagram page. Watch it below.

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Lea Michele Addresses ‘Funny Girl’ Casting Controversy & Allegations of Bullying on ‘Glee’ Set

Lea Michele has been enjoying a comeback of sorts in recent months, partly set into motion by the July announcement she’d be taking over the lead role from Beanie Feldstein in Broadway’s revival of Funny Girl. 

However, she still hasn’t quite been able to escape various controversies attached to her name, from allegations of bullying and discrimination made against her in 2020, to speculation over what went down behind the scenes of her casting in the famed musical that starred Barbra Streisand in the role of Fanny Brice. But in a new interview with The New York Times, just days before she’s scheduled to officially step into the role of Fanny on Sept. 6, the 36-year-old performer addressed all of them one by one.

Claims that Michele was hostile toward her costars on the set of Glee first surfaced when her castmate Samantha Marie Ware called her out for supporting Black Lives Matter while allegedly mistreating Black coworkers on set. In the new interview, Michele attributed her previous negative behavior to the intense, tunnel-vision focus she had on her craft.

“I have an edge to me,” she told the Times. “I work really hard. I leave no room for mistakes. That level of perfectionism, or that pressure of perfectionism, left me with a lot of blind spots.”

Michele said that the claims made by Ware and other colleagues prompted her to do some self-reflecting, and that she now sees how important it is to be a leader. “It means not only going and doing a good job when the camera’s rolling, but also when it’s not,” she told the paper. “And that wasn’t always the most important thing for me.”

As for what went down with her landing the the part of Funny Girl’s Fanny Brice — some were unhappy with the casting, including Ware, who once again appeared to speak out — the musical’s director Michael Mayer explained that Michele had actually been “at the top of the list” for the role when he first began casting the Broadway revival. But the timing didn’t work out, as she had just given birth to her son Ever, and wasn’t ready to return to performing.

Instead, he selected Feldstein, whose performance he said he loved and still stands by, in spite of some critical reviews. Michele revealed she had told Mayer she’d be “honored” to step in for the former lead if her run ever ended. It eventually did in June, and everything was then in place for the Scream Queens alum to take over what she’s long said is her dream role.

Mayer also revealed he hasn’t spoken to Feldstein about Michele’s casting. He explained, “I think it was hard for her once she knew she was going to be leaving and someone else was taking over.”

Finally, Michele addressed a strange internet rumor about her that she can’t read or write. “I went to Glee every single day; I knew my lines every single day,” she said. “And then there’s a rumor online that I can’t read or write? It’s sad. It really is. I think often if I were a man, a lot of this wouldn’t be the case.”

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Steve Lacy’s ‘Bad Habit’ Rules Hot Rock & Alternative Songs Chart

Steve Lacy‘s “Bad Habit” rises to No. 1 on Billboard‘s Hot Rock & Alternative Songs, Hot Rock Songs and Hot Alternative Songs charts dated Sept. 3.

Lacy lands his first leader on any of Billboard‘s streaming-, airplay- and sales-based Billboard surveys.

In the Aug. 19-25 tracking week, “Habit” earned 23.1 million radio audience impressions (up 16%) and 20.8 million official streams and sold 1,000 downloads in the U.S., according to Luminate.

Concurrently, “Habit” ascends to No. 2 on both the multi-metric Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and Hot R&B Songs charts. On the all-genre Billboard Hot 100, where the track is Lacy’s first entry, it pushes 6-3.

“I’m just grateful,” Lacy recently told Billboard of the song’s success. “It still doesn’t feel real yet.”

“Habit” also returns to No. 1 on the all-genre Streaming Songs chart for a second week on top. It rules R&B Streaming Songs for a sixth week, Rock Streaming Songs and Alternative Streaming Songs for a fifth week each, and R&B/Hip-Hop Streaming Songs for a third frame.

“Habit” continues to flex its strength at radio, rising 13-11 on Pop Airplay, holding at its No. 20 high on Rhythmic Airplay and climbing 35-27 on Adult Alternative Airplay and 35-33 on Adult Pop Airplay. Additionally, it is bubbling under Alternative Airplay.

Four other tracks by Lacy appear on the latest Hot Rock & Alternative Songs list, paced by “Static,” which rises 15-14 (4.3 million streams).

