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Post by OnWithTheCountdown on Nov 26, 2019 10:49:36 GMT -5
For the AT10 Christmas shows, 2005 had an extra week; 11/13/2004 was a regular show, while the corresponding week in 2005 (11/12) was a Christmas show, which is different from the five Christmas shows that aired in 2004. (Two of the five are the top 60 Christmas hits of all-time, aired on the weekends of 12/11 and 12/18, 2004.)
Since 12/25/2004 fell on a Saturday, they did the year-end countdown that weekend, and 1/1/2005 ended up being a regular show. (I think that's the only year in Casey's tenure that New Year's Day was a regular show.)
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Post by albe on Nov 26, 2019 17:45:37 GMT -5
FWIW >>>>>>>>>>>>>
Not sure which version of the 11-20-2004 AT10 "Christmas Around The World" will be aired by Premiere this weekend but when the show was updated and aired November 19-20, 2011 there were three optional extras all with Casey's Intros:
Hour #1: “THE GIFT” – Jim Brickman w/Colin Raye & Susan Ashton Hour #2: “CHRISTMAS THROUGH YOUR EYES” – Gloria Estefan Hour #3: “THE FIRST NOEL” – Karla Bonoff
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Post by matt on Nov 27, 2019 11:10:03 GMT -5
Prediction for next week's show:
1st Guess - 12/10/77 2nd Guess - 12/5/70
Hoping for 12/10/77, but it seems like they love to play early 70's shows in December more often than not. Premiere has played three of the final four Casey-hosted countdowns of 1977 since 2016, and this one would be the fourth of those. If it's 1970, it would be the fourth '70 show of this year.
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Post by at40petebattistini on Nov 27, 2019 12:17:47 GMT -5
at40petebattistini said this over two months ago, "One other tidbit -- there is only one 1971 program left for us in 2019", I think that ended up being 10/30/71! I thought of that...but did he mean one 1971 period, or one 1971 'A' show? If so, there should be another '71 show. There's only been one since the beginning of July, and that happened in mid-August. That seems like a long time to go between shows, but maybe Pete really meant one more 1971, A or B... My apologies, matt ... I was looking at "A" shows. We'll get December 4, 1971 next weekend. Also, you'll need to look to another 70s year (other than 1971) for Premiere's 2019-ending special.
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Post by jmack19 on Nov 28, 2019 9:14:21 GMT -5
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Post by Hervard on Nov 28, 2019 9:33:14 GMT -5
Since 12/25/2004 fell on a Saturday, they did the year-end countdown that weekend, and 1/1/2005 ended up being a regular show. (I think that's the only year in Casey's tenure that New Year's Day was a regular show.) Back in 1995, during the Casey's Countdown era, something similar happened. Even though Radio & Records skipped two weeks, the year-ender was only a one-part show. The following week (which was actually a week after New Year's weekend), there was a regular weekly show and it featured a frozen chart. Initially, I thought that was kind of foolish, but I believe that the fact that the Hot AC show had started not even two months prior, they decided to do one-part shows for both formats to make things easier. The following year, the show was back to skipping two weeks (though the Hot AC show featured a Top 35 of the 1990s so far - not sure if the AC version did the same thing, did a Top 60 or 70 or did the one-part thing again). In any case, they were back to doing two-week year-enders in 1996 and starting in 2002, the AC show went back to being a one-part show (since Part 1 was often pre-empted by AC stations' Christmas sweeps) while the HAC version continued on as a Top 60 until the show's end.
