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Words near each other
・ Your Hand In Mine
・ Your Hands on My Body
・ Your Health Idaho
・ Your Health Now
・ Your Heart Belongs to Me
・ Your Heart Belongs to Me (disambiguation)
・ Your Heart Belongs to Me (Hind song)
・ Your Heart Belongs to Me (novel)
・ Your Heart Breaks
・ Your Heart is a Glorious Machine
・ Your Heart Turned Left (And I Was on the Right)
・ Your Heart's in Good Hands
・ Your Heart's Not in It
・ Your Heiress Diary
・ Your Highness
Your Hit Parade
・ Your Hit Parade (Time-Life Music)
・ Your Home
・ Your Home in Their Hands
・ Your Home Library
・ Your Horoscope for Today
・ Your Host
・ Your Hundred Best Tunes
・ Your Ice Cream's Dirty
・ Your Imagination
・ Your Independent Grocer
・ Your Itinerary
・ Your Jeweler's Showcase
・ Your Job in Germany
・ Your Joy Is My Low


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Your Hit Parade : ウィキペディア英語版
Your Hit Parade

''Your Hit Parade'' is an American radio and television music program that was broadcast from 1935 to 1955 on radio, and seen from 1950 to 1959 on television. It was sponsored by American Tobacco's Lucky Strike cigarettes. During this 24-year run, the show had 19 orchestra leaders and 52 singers or groups. Many listeners and viewers casually referred to the show with the incorrect title ''The Hit Parade''.
When the show debuted, there was no agreement as to what it should be called. The press referred to it in a variety of ways, with the most common being "Hit Parade," "The Hit Parade," and even "The Lucky Strike Hit Parade" (see for example "Lucky Strike Hit Parade is Popular," ''Laredo (Texas) Times'', May 21, 1935, p 7). The program's title was not officially changed to "Your Hit Parade" until November 9, 1935 ("Al Goodman to Be Maestro on Radio Series," ''Oakland Tribune'', November 9, 1935, p. 14.)
Each Saturday evening, the program offered the most popular and bestselling songs of the week. The earliest format involved a presentation of the top 15 songs. Later, a countdown with fanfares led to the top three finalists, with the number one song for the finale. Occasional performances of standards and other favorite songs from the past were known as "Lucky Strike Extras."
Listeners were informed that the "''Your Hit Parade'' survey checks the best sellers on sheet music and phonograph records, the songs most heard on the air and most played on the automatic coin machines, an accurate, authentic tabulation of America's taste in popular music." However, the exact procedure of this "authentic tabulation" remained a secret. Some believe song choices were often arbitrary due to various performance and production factors. The show's ad agencies—initially Lord and Thomas and later Batten, Barton, Durstine & Osborne—never revealed the specific sources or the methods that were used to determine top hits. They made a general statement that it was based mainly on "readings of radio requests, sheet music sales, dance-hall favorites and jukebox tabulations"; ''Radio Guide'' claimed "an endless popularity poll on a nationwide scale."
==Radio==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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