“Habit” is from Gemini Rights, Lacy’s album that ranks at No. 14 on the Billboard 200 with 24,000 equivalent album units earned Aug. 19-25. It debuted at its No. 7 best on the July 30-dated chart and has earned 173,000 units to date.

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Ellie Goulding & Tems to Receive Special Honors at 2022 BMI London Awards 

Ellie Goulding will receive the BMI President’s Award and Tems will receive the BMI Impact Award at the 2022 BMI London Awards, which will be presented at London’s Savoy Hotel on Oct. 3.

The private event will be hosted by Mike O’Neill, BMI president and CEO, and Shirin Foroutan, BMI vice president, creative, Europe.

The ceremony also pays tribute to the U.K. and European songwriters and publishers of the previous year’s most-performed songs on U.S. radio and television from BMI’s repertoire. The million-air awards, song of the year, and awards for pop, dance, film, television and cable television music will also be presented throughout the evening.

“We’re thrilled to be back in person at the Savoy celebrating our BMI family of U.K. and European songwriters, composers and music publishers,” Foroutan said in a statement.

Goulding, 35, has had two top 10 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 – “Lights,” which reached No. 2 in 2012, and “Love Me Like You Do,” which hit No. 3 in 2015. Goulding received a Grammy nod for best pop solo performance for the latter song, which was featured in the film Fifty Shades of Grey. Goulding co-wrote “Lights,” but not “Love Me Like You Do.”

Goulding, who has received 16 BMI Awards, is English. Previous Brits to receive the BMI President’s Award include Jay Kay of Jamiroquai and Noel Gallagher.

This has been a breakthrough year for Tems, 27. Last November, the Nigeria-born singer received her first Grammy nomination — best global music performance for Wizkid’s “Essence,” on which she was featured. The song reached No. 9 on the Hot 100. In May, she landed her first No. 1 hit on the chart – Future’s “Wait for U,” on which she was featured (along with Drake).

“Wait for U” sampled Tems’ song “Higher,” from her debut EP, For Broken Ears (2020), which led to her receiving a writing credit on the Future smash. She was also credited as a co-writer of “Essence.” Tems sings Bob Marley’s classic song “No Woman No Cry” in the trailer for Black Panther: Wakanda Forever. The film, the sequel to the 2018 blockbuster Black Panther, is due Nov. 11.

The BMI Impact Award is given to a songwriter, producer or composer for their artistry, creative vision and impact on the future of music. Previous recipients include RAYE and Arlo Parks.

Follow BMI on Twitter and on Facebook and use #BMILondonAwards to join the conversation.

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Bailey Zimmerman Makes History in Hot Country Songs Chart’s Top 10

Bailey Zimmerman makes history on Billboard‘s Hot Country Songs chart (dated Sept. 3), becoming the first artist to place three career-opening entries in the top 10 simultaneously since the survey began as an all-encompassing genre ranking in October 1958.

Zimmerman’s “Rock and a Hard Place,” “Where It Ends” and “Fall in Love” (all on Elektra/Warner Music Nashville/WEA) rank at Nos. 6, 7 and 10 on the streaming-, airplay- and sales-based Hot Country Songs chart, respectively. “Ends,” released Aug. 19, debuts with 10.4 million U.S. streams and 6,000 downloads sold in the week ending Aug. 25, according to Luminate. “Rock” reached No. 2 upon its entrance in June, while “Fall” hit No. 6 in July, after debuting in February. (“Fall” also jumps 22-16 on the Country Airplay chart, up 16% to 7.9 million in audience.)

Morgan Wallen has notched six weeks with at least three concurrent Hot Country Songs top 10s, paced by a record six simultaneous top 10s on the Jan. 23, 2021, tally, when his Dangerous: The Double Album entered Billboard‘s charts. The other acts with three top 10s each in a single week: Florida Georgia Line (for six such weeks); Johnny Cash (three); Taylor Swift (two); and Luke Combs, Buck Owens, Faron Young and, now, Zimmerman (one each), the lattermost, again, the first artist to achieve the feat with his first three entries on the chart.

