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‘We Are The World: 25 For Haiti’: Strong Chart Numbers But Little Radio Play

However, a radio hit was presumably not a paramount goal for the song: raising money and awareness was. By Jayson Rodriguez, with additional reporting by Gil Kaufman Wyclef Jean, Kanye West and Jennifer Hudson perform at the “We Are The World 25 Years for Haiti” Photo: Kevin Mazur/ WireImage When the original version of “We Are the World” was released 25 years ago, the all-star benefit song was a nearly inescapable presence — on radio, on MTV and on T-shirts. Thanks to the groundwork laid by England’s Band-Aid fundraiser “Do They Know It’s Christmas?,” audiences were primed for a new kind of fundraiser that not only helped famine victims in Africa, but also provided a keepsake featuring some of the planet’s biggest musical acts singing a heartfelt anthem co-written by the then-biggest pop star on the planet, Michael Jackson. Fast forward a quarter century to last week, when the video for the “We Are the World: 25 for Haiti” debuted to a huge audience at the opening ceremonies of the Winter Olympics. However, the song struggled to gain a foothold at radio in a media environment that is worlds away from the one that greeted the original in 1985. While “We Are the World: 25 for Haiti” landed at #2 on Billboard ‘s Hot 100 chart last week (powered primarily by digital sales), lagging behind only newcomer Ke$ha’s breakout hit “Tik Tok,” more than a week after its release, the single’s airplay numbers aren’t nearly as strong. According to Media Base, a company that tracks radio data, only five stations have added the track into their rotation in the past seven days, including Los Angeles’ KIIS-FM, one of the largest Top 40 outlets in the country. (By contrast, Rihanna’s latest, “Rude Boy,” was added by 48 different radio stations in the same period.) “Personally, I came into work on Saturday (February 13) and purchased the track on iTunes and played it all weekend,” KIIS music director Julie Platt told MTV News in an e-mail. “KIIS-FM added it into regular rotation on Tuesday (February 16).” Platt, however, noted that the record isn’t being pushed like a traditional new release. “It doesn’t have a record label distributing it or helping get the word to programmers like a normal single release,” she explained, noting that she didn’t receive a scaled-down radio edit of the eight-minute anthem until days after it was released. In total, the song was played across the country 987 times in its first full week since it premiered, according to Media Base. Again, by comparison, “TiK ToK,” the most-played song in the country, received over 11,000 spins during the same time span: One doesn’t need a math degree to see that’s more than 10 times the spins. Radio spins, physical sales and digital downloads together to account for the metrics used to determine a song’s success when it comes to the Hot 100 chart. While “We Are the World: 25 for Haiti” has fared better on the charts so far than the original version of the song (which debuted at #21 in 1985 before gradually rising to #1), the comparison isn’t a fair one, given that radio charts moved much more slowly 25 years ago: Songs often debuted low and gradually rose higher, almost the complete opposite of charting behavior today. “This [song] is not about airplay, which it won’t get a lot of. It’s about creating a viral hit on YouTube and Vevo, and maybe getting some traction at a few top 40 stations,” Keith Caulfield, the Senior Chart Manager/Anaylst for Billboard magazine, explained to MTV News. Caulfied said because of the splintered nature of radio today and the abundance of niche markets, an ambitious song that seeks out to reach a large audience wouldn’t fare as well today as it did in the past. The new song, for instance, was played on a Top 40 station in Kansas City, a “Rhymthic” station in Denver and an Alternative station in the Washington, DC, according to Media Base. Those spins, however, were extremely limited, with only 32 stations playing the song more than 10 times last week. In New York, for example, “We Are the World 25: For Haiti” was played only a total of six times across various stations. Hot 107.9 in Indiana played it the most, spinning the song 44 times. SiriusXM, the subscription radio service, played the song just once within the last week. Those numbers hardly qualify the “We Are the World” update as a radio hit. However, that was presumably not a major goal of the song’s organizers. While reps for the song’s organizers had not responded to MTV News’ requests for comment at press time, the purpose of the new song was to raise money, Sirius radio show Shade 45’s senior producer Rob “Reef” Tewlow emphasized. And by that scale, he said, the new song is a success, radio spins or not. “It’s for a great cause, you want to see it raise a lot of money, raise awareness, and help a lot of people, because that’s ultimately the goal,” Tewlow told MTV News. “It doesn’t have the same momentous impact as the original, nothing like that had ever been done before. And you had some of the biggest artists, Michael Jackson, first and foremost, as part of the track. Is this one something that everyone is talking about? Maybe not. But people are making contributions and downloading the song.” Learn more about what you can do to help with earthquake-relief efforts in Haiti , and for more information, see Think MTV . Visit HopeForHaitiNow.org or call (877) 99-HAITI to make a donation now. Related Videos Behind The Scenes Of ‘We Are The World’ Related Photos ‘We Are The World 25 For Haiti’ Recording Session Related Artists Michael Jackson

