Tag Archives: charts

Eminem’s Recovery Goes Platinum, Stays Healthy At #1

Drake’s Thank Me Later holds onto Billboard #2, while ‘Eclipse’ soundtrack jumps up to #3 with movie’s release. By Gil Kaufman Eminem Photo: Kevin Mazur/ WireImage He may not have crossed the platinum plateau in his first week on shelves, but Eminem cruised past it in the second week, as Recovery moved another 313,000 copies to hold on to the #1 spot on next week’s Billboard 200 albums chart. Despite a 58 percent sales dip, Slim Shady bested all comers with his latest, as his two-week total went up over 1 million, according to figures provided by Nielsen SoundScan. That was more than enough to keep beating Drake ‘s Thank Me Later, which sold 105,000 copies for a three-week total just shy of 709,000 and the #2 slot on the chart. And after “The Twilight Saga: Eclipse” smashed box-office records last week, the soundtrack moves up seven spots to #3 (65,000, up 69 percent). The only newcomers in the top 10 are which lands at #4 in its first week (58,000) and Warped Tour rappers 3OH!3 , whose Streets of Gold comes in at #7 (41,000). The rest of the top 10 is made of familiar faces: the NOW 34 collection (#5, 45,000), Justin Bieber ‘s My World 2.0 (#6, 41,000), Jack Johnson ‘s To the Sea (#8, 35,000), Miley Cyrus ‘ Can’t Be Tamed (dropping six spots to #9 as sales tailed off by 68 percent to 32,000) and Lady Antebellum ‘s Need You Now (#10, 30,000). Further down the line, disco revivalists Scissor Sisters debut at #18 with Night Work (18,000), and the score for “Eclipse” is close behind at #20 (17,000). The march down the charts continues for Christina Aguilera ‘s Bionic , which falls another 10 spots in its fourth week on the charts, dropping to #32 on sales of 12,000 for a one-month total of just under 182,000. Indie faves Wolf Parade land at #48 with Expo 86 (8,000), and punk survivor Alejandro Escovedo , with a little help from Bruce Springsteen , debuts at #101 with Street Songs of Love (5,000). Over on the iTunes charts, Eminem holds onto #1 on the album tally, with the “Eclipse” soundtrack surging up six spots to #2, followed by Drake, 3OH!3, The-Dream, Johnson, Scissor Sisters, the “Eclipse” score, Hillsong Live ‘s A Beautiful Exchange and the Roots’ How I Got Over . The recent releases by Cyrus, Ozzy Osbourne , Sarah McLachlan and B.o.B have all been knocked out of the top 10. Though iTunes doesn’t provide sales data, suffice it to say that Katy Perry ‘s “California Gurls” is hanging strong on the singles list, knocking Slim Shady out of the #1 spot he held last week with his Rihanna duet, “Love the Way You Lie.” Taio Cruz has to settle for moving up six spots to #3 with “Dynamite,” followed by B.o.B’s “Airplanes, Travie McCoy ‘s “Billionaire,” Mike Posner ‘s “Cooler Than Me” and Jason DeRulo ‘s “Ridin’ Solo.” The singles chart is filled out by Eminem again at #8 with “Not Afraid,” Usher at #9 with “OMG” and Drake’s “Find Your Love” at #10. Look for chart debuts next week from Big Boi, Kelis , Enrique Iglesias and Kylie Minogue . Related Videos MTV News’ Chart Watch ‘Drake: Better Than Good Enough’ Related Photos The Evolution Of: Eminem Drake’s Style: From A To Drizzy Related Artists Eminem Drake

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Eminem’s Recovery Goes Platinum, Stays Healthy At #1

