Entertainment
Saja Boys’ ‘Soda Pop’ Tops Latest Top Gabb Music Songs Chart
A month after swarming the Top Gabb Music Songs chart by dominating the entire top five of the July 2025 tally, music from KPop Demon Hunters is even more inescapable on the August 2025 ranking, occupying the list’s top seven.
Billboard has partnered with Gabb Wireless, a phone company for kids and teens, to present a monthly chart tracking on-demand streams via its Gabb Music platform. Gabb Music offers a vast catalog of songs, all of which are selected by the Gabb team to include only kid- and teen-appropriate content. Gabb Music streams are not currently factored into any other Billboard charts.
Of note: the August 2025 chart marks the first published ranking since Gabb Music was made available via app stores, meaning users can now download the streaming app to devices other than Gabb Wireless’ phones and tablets.
While KPop Demon Hunters music rules Top Gabb Music Songs for the second month in a row, it’s not the same song at No. 1. Saja Boys stans rejoice, though: after the boyband’s “Your Idol” topped the July ranking, it’s “Soda Pop” that leads the August tally, while “Your Idol” falls to No. 3.
HUNTR/X, however, holds the lion’s share of the top five, occupying the remainder of the region, led by “How It’s Done” at No. 2. “Golden,” HUNTR/X’s now-five-week No. 1 on the weekly Billboard Hot 100 since first ascending to the top of the list in mid-August, follows at No. 4 (Top Gabb Music Songs leader “Soda Pop” ranks at No. 5 on the latest Hot 100).
A song featured on the Netflix film’s soundtrack is also the top debut of the week: TWICE’s “Takedown” bows at No. 11, six spots below HUNTR/X’s own version of the tune (No. 5).
KPop Demon Hunters fever hasn’t just swept Top Gabb Music Songs and the Hot 100 (the latter features four songs from the film in its top 10), the movie’s soundtrack also topped the Billboard 200 for the first time on the Sept. 20-dated list.
Much like in July, the top non-KPop Demon Hunters track on Top Gabb Music Songs is Alex Warren’s “Ordinary,” which drops two positions to No. 8.
And Forrest Frank’s got the best debut for a song not on the KPop Demon Hunters soundtrack, starting at No. 13 with “God’s Got My Back,” which was released on July 25 and debuted at No. 5 on the Hot Christian Songs chart in August.
Music from Ravyn Lenae, KATSEYE and MeloMance also debuts on the August survey. See the full top 25 below.
It’s free Billboard charts month! Through Sept. 30, subscribers to Billboard’s Chart Beat newsletter, emailed each Friday, can unlock access to Billboard’s weekly and historical charts, artist chart histories and all Chart Beat stories simply by visiting the newly redesigned Billboard.com through any story link in the newsletter. Not a Chart Beat subscriber? Sign up for free here.
Top Gabb Music Songs
- “Soda Pop,” Saja Boys (+20)
- “How It’s Done,” HUNTR/X (+23)
- “Your Idol,” Saja Boys (-2)
- “Golden,” HUNTR/X (-2)
- “Takedown,” HUNTR/X (=)
- “What It Sounds Like,” HUNTR/X (-1)
- “Free,” EJAE & Andrew Choi (-3)
- “Ordinary,” Alex Warren (-2)
- “Strategy,” TWICE (-2)
- “Your Way’s Better,” Forrest Frank (-2)
- “Takedown,” TWICE (debut)
- “What I Want,” Morgan Wallen feat. Tate McRae (-3)
- God’s Got My Back,” Forrest Frank (debut)
- “Love Me Not,” Ravyn Lenae (debut)
- “Beautiful Things,” Benson Boone (-4)
- “Sorry I’m Here for Someone Else,” Benson Boone (-6)
- “Up!,” Forrest Frank & Connor Price (-4)
- “Gabriela,” KATSEYE (debut)
- “Dusty Bibles,” Josiah Queen (-2)
- “Dream Come True,” Freya Skye & Malachi Barton (=)
- “Love, Maybe,” MeloMance (debut)
- “Love Somebody,” Morgan Wallen (-10)
- “Slow It Down,” Benson Boone (-5)
- “Touch,” KATSEYE (debut)
- “The Place to Be,” Cast of Zombies 4 (-2)
DROPS: “Stargazing,” Myles Smith; “Die With a Smile,” Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars; “God’s Plan,” Drake; “Stressed Out,” Twenty One Pilots; “Ain’t No Love in Oklahoma,” Luke Combs; “Mr. Electric Blue,” Benson Boone
Entertainment
How the Story in HARDY’s ‘McArthur’ Parallels Life at Some Country Radio Stations
“When you pass on, what you gonna pass down?”
That question haunts the final moments of “McArthur,” a star-studded HARDY collab with Tim McGraw, Eric Church and Morgan Wallen while addressing bloodlines, business and legacy. It’s at No. 24 on Billboard’s Country Airplay chart dated March 21, in its sixth week on the list.
