Payola is skewing the charts again

Chart watchers all know what payola is – but for the rest of you, here goes.

Payola
was the name given to a scandal that hit American radio in the late
fifties, when the music biz was dominated by sales of seven-inch
singles.

Record companies offered radio stations and
individual DJs cash to play their product on high rotation. Under the
laws at the time stations had the ability to play specific songs in
exchange for money, but the plug had to be disclosed as sponsored
airtime. Payola represented paid, but unacknowledged, advertising –
particularly since then and even now key stations report spins of the
newest and most popular songs to industry publications, influencing
other stations’ playlists.

Big names got caught up. Alan
Freed, the man often credited with inventing the term “rock and roll”,
saw his career destroyed by the payola scandal. Dick Clark, the
American Bandstand host, only survived by selling his own record
company interests and cooperating with the authorities.

A quick look at this week’s Canberra Top 40 will let you know where this is all leading us.

Australian
Idol John Howard is in his usual Number One spot – but look who else
makes up the Top 10. The places in our own political payola row
dominate this week’s chart.

Rehame has Nationals Leader
John Anderson coming in at Number Two. He’s closely followed by the
Independent MP making the allegations, Tony Windsor, who’s jumped 65
places in the chart and increased his mentions from just 11 in the
previous poll to a massive 1,597 this week to hit Number Three. The
go-between in the row, Nationals Senator Sandy Macdonald, has done even
better. He leaps an amazing 169 places in the Canberra Top 40 to come
in at Number Nine.

Some usual favourites, like Treasurer
Peter Costello, haven’t even made the Top 10 and, ironically, the
payola scandal means that the only real rock and roller in this week’s
Canberra Top 40, Peter Garrett, is languishing way down at Number 39 –
despite his almost perpetual state of confusion over his electoral
enrolment or where and when he’s voted.

Irony of ironies, that must be sweet music to the ambitious new MP’s ears.

Who’s hot, who’s not: The Rehame Top 40 Pols

Rank Name Mentions Mentions
Last Report
Rank
Last Report
1 John
Howard
2704 1973 1
2 John
Anderson
1697 358 7
3 Tony
Windsor
1597 11 68
4 Mark
Latham
975 563 6
5 David
Hawker
884 35 38
6 Bronwyn
Bishop
529 56 22
7 Alexander
Downer
481 673 4
8 Tony
Abbott
476 548 5
9 Sandy
Macdonald
427 0 178
10 Chris
Ellison
389 17 54
11 Bruce
Baird
373 43 34
12 Peter
Costello
297 675 3
13 Mark
Vaile
246 61 21
14 Stephen
Smith
208 4 101
15 Kevin Andrews 172 49 29
16 Wayne
Swan
167 26 43
17 Julia
Gillard
161 90 17
18 Warren
Truss
160 109 15
19 Bob
Brown
156 50 27
20 David
Jull
141 21 49
21 Anthony
Albanese
135 2 131
22 Brendan
Nelson
128 705 2
23 Chris
Evans
126 2 131
24 Philip
Ruddock
114 305 8
25 De
Anne Kelly
112 50 27
26 Dick
Adams
97 3 115
27 Paul
Neville
92 4 101
27 Wilson
Tuckey
92 24 45
29 Kevin
Rudd
91 243 11
30 Helen
Coonan
89 257 10
30 Ian
Macdonald
89 56 22
32 Andrew
Southcott
80 2 131
33 Amanda
Vanstone
71 277 9
34 Sharman
Stone
66 56 22
35 Ron
Boswell
63 7 85
36 Alex
Somlyay
62 2 131
37 Craig
Emerson
59 4 101
38 Natasha
Stott Despoja
58 9 78
39 Peter
Garrett
52 94 16
39 Simon
Crean
52 5 94
41 Alan
Cadman
46 6 90
41 Chris
Pyne
46 81 19