Justin Bieber Is Not Going To North Korea, Rep Confirms

Bieber-related Internet hoaxes and attacks abound in recent weeks. By James Montgomery Justin Bieber Photo: George Pimentel/ WireImage At this point, Justin Bieber ‘s camp is sort of used to the Internet hoaxes — he’s had syphilis, gotten pregnant and even died a few times, if you can believe what you read — but over the past week, there’s been one hoax that just won’t go away: His (supposed) concert stop in North Korea. It all started with a supposed contest organized by a site called Faxo.com that allowed fans to vote on which country he should visit on an upcoming leg of his My World Tour, with absolutely no restrictions. That proved advantageous for the jokesters over at the notorious 4chan message board, who encouraged folks to vote for North Korea — the communist nation where citizens are denied Internet access and the media is strictly controlled by the government. Within days, North Korea climbed the charts, and by Wednesday, when the contest ended, it had leapfrogged Israel to claim the top spot. Of course, the Internet went insane once again, and some media outlets even reported that the contest was real. But while the idea of Bieber performing for Kim Jong-il is certainly hilarious, it’s not actually true. Sure, North Korea may have won the Faxo contest, but the contest was in no way sanctioned by Bieber or anyone in his camp, according to a statement e-mailed on Wednesday (July 7) to MTV News. “It was a spoof site,” a spokesperson for Bieber wrote. “This is not a legitimate contest.” So, sadly, the Justin Bieber North Korea concert will not come to fruition anytime soon, something the Internet attributed to something other than the contest’s illegitimacy. Early Wednesday morning, more pranksters had made the most-searched term on Google Trends “Justin Bieber Hates Korea.” Meanwhile, Bieber fans were subjected to yet another Internet attack. According to the BBC , hackers wrote code into the comments sections of Bieber videos on YouTube, flashing unsuspecting fans with news of the singer’s death and/or redirecting them to adult websites. Google issued a statement saying the company “took swift action to fix a cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability” on the video site. None of this seems to have slowed Bieber’s own Internet activity, however, as the avid Twitterer continues to rally his followers around his latest singles and even deigns to respond to a rumor or two. Back in June, for instance, he wrote, “One … I’m not dead. I had to check on this one … but it turns out I’m alive.” Related Videos Frame By Frame: Sean Kingston & Justin Bieber’s ‘Eenie Meenie’ MTV News Extended Play: Justin Bieber Related Photos Justin Bieber And His Many Lady Friends Related Artists Justin Bieber

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Justin Bieber Is Not Going To North Korea, Rep Confirms

Oil/Water samples from Gulf…VERY TOXIC

This comes from the YouTube video: Oil and water samples were taken from both the Shores of Grand Isle and from 20 miles out. The preliminary analysis was done at an academic analytical chemistry laboratory. Looking for the likely pollutants from the deep water Horizon Oil spill. It was focused on the detection of benzene and propylene glycol. Benzene and other highly toxic contaminants were very low however the concentration of propylene glycol was between 360 and 440 parts per million. Just 25 parts per million is know to kill most fish and propylene glycol is just one of many ingredients found in Corexit. In short, the Gulf is being poisoned by BP's usage of the dispersants even after the EPA asked them to stop back in May. We are willing to provide ANY respected/known laboratory these samples or provide them with more. This is very serious to all people and marine life in and around the Gulf. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gq65E7rmO_k This comes from a blog: A group of daring citizen journalists collected water samples from Grand Isle, Louisiana, a few days ago and sent them to an Academic Chemistry lab for analysis. The findings were startling: The concentrations of Propylene Glycol were off the charts: 360 and 440 parts per million, concentrations indicating a much higher level of Corexit (of which Propylene Glycol is only one part). Toxicity tests have shown that a concentration of Corexit at 25 parts per million kills most fish and only 2.6 parts per million has the same effect in the presence of dispersed oil. The level of the water samples collected at Grand Isle is roughly 150 times the toxic level for fish. Overall, this water analysis suggests high Corexit concentrations in surface water near New Orleans and suggests a public health Hazard that should be taken extremely seriously along the entire Gulf Coast. Simply put: This water is poisonous! http://activerain.com/blogsview/1731102/this-water-is-poisonous- added by: samantha420

Dolly Parton to Critics: Leave Miley Cyrus Alone!

Country music legend is admittedly biased, but she has a message for critics of Miley Cyrus: Give the girl a break! In an interview with Fox News, Parton is asked about the rebukes of Miley’s new image these days and says: “I’ve known her since she was a baby.” She then takes the same stance on digs directed at Cyrus as Miley herself takes on pants : “I hate it when people criticize her,” Dolly says. Parton continues to praise the girl her “honorary goddaughter,” adding: “She is a great singer; she has a great voice. She’s a great little entertainer and she can speak to you like she is 50 years old.” We guess that’s true. At least if 50 year-olds are known for spouting Hallmard card-like cliches about love and life . In closing, Dolly seems to at least acknowledge that Miley’s new CD has been a bust on the charts , but the singing legend takes a grander, positive view of her young pal: “She’ll land in the right place. I really know she has everything it takes. She is just trying to find her way and she will.” Those words sound eerily similar to what some people said about Britney Spears and Lindsay Lohan back in the day. Let’s hope Miley’s path ends in a different location from that of those two trainwrecks.

