Song of the Day #6,463: ‘The Twist’ – Chubby Checker

The next inductee into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Class of 2025 — Chubby Checker — arguably made it on the strength of just one song.

But what a song! Checker’s ‘The Twist’ was considered the #1 Billboard song of all-time for more than 60 years based on its strength and longevity on the Hot 100. It was only recently eclipsed by The Weeknd’s ‘Blinding Lights.’

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Song of the Day #6,461: ‘Sara’ – Starship

The week of March 15, 1986, found Starship atop the Hot 100 for the second time. The first ‘Starship’ single to accomplish the feat was ‘We Built This City,’ which reached #1 in December of 1985.

That song is widely considered one of the worst of all time, so ‘Sara’ is an improvement simply by default. It’s certainly a better song than ‘We Built This City,’ and maybe even a somewhat good song, period? You tell me.

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Song of the Day #6,460: ‘December, 1963 (Oh, What A Night)’ – The Four Seasons

Throwing back to the week of March 14, 1976, sitting atop the Billboard Hot 100 is a classic disco doo-wop song that returned its legendary group to the #1 spot for the first time in more than a decade.

The Four Seasons had four #1 hits between 1962 and 1964 — ‘Sherry,’ ‘Big Girls Don’t Cry,’ ‘Walk Like a Man,’ and ‘Rag Doll,’ doo-wop hits that made splendid use of Frankie Valli’s falsetto. Another six singles made it into at least the top 20.

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Song of the Day #6,459: ‘Ready or Not (Here I Come)’ – The Jackson 5

Concluding my countdown of last year’s best films…

Best Films of 2025
#1. One Battle After Another

Paul Thomas Anderson is one of my guys — one of a handful of filmmakers I consider among my very favorites. I consider him a modern American master, somebody whose name should and will be listed alongside Scorsese, Hitchcock, Welles, Spielberg, Coppola, and Kubrick.

That said, it had been four years since his last release, and 2021’s Licorice Pizza (despite its many charms) is probably my least favorite of his films. Before that, it’s all the way back to 2017 and the brilliant Phantom Thread. So when One Battle After Another was announced, I’d been waiting nearly a decade for a new PTA masterpiece with no guarantee I’d get one.

Well, I got one.

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