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・ Pepsi
・ Pepsi & Shirlie
・ Pepsi (disambiguation)
・ Pepsi 200
・ Pepsi 420
・ Pepsi Arena
・ Pepsi Beats of the Beautiful Game
・ Pepsi Bethel
・ Pepsi Billion Dollar Sweepstakes
・ Pepsi Blue
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・ Pepsi Center / Elitch Gardens (RTD)
・ Pepsi Challenge
・ Pepsi Championship
Pepsi Chart
・ Pepsi Cola Lake
・ Pepsi Football Academy
・ Pepsi Generation
・ Pepsi Globe
・ Pepsi Grand Slam
・ Pepsi Invaders
・ Pepsi Kaffe
・ Pepsi Little People's Golf Championships
・ Pepsi Live
・ Pepsi Max
・ Pepsi Max (North America)
・ Pepsi Max 400
・ Pepsi Music Festival
・ Pepsi Next


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Pepsi Chart : ウィキペディア英語版
Pepsi Chart

The Pepsi Chart (previously known as "The Pepsi Network Chart Show") was a networked Sunday afternoon Top 40 countdown on UK radio that started life on 1 August 1993 with Neil 'Doctor' Fox hosting the show live from the Capital Radio studios in London. The Pepsi Chart show carried an emphasis in fun and was the UK's first personality-led chart show: the presenter was live and exciting, big-prize competitions were held, and the Top 10 was official - i.e. it was entirely sales-based resulting in a shared song order with the BBC's Radio 1 Official Chart Show and also theoretically played out at the same time.
The Pepsi Chart was produced for CRCA by Unique Productions who along with the (then) programme director of Capital Radio Richard Park, and Fox, came up with the new show concept. The show was broadcast on between 80 and 110 local commercial radio stations across the UK via SMS satellite. Locums for the 'Doctor' included Capital's own Steve Penk and Key 103 Manchester's Darren Proctor. Occasional guest presenters filled in, such as Richard Blackwood of MTV UK & Ireland fame.
==Compilation==
Different compilation methods of the chart show were employed in its time. Initially, the sales: airplay ratio for its 40-11 positions were 30:70, but later became 50:50. Sales data was provided by Chart Information Network (CIN - now known as The Official UK Charts Company) and airplay data from Music Control. The final chart show on the Sunday before the new year would air with a chart of the year, counting down the Top 40 most popular singles of that particular year. An exception took place in December 1999, the last countdown of the millennium, when the Top 40 of all time was compiled and aired instead. Elton John's Candle in the Wind came out as top.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Pepsi Chart」の詳細全文を読む



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