To sell — or not sell — the family farm has emerged as a popular theme in country music during an era when the culture is struggling with heightened economic inequality and uncertainty. Justin Moore tackled the topic in “This is My Dirt,” Cody Johnson dug in on it with “Cheap Dirt,” and Jordan Davis and Luke Bryan brushed up against it with “Buy Dirt.” The story plays well in large and major markets, but it particularly resonates in smaller markets, which are generally closer to America’s farmland.
“Those are our core artists right there: HARDY, Cody, Justin Moore,” says WQMX Akron, Ohio, PD/morning co-host Sarah Kay. “I mean, we’re a very traditional station in our sound. We’re very eclectic, but that’s what works, our traditional kind of ‘dirt’-y country, for lack of a better word.”
The family farms at the center of those songs aren’t the only businesses that live out a David-vs.-Goliath scenario in the heartland. While mammoth chains have gobbled up a good portion of the country’s radio stations, some holdouts — such as WQMX; WTGE Baton Rouge, La.; and WJVL Janesville-Beloit, Wis. — still operate with an old-school mentality. They’re a part of more compact broadcasting chains that operate from just one city or condensed region, maintaining a small-town product with heavy attention to live, local air talent; in-market personal appearances; and comparatively unconventional playlists.
Staff from those outlets, and hundreds of others, arrive in Nashville for the annual Country Radio Seminar March 18-20 at a time of contradictory developments.
Cumulus, one of the industry’s largest conglomerates, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy March 5 for the second time in less than a decade, citing a difficult advertising climate and changes in listening habits influenced by the growth of streaming services. Several executives and analysts — most notably producer-label executive-Apple investor Jimmy Iovine — have predicted obsolescence for those same streaming companies. The development of radio stations fueled by artificial intelligence meanwhile raises the specter of further employment cuts in broadcasting.
Those uncertainties don’t seem to bother the small-town programmers, whose tactile connection to their audience provides a more stable environment for their stations.
“There’s still a whole lot of fantastic radio stations like mine that are locally owned and programmed, and we don’t pay any attention to that kind of stuff,” says WTGE PD/midday host Jimmy Brooks. “The iHeart stations, they kick off every hour and they talk about how they’re guaranteed human, but in reality, it’s kind of making a fool out of the listener, because if people listen to any of those stations, they know that those people are not downtown in a studio in their city. They’re cranking out these tracks to 15-20 different stations a day.”
The reality for those monster chains is quite different than the experience of the small-town stations. The largest radio companies maintain smaller staffs at their individual outlets than in earlier eras, with employees holding multiple jobs across several stations in different formats. They often rely heavily on nationally syndicated shows and make many programming decisions at a regional or national level.
In contrast, the smaller stations tend to feature larger playlists with greater variety and more local personalities who generally make more appearances at public events. Even their advertising tends to lean on local businesses, which only emphasizes for the listeners that the station is servicing their community in a meaningful way. The PDs oversee just one station, and they tend to rack up larger time-spent-listening among their audience, which allows more flexibility in breaking the informal rules that guide most stations.
“When’s the last time you heard of an owner or a GM telling you to talk more?” WJVL PD/midday host Justin Brown asks rhetorically. “Ben and Scott Thompson, they tell us, ‘Personality — personality radio.’”
The Thompsons, appropriately, have a deep background in family businesses and bloodlines, tying them neatly to the family-farm scenarios playing in “McArthur” or “This Is My Dirt” on their stations. Scott Thompson made his mark originally as an attorney specializing in trusts and inheritance, assisting the transfer of farms across generations. He established WJVL’s parent company, Big Radio, when he purchased his first stations in 1996, the same year that the Telecommunications Act passed, loosening ownership rules and setting up the rapid expansion of the larger radio chains. He and son Ben own 10 stations between them in a 50-mile stretch of Southern Wisconsin and Northern Illinois.
WTGE, owned by Guaranty Media; and WQMX, owned by Rubber City; are both part of four-station radio firms in a single market. They contrast with the larger chains. At those companies — where chunks of the on-air lineup are often syndicated, and the local personalities might air on three different signals — visitors are sometimes surprised by how few employees inhabit the offices. The smaller companies take pride in their in-person vibe.
“When anyone comes to 929 Government Street in downtown Baton Rouge, you’re going to see people in the hall,” Brooks says. “You’re going to see people sitting behind a console in a control room, pressing buttons and doing things at any point of the day.”
When those small- and medium-market broadcasters arrive at CRS, the contrast between their day-to-day existence and that of their peers in larger markets will be on stark display. Many of the issues that fray the nerves of big-city programmers are mild or non-existent by comparison. And one of the biggest differences is their ability to take ownership of their product. At the larger companies, corporate and regional managers often make granular decisions for the chain that may not account for idiosyncrasies in individual communities. In the smaller markets, where upper management is closer to the actual customer, they have additional incentive to respond quickly to changes on the ground, since they can witness firsthand the effect their decisions have on the community.
“I have a giant microphone in my face, and I get to make a difference,” Kay says. “My whole station does, and all my staff, and we get to raise an insane amount of money for local charities. I never thought that would be my job, ever.”