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‘We Are The World: 25 For Haiti’: Strong Chart Numbers But Little Radio Play

‘We Are The World’ Remake: Was The Lineup Too Contemporary?

Original featured classic voices, update has many less-recognizable stars. By Gil Kaufman, with additional reporting by Jayson Rodriguez Celine Dion, Joe Jonas, Kevin Jonas and Justin Bieber perform on We Are The World Photo: Kevin Mazur/ Wire Image The organizers of the “We Are the World: 25 For Haiti” pulled off a Herculean feat, rallying and recording the track and video for the earthquake-relief effort in record time. Like the sessions for the 1985 original all-star famine relief tune, producer Quincy Jones and songwriter Lionel Richie were able to get a galaxy of contemporary and classic voices to drop what they were doing to lend their time and vocals to a higher cause. But whereas the original features vocals from such still-classic megastars as Stevie Wonder, Tina Turner, Kenny Rogers, Diana Ross, Michael Jackson, Paul Simon, Billy Joel, Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan and Ray Charles, Jones and Richie said they purposely shuffled the deck on the reboot to focus on contemporary acts . That explains why the track opens with newly minted star Justin Bieber, followed by Jennifer Hudson and Pussycat Doll Nicole Scherzinger, and quickly segues into solos from Sugarland singer Jennifer Nettles, Jamie Foxx, Maroon 5’s Adam Levine, Fergie and Nick Jonas, among many others. While there are major, undeniable stars on the new version — Mary J Blige, Lil Wayne, Kanye West and Pink among them — some are wondering if the song’s lineup was too contemporary? “I looked at the video the other day and I will admit I had several ‘Who the hell is that?’ moments,” said Christopher Morris, contributing music writer for Variety magazine of the 8-minute clip for the song shot by Academy Award-winning director Paul Haggis. “Some like Kanye West leap out at you, but it took several go-rounds for me to identify Nicole Scherzinger from the Pussycat Dolls. In terms of legend power, it’s on the shorter side.” As the new video unfolds, such modern standard bearers as Mary J. Blige, Janet Jackson, Toni Braxton and Pink are thrown into a mix that also includes old-schoolers Tony Bennett and Barbra Streisand, alongside the 1985 vocals from Michael Jackson, who co-wrote the song with Richie, and bits from gospel singers BeBe Winans and Mary Mary. The update’s concentration on contemporary stars, some of whom have voices that are not as instantly recognizable, might have contributed to the song’s relatively low profile at radio (although it did debut at #2 on the Billboard Hot 100 ). “Is it likely that an R&B station will put it in regular rotation? Probably not. As a curiosity, yes. But this is not about airplay, which it won’t get a lot of, it’s about creating a viral hit on YouTube and Vevo, and maybe getting some traction at a few top 40 stations,” said Keith Caulfield, Senior Chart Manager/Analyst for Billboard magazine. At a time when terrestrial radio playlists are more narrowly focused than ever before, such a broad, multi-genre song faces an uphill climb to gain major spins on stations that might cotton to stars like Jennifer Hudson and Wayne, but risk alienating their listeners with the likes of Streisand, Josh Groban, Cyrus and Jonas. “I don’t know if, given the way things are right now, you could have gotten a similar lineup,” Morris said of the high wattage, cross-genre original. “Music is much more niche-oriented right now and there aren’t a huge number of artists who’ve cut across every listening demo. Even someone like Taylor Swift doesn’t command an African-American audience. There’s no Michael Jackson in there, except in the old footage, who cuts through every sector of the international listening audience.” Despite those challenges, the remake’s #2 Billboard debut easily bested the original, which bowed at #21 in March 1985, then rose to #1 three weeks later, eventually earning four-times platinum