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Dolly Parton to Critics: Leave Miley Cyrus Alone!

How Did Eminem’s Recovery Have Such A Big Debut?

Rapper’s more mature style appears to have appealed to wide audience, experts say. By Gil Kaufman Eminem’s Recovery Photo: Interscope At this point, we’re used to Eminem debuting at #1 . After all, he’s done it six times in a row, including two records that sold more than 1 million copies in their first week on the charts. But following last year’s comeback album, Relapse, which sold nearly 2 million copies despite Em admitting that it was not his finest hour , it wasn’t a lock that Recovery would be greeted with the same instant success as the Detroit rapper’s previous work. There were the fans who were turned off by the weird accents he adopted on Relapse, the dark, gory vibe of the campaign promoting that album and the overall grim nature of the music, not to mention the lack of a breakout, signature hit. And while Relapse did very solid business its first week out, with sales topping 608,000, even some experts were surprised when Recovery snagged the year’s highest debut to date , with sales of 741,000 after initial projections had it in the 500,00-600,000 range. In a music industry starved for hits, Recovery became only the third album since 2008 to debut with more than 700,000 copies sold. So how did Eminem do it again? Chalk it up to a killer first single, some clever promotional gimmicks, more visibility for the rapper and a mature attitude that may have broadened his fanbase after a dozen years in the game. “I think for him, [ Relapse ] didn’t connect with his fans the way he wanted it to, so he wasn’t happy with that,” Eminem’s manager, Paul Rosenberg, told The Detroit News on Tuesday. ” Recovery offers more of an emotional connection for listeners. … I think Em made the kind of album that people were waiting for with Recovery. ” From a jokey viral campaign featuring the ShamWow guy appearances on “The Soup,” “The Late Show With David Letterman,” the BET Awards and “Late Night With Jimmy Fallon” and a one-page profile in the New York Times Sunday magazine , in which he came out in favor of gay marriage, Eminem has done more press and appearances in the past month for the new album than he did for almost the entire Relapse cycle. The heightened exposure from the typically reclusive rapper has clearly helped keep his name in the news and might have boosted sales. “We sold a ton more of it than the last time,” said Carl Mello, director of purchasing for the 28-store Newbury Comics chain of record stores. “Which is always a surprise in these days, with trends being the way they are.” Mello chalked the big first week up to more crossover airplay and the album’s first single, “Not Afraid,” which he thinks brought more people into the store to buy the album. “On the last one, he would have a single and it would go top five and then disappear. On this one, they actually played it on the radio and there was definitely some anticipation for it.” Mello said the album did much better than he expected in the Newbury stores and had the kind of crossover appeal the rapper hasn’t shown since his heyday in the early 2000s. The album didn’t appear to be affected by leaking two weeks early and, as the News noted, it was the first of Em’s records not to announce itself with a pop-culture-skewering first single like “My Name Is,” “The Real Slim Shady,” “Just Lose It” and “We Made You.” As he typically does, Em offered cryptic details at first about the disc, tweeting in mid-April that he’d tossed the planned Relapse 2 album to work on a new disc. “Not Afraid” hit radio two weeks later and debuted at #1, and within weeks, the album’s cover leaked out , generating more buzz. The grimier “Won’t Back Down” leaked out earlier this month and was used in commercials for the shooter video game “Call of Duty: Black Ops,” and the second official single, the Rihanna-assisted ballad “Love the Way You Lie,” has already hit #1 on the iTunes singles chart, with a video on the way. By going with the pensive, midtempo “Not Afraid” — a serious-minded track in which Marshall Mathers, now 37, ponders his recent problems and tries to connect with fans who have also lived through hard times — as the first single, Entertainment Weekly correspondent Simon Vozick-Levinson said the rapper was signaling he’d turned a corner. While the CD was expected to be big, at a time when even some major career stars are struggling to follow up hit albums (Christina Aguilera, John Mayer, Miley Cyrus), the more robust promotional push and the crucial first single are major factors. “When he put out the last album, people were just getting used to him being back after four or five years away, and he didn’t do many interviews or appearances,” Vozick-Levinson said. “But now he’s out front, doing late-night talk shows and reminding people that he has a new album. He’s put the work in, and it’s paid off. “But he also picked the right first single,” he added. “Last time he came back with singles that didn’t connect with people, and there was no clear idea of why he was back and what he was doing with his career. ‘Not Afraid’ was a smart choice, because it had the message that he’s older and wiser, that he’s grown up with his audience and he’s more mature than in the past.” And while he’s not sure the rest of the album lives up to that standard, Vozick-Levinson said the song clearly connected with Em’s audience, and the not-so-hidden double meaning of the album title was perfect for these tenuous times. “He sent a message that he’s connected with the audience in the way it is packaged too. Recovery has a double meaning about his own sobriety and his own recovery and also about the economic climate. People want to believe in the idea of things getting better and making a fresh start.” Eschewing the traditional violent, sophomoric between-song skits, tapping major stars like Pink and Rihanna and opening up his stable of producers after years of relying on mentor Dr. Dre has also helped Eminem connect to a new generation of hip-hop fans who are used to hearing MCs like Drake and B.o.B chant and sing their choruses in between bars. Though he can’t singlehandedly save the music biz, Vozick-Levinson said what’s good for Eminem is ultimately good for an industry struggling to turn around a nearly decade-long slide in album sales. “You can’t transfer his success to other artists, because he’s always been so unique,” he said. “But it’s good news for the industry that something like this can still happen and blockbuster sales and career artists still exist.” Were you surprised by Eminem’s blockbuster debut? Let us know in the comments! Related Photos Eminem And Jay-Z Perform On The ‘Late Show With David Letterman’ Related Artists Eminem