Like their big-market compadres, the small-market staffers still put in long hours — “It’s not like they don’t overwork me,” Kay quips — and when they attend CRS, their interests align as well with many of the topics that resonate at those larger stations. Agenda items that have them intrigued include the skill-focused Workshop Alley, a diversity panel and artificial intelligence discussions. They have little or no fear that they might lose their jobs to AI, but still want to find ways to use it more efficiently as a tool. And, of course, the networking matters.
“There’s all kinds of artist hangs that I’ve committed to,” Brooks notes. “A lot of labels have gotten creative this year in terms of just putting 50 radio people in a room with an artist and booze.”
The partying at CRS provides a welcome respite from their day-to-day existence, though when programmers get back to their markets, the hard work will continue. The titles that that cropped up about holding onto the family farm parallel efforts by broadcasters to leave a legacy for the next generation of radio professionals to carry forward. The workers in those smaller companies are convinced that they’re in a setting where they can accomplish that.
“I believe in the future here,” says Janesville’s Brown. “I think radio will survive, but it’s going to be the small and medium markets like ours that are really, really going to be successful.”
Entertainment
RZA Calls It a ‘Blessing’ That Rihanna & A$AP Rocky Named Their Firstborn Son After Him
Imagine hearing that Rihanna and A$AP Rocky named their baby after you. If you’re Wu-Tang Clan‘s RZA, you don’t have to.
RZA has shared with Capital Xtra radio host DJ Semtex his feelings on Rihanna and Rocky’s choice of name for their first child, who was born in 2022. (The couple is also parents to son Riot Rose and daughter Rocki.)
“It’s a great honor, right,” RZA said during his Friday (March 13) chat with the DJ before praising Rihanna and Rocky’s contributions to music, fashion and culture. “To know that there’s some inspiration from the Wu that entered their hearts and have them name their child after the Abbot, that’s a blessing, bro.”
The hip-hop legend went on to share well wishes for his young namesake and his future.
“I always say that the RZA is not just a name, it’s also a title,” RZA continued. “I’m rooting for him.”
The naming honor is not the only one RZA has received recently. In February, Wu-Tang Clan was nominated for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame for the first time — nearly a decade after reaching eligibility. RZA has previously advocated for Wu-Tang to be inducted into the Rock Hall.
“I think we should [get in], and I do care. It may take some time to get in there,” he told Rolling Stone in a 2019 interview. “I think it’s good for us and I think it’s good for rock n’ roll, because hip-hop is a form of music that grabs from every genre, but definitely grabs from rock n’ roll.”
Though it indeed took some time, this year could finally be the one for Wu-Tang and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. If the group is inducted this year, it would join only 15 other rap acts with the honor.
Watch RZA talk about Rihanna and A$AP Rocky naming their son after him below:
Entertainment
Dua Lipa Calls Out Epstein Files Discourse for ‘Doing Such a Disservice to All the Victims’
Dua Lipa is calling out what she sees as a lack of consideration for the victims named in the Epstein files, many of whom were underage.
On the latest episode of the pop star’s Service 95 book club podcast posted Sunday (March 15), Lipa brought up the subject of late billionaire and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein while speaking to her guest, author Roxane Gay. “The way that the crimes have been reported, and the language that’s been used, has been doing such a disservice to all the victims,” Lipa began.
“I keep thinking about all the stories that talk about the underage girls and the sex parties, rather than writing about the victims that were children who were trafficked,” she continued. “It’s putting everything under some kind of veil to protect — I don’t know who, [maybe] the reader — or trying to mask what is happening.”
Epstein died by suicide while awaiting trial in prison in 2019, having been arrested on charges of running a sex-trafficking operation involving minors — to which he pleaded not guilty. He had previously spent 13 months in prison for soliciting prostitution from a minor.
To Lipa’s point, much of the conversation surrounding the Jan. 30 release of millions of files relating to Epstein’s crimes has been focused on the famous names who were associated with him and his associate Ghislaine Maxwell — who is currently serving 20 years behind bars for her part in the operation — and not on the victims themselves. President Donald Trump, former president Bill Clinton, Elon Musk, Bill Gates and Prince Andrew were all named in the documents, though all have denied any wrongdoing in connection to Epstein.
In the music world, Casey Wasserman recently sold his talent agency — which represented artists such as Chappell Roan, Orville Peck and Gigi Perez, all of whom have left the company in light of the news — after his 2003 emails with Maxwell were made public in the Epstein files. In a statement addressing the controversy, the music mogul said, “I deeply regret my correspondence with Ghislaine Maxwell, which took place over two decades ago, long before her horrific crimes came to light. I never had a personal or business relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.”
Lipa has never shied away from speaking about difficult political issues. For years, she’s spoken out about Palestinian people and the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.
She last dropped new music in 2024, reaching No. 2 on the Billboard 200 with Radical Optimism.
Watch Lipa discuss the Epstein files on Service 95 below.
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