certification within a month of release (during that era, singles traditionally moved up the charts much more gradually than they do today). The remake entered the Digital Songs chart at #1, selling more than 267,000 copies in less than three days. Even with that firepower, though, it was unable to unseat Ke$ha’s “Tik Tok” from its nine-week run at the top of the single’s charts. One music journalist at a major music magazine, who requested anonymity, told MTV News that even with a fresh sound courtesy of co-producer RedOne and a vaunted hip-hop section with fresh lyrics from LL Cool J, the new song falls short in a few places. “The general consensus on this remake is that, while it’s for a great cause, it is absolutely horrible on a musical level, except for Jennifer Hudson and Pink,” the writer said. One artist who was rumored to be participating but who ultimately was not involved, Jay-Z, told MTV News he simply thought the original was “untouchable” and was not something that should be re-imagined. SiriusXM’s Rob “Reef” Tewlow, an executive for the station’s hip-hop channel Shade 45, agreed with Hov’s take. Tewlow also acknowledged the rap portion of the song was commendable. However, Tewlow suggested the rapper’s contributions weren’t an integral part of the number. “It’s just hard to combine MCs into that song and into that type of thing,” he explained.” It’s like trying to fit a baseball into a golfball or something. Noble intentions, and it’s good that it’s represented in some type of form or fashion, but it’s not a make-or-break thing for the song.” Though Bieber’s fame is brand new, Caulfield understood why Jones and Richie frontloaded his vocals into the song. “Everyone is asking the same question about Bieber, but the creative forces are saying, ‘Bieber is the hottest thing with teens, he’s trending huge on Twitter every day, selling tons of digital tracks and he’ll resonate with little girls going gonzo for his songs. If you think about it that way, it makes perfect sense when you’re trying to craft something that will get lots of attention from as many people as possible.” A spokesperson for “We Are the World: for 25 Haiti” could not be reached for comment at press time. With their concept of tapping the talent of today, Morris also gave Jones and Richie credit for doing the best they could with the artists at their disposal in a media environment that is very different than it was a quarter century ago. “This is a charity single after all, so you want to try and pull in the masses, so they did what they had to, which is to enlist people who sold a lot of records,” he said. “It’s not a miscalculation on their part, but it’s just a very different landscape. The way music is marketed and consumed has changed, the delivery system is fragmented.” Getting the kind of mass audience hit as the 1985 song — which has raised more than $60 million to date — today is elusive, Morris said. “It’s impossible to reach the ubiquity the first one did. It’s a replication of an event that was an unprecedented, huge deal at the time and there’s no way that mining something like that again is going to top it.” Caulfield credited organizers for getting the song and video out quickly and capitalizing on the buzz of the event, but said he couldn’t predict how the song would end up doing commercially. “Is it going to approach the same impact?” he said. “I don’t know. But I think sales now are from the immediacy of it and the fact that you could see the video and then buy it two seconds later.” Learn more about what you can do to help with earthquake-relief efforts in Haiti , and for more information, see Think MTV . Visit HopeForHaitiNow.org or call (877) 99-HAITI to make a donation now. Related Videos Behind The Scenes Of ‘We Are The World’ Related Photos ‘We Are The World 25 For Haiti’ Recording Session Related Artists Justin Bieber Jennifer Hudson Fergie Mary J. Blige Kanye West Jamie Foxx Lil Wayne

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‘We Are The World’ Remake: Was The Lineup Too Contemporary?