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How Did Eminem’s Recovery Have Such A Big Debut?

Female school Teacher Sentenced For Being Sexual Predator

[IMG] http://i46.tinypic.com/2iuytxd.jpg [/IMG] A judge in Tampa, Florida, on Monday sentenced Stephanie Ragusa, a former middle school math teacher, to 10 years in prison for having sex with two underage students in 2008. “As parents, we place our trust in teachers to provide a safe environment in which our children can learn,” Hillsborough County Circuit Judge Chet Tharpe said in handing down the sentence. “You violated that trust in the worst imaginable way.” Tharpe also sentenced Ragusa to 15 years of sex offender probation following her prison time. Ragusa, 31, pleaded guilty in April to three counts of lewd and lascivious battery in a March 2008 case involving a 14-year-old boy, and two counts of having unlawful sex with a minor in an April 2008 case involving a 16-year-old student. Ragusa has been in jail since she was arrested in 2008 leaving one of the victims' homes.Monday's sentencing included testimony from the victims' families, who depicted Ragusa as a sexual predator who caused severe emotional distress for their “Miss Ragusa maliciously and intently preyed on my son and the other boys,” said the mother of the 14-year-old victim. “She had access to their charts as far as their emotional behaviors. … I feel that she was very conniving … in picking these boys out and preying on them and using that to manipulate them and seduce them.” Prosecutor Rita Peters also… for full story click here http://www.waneenterprises.com/news/502 Did she get off light ?? added by: Wizzane

Lauryn Hill Is ‘Starting To Get Excited’ About Performing Again

‘I think it’s just time,’ Hill tells NPR about her possible return. By Mawuse Ziegbe Lauryn Hill Photo: Dimitrios Kambouris/ Getty Images Lauryn Hill made a huge impact on the music scene when she broke out from the Fugees and went solo with her acclaimed 1998 debut The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill. Already a bona fide star with the New Jersey hip-hop trio, the husky-voiced rapper and singer launched into the pop culture stratosphere with Miseducation, which soared to the top of the charts. The album went on to score a record-setting five Grammy Awards , and Hill became one of the biggest artists in the world. Then, she basically vanished. She released MTV Unplugged No. 2.0 in 2002 , and the music world waited for Fugees reunion that never fully materialized. Aside from popping up on an occasional festival date or worrying fans with an eccentric performance , Hill was largely gone from the spotlight. The singer recently opened up to NPR about why she stopped releasing music, blaming both personal issues and her feelings about the music industry. “There were things about myself, personal-growth things, that I had to go through in order to feel like it was worth it,” Hill told NPR News.

Justin Bieber? Kanye West? Who Will Be The Next To Sell A Million The First Week?

