Talk:Ultratop 50 (Flemish)

Confusing "Some records" section moved here
I have taken it upon myself to remove an entire section from the article. It is entirely unsourced for one thing, and is formatted in a non-optimal way. The last straw for me, though, was the contradiction and obvious errors in the list of songs in the second paragraph reaching #1 for ten weeks (following those in the first graph at 11 and 12 weeks), while the fourth paragraph claims a song was at #1 for the shortest time, 11 weeks. No, 3 weeks. No, wait...

Anyway, here it is, preserved for posterity and possible resurrection. Anybody with time and resources to do the research should feel free to copy it back to the article (w/ corrections) and add the ref citations. ==Some records== Fixkes with "Kvraagetaan" peaked for 16 weeks at #1. Las Ketchup with "The Ketchup Song" and Crazy Frog with "Axel F" peaked #1 for 12 weeks. "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You" by Bryan Adams and "This Is the Life" by Amy Macdonald peaked #1 for 11 weeks.

"Barbie Girl" by Aqua, "Wild Dances" by Ruslana, "Con te partirò" by Andrea Bocelli and 'Last Thing on My Mind" by Steps reached #1 for 10 weeks.

"Rood" (English: "Red") by Marco Borsato was (until now) in the charts for 41 weeks. "Love Generation" by Bob Sinclar was in the charts for 39 weeks. "You're Beautiful" by James Blunt was in the charts for 38 weeks. "Sadness" by Stash, "La Camisa Negra" by Juanes and "Obsession" by Aventura follow with 33 weeks in the charts.

"Een brief voor Kerstmis" (English: "A Letter For Christmas") by De Bewoners & Walter Grootaers is, so far, the #1 single with the shortest chart time, 11 weeks. The single stayed at #1 for 3 weeks.

Pink's "Dear Mr. President" was the first and so far only digital download single to have reached #1.

&mdash; JohnFromPinckney (talk) 04:42, 1 June 2010 (UTC)