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Post by OnWithTheCountdown on Nov 28, 2019 11:08:29 GMT -5
Since 12/25/2004 fell on a Saturday, they did the year-end countdown that weekend, and 1/1/2005 ended up being a regular show. (I think that's the only year in Casey's tenure that New Year's Day was a regular show.) Back in 1995, during the Casey's Countdown era, something similar happened. Even though Radio & Records skipped two weeks, the year-ender was only a one-part show. The following week (which was actually a week after New Year's weekend), there was a regular weekly show and it featured a frozen chart. Initially, I thought that was kind of foolish, but I believe that the fact that the Hot AC show had started not even two months prior, they decided to do one-part shows for both formats to make things easier. The following year, the show was back to skipping two weeks (though the Hot AC show featured a Top 35 of the 1990s so far - not sure if the AC version did the same thing, did a Top 60 or 70 or did the one-part thing again). In any case, they were back to doing two-week year-enders in 1996 and starting in 2002, the AC show went back to being a one-part show (since Part 1 was often pre-empted by AC stations' Christmas sweeps) while the HAC version continued on as a Top 60 until the show's end. Also, the AC charts moved really slow, too... To slightly expand on your post, 12/24/1994 was a regular show for both the AC and then-new Hot AC countdowns. 12/31/1994 was the year-end. Unsure what AC did in 1995 for the 12/23 show, as I only have the year-end (show date 12/30), and the last weekly AC show I have for 1995 is 7/1. So there's a pretty big gap there. But I have the Hot AC shows from 12/23/1995 (top 35 of the 1990s) and 12/30/1995 (top 35 of 1995). Both AC and Hot AC did the top 60 for the year-ends from 1996 to 2001 (except for 1999, they did the top 30 of the year followed by the top 30 of the decade). AT20 AC did Christmas shows on 12/8/2001, 12/15/2001, 12/21/2002, and 12/20/2003 (the latter two replacing what was the first week of the year-end shows).
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Post by seminolefan on Nov 28, 2019 13:09:18 GMT -5
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Post by jmack19 on Nov 28, 2019 22:00:56 GMT -5
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Post by billyonaire on Nov 29, 2019 0:56:47 GMT -5
This week's presentations (Weekend of December 7-8, 2019): December 4, 1971 with mono2stereo conversion by Ken Martin. American Top 10: The Top 60 Christmas Songs - Part 1 - December 17, 2005 (HOLIDAY) - 3 hours. Cue sheets: December 4, 1971: charismusicgroup.com/Cue%20Sheets/12-04-71.pdf
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Post by tzmac on Nov 29, 2019 9:53:08 GMT -5
This week's presentations (Weekend of December 7-8, 2019): December 4, 1971 with mono2stereo conversion by Ken Martin. American Top 10: The Top 60 Christmas Songs - Part 1 - December 17, 2005 (HOLIDAY) - 3 hours. Cue sheets: December 4, 1971: charismusicgroup.com/Cue%20Sheets/12-04-71.pdfDid Ken Martin do his mono2stereo conversion on the 12.04.71 show when it was previously presented on 12.07.2013?
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Post by jmack19 on Nov 29, 2019 12:45:09 GMT -5
I'll go with:
"Winchester Cathedral" "Day After Day" "Let's Stay Together"
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Post by kenmartin on Nov 29, 2019 13:00:35 GMT -5
This week's presentations (Weekend of December 7-8, 2019): December 4, 1971 with mono2stereo conversion by Ken Martin. American Top 10: The Top 60 Christmas Songs - Part 1 - December 17, 2005 (HOLIDAY) - 3 hours. Cue sheets: December 4, 1971: charismusicgroup.com/Cue%20Sheets/12-04-71.pdfDid Ken Martin do his mono2stereo conversion on the 12.04.71 show when it was previously presented on 12.07.2013? Yes. This is a mono2stereo rerun.
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Post by pb on Nov 29, 2019 13:49:49 GMT -5
Fun set of possible optional extras that won't happen:
"I'd Like To Teach The World To Sing" "Once You Understand" "George Jackson"
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Post by mkarns on Nov 29, 2019 14:09:07 GMT -5
Fun set of possible optional extras that won't happen: "I'd Like To Teach The World To Sing" "Once You Understand" "George Jackson" The second is probably "fun" in the sense that a reality show of three minutes of torture is fun. Speaking of optional extras, those who missed getting to hear Yes' "Your Move" when it was an optional in a B show several weeks ago now can hear it in the countdown. Just don't tune in late.
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