Our experts also cite Taylor Swift, a posthumous Michael Jackson release, Lil Wayne again — or maybe no one. By Shaheem Reid Justin Bieber Photo: Tim Mosenfelder/ Getty Images While Drake’s Thank Me Later didn’t sell a million copies in the first week, the debut moved more than 460,000 units and landed at #1 on the Billboard albums chart . That’s an amazing feat for any artist, let alone a rookie MC. Meanwhile, Hits Double Daily is projecting a monster launch for Eminem’s Recovery, which was released Monday, selling between 590,000 and 615,000 copies by this time next week. Drake and Em have proven that, despite an overall decline in record sales, artists who are able to engage fans and produce high-quality music will be rewarded on the charts. However, a huge question remains: Will anyone be able to knock Lil Wayne from his spot as the last artist to sell 1 million copies the first week of release? Weezy reached that milestone back in 2008 , when Tha Carter III came out. And while Kanye West’s Graduation came within an eyelash of hitting the mark several weeks later and others, such as Susan Boyle, have put up monster first-week numbers, no one besides Wayne has cracked a milli. XXL magazine’s Bonsu Thompson knows just the man up for the task: None other than Kanye West, whose song “Power,” from his upcoming LP, has already garnered critical acclaim. “In order to sell a million albums, your momentum has to be working on all cylinders,” Thompson said via e-mail. “Kanye’s range is built for that. Musically, he has the ability to simultaneously have an infectious record in the streets and a monstrous record on radio and television loop. Add in his penchant for controversial quotes (he’s got a ton to address) and bringing the fashion and arts world wherever he goes, and it’s a home run (Barry Bonds).” “It’s easy to say no one will ever hit that mark again, but there will always be someone,” said Jon Caramanica, a music critic for The New York Times. “Right now, Justin Bieber has the best chance and also Taylor Swift with her next album. Rappers are in danger.” Vibe Editor in Chief Jermaine Hall said the next person to sell a million copies the first week will either be the man with the biggest-selling solo LP of all time or the last guy to reach a million sales the first week. “It’s tough to say, based on music’s economical climate,” Hall said. “Certainly, if Sony is able to get something out on Michael [Jackson] by the fourth quarter with a solid single, that would be a contender. Outside of that, Wayne’s Carter IV also has to be considered. If he has a lead record anything close to the impact of ‘Lollipop,’ he will be knocking on that door.” Other industry insiders are way more pessimistic. “I don’t know if it’s possible for an artist to sell a million records again in a week,” XXL Editor in Chief Vanessa Satten said. “Seems to me, sales are not an issue anymore, and no one wants to say that. We still stress over sales when we’ve had the Drake and Eminem albums for weeks. Sales are not the issue anymore, so I don’t know if that million in a week is feasible anymore.” “I think Wayne is probably the last one to do that,” ThisIs50.com’s Jeremy Bettis agreed. “I don’t think people should pay too close attention to the numbers. I don’t think the numbers should take away from the actual project. I think that’s the problem with hip-hop. Everyone wants to know: ‘What’s his first-week numbers?’ If it’s not what they think it should be, then they have a judgment about the album, which I think takes away from the project and the actual creativity of the music.” “That 1 million that Wayne did was so out of this world, I don’t know that’s gonna happen again,” radio personality Miss Info said. “I don’t know that’s a fair bar to set. … I don’t think the emphasis at this point is even on sales. It’s about: ‘How many stages are you gonna pack? How many endorsement deals are you gonna have? How many companies are you gonna launch?’ ” “I think, even for record labels, it’s gonna be hard to see who sells a million,” said Angela Yee who host the Shade 45 radio show “The Morning After.” “I don’t think record labels rely on that. That’s why they are doing 360 deals. They’re getting money off your touring, how many ringtones you sell, T-shirts, your merchandising. I don’t know if [selling a million copies in your first week] is gonna happen anytime soon. That’s a phenomenon.” The only real answer? Wait and see. Who do you think will be the next artist to sell 1 million copies of their album in the first week of release? Share your predictions in the comments. Don’t miss the “Drake: Better Than Good Enough” documentary , airing tonight at 10 p.m. ET/PT on MTV! Related Artists Justin Bieber Lil Wayne Drake

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Justin Bieber? Kanye West? Who Will Be The Next To Sell A Million The First Week?

