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By 2010, no new 2010s music has been played unless it is left over from 2009 (for example, "Tik Tok" by Kesha was a number-one song in 2010 but was released in 2009 [2]), making it a 2000s-only station. By December 18, 2009, Mediabase ceased reporting the channel's playlist. The station gets its name from Y2K, the nickname for the year 2000.
33 & 1/3 This was the first dance music countdown show on BPM, which ran from 2001 to 2006. The program aired on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays and counted down the top 33 & 1/3 songs (actually 34; 33 1 ⁄ 3 is the RPM on a dance 12" single, hence the show's name). In between the tracks, five new singles that were being tested as feedback for ...
'80s on 8 (also known as The Big '80s on 8) is a commercial-free, satellite radio station on Sirius XM Radio channel 8 and also Dish Network 6008. As a result of the Sirius/XM merger on November 12, 2008, the channel was merged with the Big '80s channel on Sirius 8, and took its current name. The channel plays hit music from the 1980s.
Sirius XM Hits 1 is a Top 40 radio station on Sirius XM Radio channel 2 and Dish Network channels 6002 and 099-02 (099-02 is only for Hopper users). Like most Sirius XM stations, it plays no commercials. The channel was formerly known as US-1 until 2004. The name is a take-off of VH1, whose name was originally an abbreviation of "Video Hits 1".
With the merger of many Sirius XM channels on November 12, 2008, there were some changes to 60s on 6. The channel's playlist, which had once exceeded 3,000 songs was sliced to emphasize Top 10 hits more, with most of the lower-charting tracks as well as many of the crossover and novelty hits of the era removed and abandoned from the rotation.
Former XM logo as The '90s prior to Sirius/XM merger on November 12, 2008. The '90s on 9 (or just The '90s) is the name of Sirius XM Radio's 1990s commercial-free music channel, heard on Sirius XM channel 9 and Dish Network channel 6009. The channel focuses mostly on hit-driven R&B, hip-hop, rock, pop, and dance [1] tracks from the 1990s.
During Academy Award season, director Bob Moke would regularly introduce and play all of the Academy Award nominated songs for a particular year between 1936 and 1949. From November 16 through December 25, 2009 , '40 s on 4 would be preempted for Holiday Traditions , a seasonal program devoted to popular Christmas music from the 1940s to the 1960s.
On both the Sirius XM channel and the syndicated show, one song is proclaimed as "The Coolest Song in the World This Week". At the end of 2006, listeners were invited to choose among the 52 songs to pick the year's best. The 2006 results are: The Woggles: "It's Not About What I Want" The Charms: "So Romantic"