BLACKPINK’s Lisa recaptures No. 1 spot on Billboard Hot Trending Songs chart 


BLACKPINK member Lisa grabbed the No. 1 spot again on Billboard’s Hot Trending Songs chart.

According to Billboard, Lisa’s “Lalisa” is No. 1 on the Oct. 8-dated Hot Trending Songs chart, which is powered by Twitter.

Billboard's Hot Trending Songs chart dated Oct. 8 (Billboard)

BLACKPINK's Lisa (Instagram)

This is the fourth time that “Lalisa,” released in September 2021, stayed on top of the chart after capturing No. 1 for the first time on the Aug. 6-dated chart, to become “the first woman to top the tally.”

“The song is also the only title to appear on every Hot Trending Songs chart dating to the survey’s inception (50 weeks and counting),” Billboard reported.

In addition, “Lalisa” is the “fourth-longest-leading No. 1 in the chart’s brief history, breaking out of a tie with BLACKPINK’s ‘Pink Venom’ and BTS’ ‘Yet to Come.’”

On the latest Hot Trending Songs chart, Stray Kids’ “Case 143” is No. 2 followed by Lisa’s “Money at No. 3, BTS’ “Yet To Come” and Crush’s “Rush Hour” featuring BTS’ J-Hope.

GOT7 member BamBam’s “Slow Mo” is No. 6 followed by “With You” by Ha Sung-woon and BTS’ Jimin, “Wheels Up” by BamBam featuring Mayzin, and “Who Are You” by BamBam featuring Red Velvet’s Seulgi.

Billboard added that Seventeen member Jun’s “Limbo” debuted at No. 16 on the chart, his first solo entry.

EXO member Xiumin’s “Brand New” also debuted at No. 17, which is also his first time to enter the chart.

Billboard’s Hot Trending Songs charts “track global music-related trends and conversations in real-time across Twitter, viewable over either the last 24 hours or past seven days.”

“A weekly, 20-position version of the chart, covering activity from Friday through Thursday of each week, posts alongside Billboard’s other weekly charts on Billboard.com each Tuesday. The charts highlight buzz around new releases, award shows, festival moments, music nostalgia and more. Hot Trending Songs is unique in that it tracks what songs people are talking about, not necessarily what they’re listening to,” reported Billboard.