NPR: Will legalizing Pot solve California’s budget woes?

Listen to the story at link – 4:14 By at least one estimate, California's largest cash crop is not milk, cheese, or oranges, it's marijuana. Some advocates say legalizing pot — and taxing it — could be a way out of the state's financial woes, and they recently secured enough signatures for a ballot initiative to do just that. But how much revenue a legal pot industry generates would depend on how prices are set. Transcript: Heres NPRs David Kestenbaum with our Planet Money team. DAVID KESTENBAUM: Right now, the price of marijuana varies a lot. The government actually studies these things. Researchers go into holding cells or if people have been arrested and asked questions like what do you pay for marijuana? According to a report published in 2004, pot in some parts of the country can cost two or three times as much as in another. Ms. ROSALIE LICCARDO PACULA (Acting Director, RAND Health; Co-Director, RAND Drug Policy Research Center): If youre close to the Canadian border and can get, you know, Canadian bud thats higher quality than ditch weed from Mexico. KESTENBAUM: Rosalie Liccardo Pacula is co-director of RANDs Drug Policy Research Center. She says some of the differences in price are just differences in quality. Ms. PACULA: Its just like wine. Theres really, really good wine and theres mediocre wine. KESTENBAUM: According to that report, hydroponically grown weed in New York can go for $1,000 an ounce. The marijuana market is a real challenge for economists to understand. Its not a black market anymore, and its not quite an open market either. Ms. PACULA: Yeah, we call it a gray market. (Soundbite of laughter) KESTENBAUM: Over a dozen states now allow marijuana for medical purposes. But federal laws still ban it. And strange things can happen when a commodity crosses that border from illegal to legal. For instance, when states began passing medical marijuana laws, Pacula assumed the price for pot would drop because now if youre growing the stuff, you didnt have to worry so much about being busted, you wouldnt need lawyers, guns, cars with secret compartments for smuggling. But this question has been studied and it looks like the opposite happened. The price of marijuana actually went up. Pacula thinks the big reason is that when pot became legal for medical purposes, more people started using it. Increased demand, more people wanting something, tends to push prices up. Kevin Johnson is the general manager of a medical marijuana dispensary in San Francisco called, Grassroots. The place is decorated like a turn-of-the-century saloon. And it does seem like more people are using marijuana these days to treat all kinds of things like insomnia. Mr. KEVIN JOHNSON (General Manager, Grassroots): Insomnia, I recommend something heavier. Any of the purple varietals tend to work very well for that, something like Purple Urkle or Granddaddy Purple or a Purple Kush. Those tend to be much dopier and sleepier. KESTENBAUM: Now, in a normal economic market, when demand goes up, suppliers -in this case pot growers – would just grow more Purple Kush, and prices would come back down. But Johnson says the marijuana market is still quirky. Before running the marijuana club, he used to run a bar, which he says was completely different. Mr. JOHNSON: When you, you know, make an order for your suppliers, for you booze, you know, its going to be delivered on time and you can get whatever Budweiser or Jameson that you need for that week. Whereas in this industry, youd never know when people are going to harvest, sometimes theyll just disappear. You dont know if they just gave up growing or they went on vacation. KESTENBAUM: If marijuana were completely legal, big corporations might start growing pot super efficiently. And people think the price could come down by at least half. After all, pot is just a plant not that different from growing tomatoes. And price is important because the cheaper pot is, the more people will use it. And whenever you think about more people smoking pot, that could mean more potential revenue from the tax. California has estimated that the tax could bring in $1.4 billion in revenue a year, though some economists think that number is high. A few weeks ago, supporters have legalization and taxation in California turned in enough signatures to put the question on the state ballot in November. http://media.2news.tv/images/0802027_marijuana.jpg added by: samantha420