“My life went from, like, nothing to 100, just so fast,” Illinois native Zimmerman, who boasts 1.5 million followers on TikTok, recently told Billboard. “I started reading books. [Fellow country artist] Drew Baldridge has been like a mentor for me. He was like, ‘Dude, get the book All You Need to Know About the Music Business [by Donald Passman].’ I learned how labels worked, all kinds of stuff. I still have a lot to learn, but I dove in to learn what’s going on.”

Key to Zimmerman’s success, Austin Shawn concurrently rises to No. 1 on Billboard‘s Country Producers chart, becoming the top country producer in the U.S. for the first time. He solely produced all three of Zimmerman’s Hot Country Songs hits.

Before working with Zimmerman, Shawn produced two Hot Country Songs-charting entries, both by Chase Matthew: “County Line” reached No. 29 in July 2021 and “We Had It Good” climbed to No. 44 this February.

All three of Zimmerman’s tracks simultaneously rank in the Billboard Hot 100‘s top 40, at Nos. 29, 32 and 38, as Shawn surges 9-2 on Hot 100 Producers, in addition to his Country Producers coronation.

“One of the biggest things I’ve learned is to make music that defines exactly who I am, and who the artist is, on a personal level,” says Shawn (whose co-managers are Simon Tikhman and Chief Zaruk and day-to-day manager is Tim Crane). “My goal as a producer and songwriter is to help create an artist’s unique sonic identity. I’m constantly chasing something that’s fresh and timeless.”

Shawn dethrones Joey Moi atop Country Producers, halting the latter’s record 81-week domination (dating to the chart’s June 2019 inception) – including the last 32 weeks consecutively.

On the Country Songwriters chart, Zach Bryan tallies an 11th week at No. 1, thanks to his two entries on Hot Country Songs that he recorded, and wrote solo: “Something in the Orange” (No. 12) and “Oklahoma Smoke Show” (No. 36). Bryan first led Country Songwriters on the chart dated May 7; since Country Songwriters began in June 2019, only five talents have spent more time at No. 1: Ashley Gorley (31 weeks), Blanco Brown (18), Luke Combs (15), Morgan Wallen (14) and Taylor Swift (13).

The weekly Country Songwriters and Country Producers charts are based on total points accrued by a songwriter and producer, respectively, for each attributed song that appears on the Hot Country Songs chart. As with Billboard‘s yearly recaps, multiple writers or producers split points for each song equally (and the dividing of points will lead to occasional ties on rankings).

The full Country Songwriters and Country Producers charts, in addition to the full genre rankings, can be found on Billboard.com.

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BLACKPINK Achieves This First-Time Feat on Streaming Songs Chart With ‘Pink Venom’

For the first time, BLACKPINK boasts a top 10 on its own on Billboard‘s Streaming Songs chart.

The group’s new single, “Pink Venom,” launches at No. 9 on the list dated Sept. 3. In the Aug. 19-25 tracking week, the track, released Aug. 19, earned 14.3 million official U.S. streams, according to Luminate.

BLACKPINK now sports a pair of Streaming Songs top 10s. “Ice Cream,” with co-lead Selena Gomez, debuted and peaked at No. 8 in September 2020.

The South Korean quartet – Jennie, Jisoo, Lisa and Rosé – has now logged seven Streaming Songs appearances, starting with “Ddu-Du Ddu-Du” in June 2018.

“Pink Venom” also begins at No. 3 on the Digital Song Sales chart with 11,00 downloads sold. It drew 359,000 in radio airplay audience in its first week.

Concurrently, “Pink Venom” starts at No. 22 on the multi-metric Billboard Hot 100, marking BLACKPINK’s second-highest charting hit, after “Ice Cream” (No. 13 debut and peak). The act banks its fourth top 40 Hot 100 entry, a total rounded out by two No. 33-reaching songs in 2020: “How You Like That” and its Lady Gaga team-up “Sour Candy.”

As previously reported, “Venom” soars in atop both the Billboard Global 200 and Billboard Global Excl. U.S. charts with the biggest worldwide streaming week in over a year. It drew 212.1 million streams (and sold 36,000 downloads) worldwide in the Aug. 19-25 tracking week, marking the second-biggest weekly global streaming sum since the charts began in September 2020, trailing only the 289.5 million that BTS‘ “Butter” drew in its first week, as reflected on the June 5, 2021, Global 200.