Drake’s Thank Me Later Nears Half A Mil In Billboard Debut

Katy Perry, Drake and Eminem dominate the iTunes charts. By Gil Kaufman Drake Photo: Tim Mosenfelder/ Getty Images Though he failed to join mentor Lil Wayne in the one milli club in his first week on the charts, there’s no shame in Drake ‘s game, as the Canadian rapper’s debut studio album, Thank Me Later will easily hit #1 on the Billboard 200 with sales of nearly 447,000. That total was good enough to earn Drizzy the third-best chart debut of 2010 (behind Lady Antebellum and Sade). He bested the week’s other newcomers, veteran rock act Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers , whose blues-inflected Mojo was far behind at #2 with 125,000, and fellow Canadian Sarah McLachlan , who returns to the charts with Laws of Illusion, hitting #3 with 94,000 in sales. The fourth slot is taken up by Now 34, which sold 88,000, meaning Drake sold more than the rest of the top five combined, according to figures provided by Nielsen SoundScan. There were no other debuts in the top 10, which undergoes a bit of shuffling: Jack Johnson ‘s To the Sea (#5, 68,000), the “Twilight Saga: Eclipse” soundtrack (#6, 55,000, down 63 percent), Justin Bieber ‘s My World 2.0 (#7, 47,000), Lady Antebellum ‘s Need You Now (#8, 40,000), Christina Aguilera ‘s Bionic (#9, 40,000, down 64 percent in week two) and Glee: The Music — Journey to Regionals (#10, 39,000), which plummeted by 75 percent from last week’s #1 showing. Further down the line, tattooed Jersey rockers the Gaslight Anthem notch their best-ever chart debut with American Slang, which lit it up at #16 on sales of 27,000. The first new disc in 20 years from reunited new-wave spud rockers Devo , Something for Everybody, debuts at #30 (14,000). The solo debut from Gym Class Heroes frontman Travie McCoy takes a hard tumble in week two, as Lazarus sinks 42 slots to #67 as sales dropped off by 57 percent to 7,000. The new album from Swedish pop singer Robyn , Body Talk Pt. 1, slides into the top 100 at #97 (5,000). In case you doubted whether he still had it, Eminem rockets to the #2 position on this week’s iTunes album charts after only one day on shelves. Slim Shady’s Recovery nearly bested Drake’s Thank Me Later , which managed to hold onto the #1 slot, according to charts provided by iTunes, which does not release sales figures. The one-two finish by the rappers pushes last week’s iTunes #1 album, Glee: The Music, Journey to Regionals , down to #4, as another newcomer, McLachlan’s Laws of Illusion , slipped in at #3. Johnson’s To the Sea slipped one to #5, while Petty’s Mojo debuted at #6, and the rankings were filled out by the “Twilight” soundtrack, B.o.B. ‘s B.o.B. Presents: The Adventures of Bobby Ray, Glee: The Music, Vol. 3: Showstoppers and Gaslight Anthem’s Slang , which debuted at #10. On the iTunes singles chart, things were mostly unchanged, as Katy Perry held on at #1 with “California Gurls,” followed by the same suspects as last week: B.o.B. with “Airplanes,” Usher with “OMG,” Travie McCoy with “Billionaire” and Eminem’s “Not Afraid.” Climbing up to #6 was Mike Posner ‘s “Not Afraid,” followed by Ke$ha with “Your Love Is My Drug,” 3OH!3’s “My First Kiss,” the Black Eyed Peas ‘ “Rock That Body” and Drake’s “Find Your Love” at #10. Look for things to get blown out next week, as Eminem’s Recovery vies for the top with Miley Cyrus ‘ Can’t Be Tamed . Also in stores are new albums from Ozzy Osbourne , the Roots , Sia , Macy Gray , Cyndi Lauper , the Chemical Brothers and Keith Sweat . Related Videos MTV News Extended Play: Drake Preview: Drake’s MTV Special ‘Better Than Good Enough’ Related Photos Drake Takes Manhattan! Drake’s Style: From A To Drizzy Related Artists Drake

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Drake’s Thank Me Later Nears Half A Mil In Billboard Debut

Drake Easily Notches #1 Debut With Thank Me Later

Early estimates show the album had the third-best first week sales of the year. By Gil Kaufman Drake Photo: Getty Images The Game may have been off by a bit when he predicted Drake would sell 650,000 in his first week, but according to preliminary figures provided by Nielsen SoundScan, Thank Me Later will debut very strongly on the Billboard charts. The Canadian rapper and Lil Wayne prot