Black Eyed Peas Settlement a Real Perez Dispenser

Did they meet him halfway? We may never know. The slur-happy Perez Hilton has settled his civil suit against the Black Eyed Peas’ punch-happy tour manager, Liborio Molina. The terms…

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Black Eyed Peas Settlement a Real Perez Dispenser

Swizz Beatz Wants To Expand His Brand To Include Art, Films, Fashion

‘Some people don’t know 70 percent of the work I’ve done,’ he says during Hip-Hop and R&B Week. By Shaheem Reid Swizz Beatz Photo: Full Surface Swizz Beatz said you’re going to learn more about him soon.

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Swizz Beatz Wants To Expand His Brand To Include Art, Films, Fashion

Death Cab’s Chris Walla Addresses Postal Service/ Owl City Comparisons

In a tweet about Men at Work plagiarism case, Walla writes, ‘Related: Owl City should really consider buying Ben [Gibbard] a pony.’ By James Montgomery Owl City Photo: Universal Republic Last year, Chris Walla raised eyebrows when he called brooding “Twilight” bloodsucker Edward Cullen “an a–hole.” Then, at rehearsals for the mtvU Woodie Awards , he made sure to point out the “high beefcake quotient” of the “New Moon” film. And how can we forget the international incident he created when the master tapes for his Field Manual album ran afoul of the Department of Homeland Security? Basically, the Death Cab for Cutie guitarist/producer is unafraid to speak his mind or rankle the third-largest Cabinet department in the U.S., which makes him a rare breed in these buttoned-up, sound-bite-ified times

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Death Cab’s Chris Walla Addresses Postal Service/ Owl City Comparisons

Kelly Clarkson Slams Taylor Swift Label CEO For His ‘American Idol’ Comment

Singer blogs open letter to Big Machine Records CEO Scott Borchetta, who said ‘American Idol’ is a competition over ‘seeing who can sing the highest note.’ By James Dinh Kelly Clarkson On Thursday (February 4), “American Idol” season-one winner Kelly Clarkson, who has never been afraid to voice her opinion , took to her blog to fire back at Big Machine Records CEO Scott Borchetta’s recent defense of Taylor Swift’s Grammy performance .

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Kelly Clarkson Slams Taylor Swift Label CEO For His ‘American Idol’ Comment

Twista Says ‘Everything Counts’ When It Comes To Helping Haiti

‘I wanna lend a helping hand anyway that I can,’ Chicago MC says of organizing a benefit concert in his hometown. By Shaheem Reid Twista Photo: Jason LaVeris/ FilmMagic Twista wants to do all he can to help Haiti — the Chicago rapper is hoping to put together his own benefit show and dropped a freestyle about the tragedy last week to raise awareness

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Twista Says ‘Everything Counts’ When It Comes To Helping Haiti

American Idol: Magic Kingdom Come

“Orlaaannnnndo! Concrete jungle where dreams die and wither in the hot palmetto sun and everyone’s miserable…” We were in Florida last night, proud member of our nation, and gosh did we see a lot of miserable people. One got arrested! Yeah

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American Idol: Magic Kingdom Come

Wyclef Jean Delivers YouTube Address over his Charity’s Questionable Financial Past

Earlier this evening, a video was posted to YouTube of Wyclef Jean addressing questions that have arisen regarding his charity, Yele Haiti, their financial history, and their ability to impact disaster relief efforts right now. John Cook noted Yele’s “atrocious financial past” became an issue when documents begging questions about it emerged over the last week

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Wyclef Jean Delivers YouTube Address over his Charity’s Questionable Financial Past