
Bob Seger Returns To Several Billboard Charts Thanks To Sales Gains
Bob Seger & The Silver Bullet Band's Greatest Hits is one of the most successful albums in American history. The title can almost always be found on a handful of Billboard rankings, but even the sturdy project occasionally falls off some tallies. While streaming keeps the compilation present on the Billboard 200, it doesn't always sell well enough to remain on rosters dedicated solely to pure purchases. Still, fans of Seger and the group know that if the Greatest Hits collection ever disappears, it won't be gone for long.
This week, Greatest Hits by Seger and the Silver Bullet Band returns to the Top Album Sales chart. The ranking lists the full-lengths and EPs that actually sell the most copies throughout the U.S. According to Luminate, the compilation sold just over 2,000 copies during the most recent tracking period. That number represents a more than 21% increase — several hundred additional units — from the previous frame.
That figure is large enough to place the compilation in second-to-last place on the sales-only tally. Seger and company land just ahead of another hugely popular compilation: Chronicle by Creedence Clearwater Revival.
That uptick in purchases was also enough to bring Greatest Hits back to another ranking. The compilation reenters the Top Rock Albums list at No. 25. That roster is compiled using a methodology that blends both sales and streaming activity, but it appears the increase in fans buying the title alone helped push it back onto the list of the most-consumed rock collections in the country.
As Greatest Hits returns to those two rankings, it also rises on yet another pair of Billboard rosters. The set lifts two spots to No. 31 on the Top Rock & Alternative Albums chart. At the same time, it surges seven spaces to No. 138 on the Billboard 200.
Luminate reports that while sales of Seger's Greatest Hits jumped by more than 20% week over week, total consumption — which includes streams as well as purchases — grew by only 5.5%. The set shifted 10,650 equivalent units in the U.S. during the tracking week that ended more than seven days ago.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
9 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Teens Are 'Meltmaxxing' Now — Here's What That Actually Means
TikTok trends are unpredictable. Sometimes they are toxic or a sign of a deeper issue; other times, they are just fun. The newest trend taking over your teen's For You Page falls in the latter category. It's called 'meltmaxxing' — and it's a harmless (and funny!) trend that teens are using to embrace their silly side. What Is Meltmaxxing? Meltmaxxing is a trend where teens will film themselves trying to reach 100 percent 'melted.' It starts at '0% melt,' where they just smile normally. Then it goes to 10 or 25 percent melt, where they tilt their heads back a little to give themselves a double chin. Then they go up to 50 percent, 75 percent, etc., increasingly creating more double chins in the camera until they reach 100 percent, where they are fully 'meltmaxxed.' Here's another example. More from SheKnows Chris Martin Wants Privacy - But His 'Kiss Cam' May Have Just Sparked an Office Scandal And that's basically it! One TikToker explained meltmaxxing like this: 'This is not referring to the other videos where they're talking about standing in the sun until you physically and spiritually dissolve,' she explains. Instead, this is just 'squish[ing] your face into yourself and you end up with six chins.' She shared that the comments are confusing people because everyone is acting like meltmaxxing is 'dangerous.' People are commenting things to make it seem like risky behavior doing it 'in front of your mom' or 'on public transport,' but it's all part of the silliness. There's not actually anything more to meltmaxxing then these silly triple chins. 'This is people just being silly and having fun,' the TikToker says. Meltmaxxing Is a Joke About Maxxing Culture Meltmaxxing is unserious and silly, and it pokes fun at a more problematic trend where people are 'maxxing' to become more intense versions of themselves. 'Maxxing' in general is a video game term, where 'max' means reaching full development of character traits. For example, 'looksmaxxing,' where teen boys show how they alter their appearance to fit into masculine ideals, such as starting a new skincare regimen, working out, getting a new haircut, and undergoing cosmetic surgery. There have also been 'sleepmaxxing' to get the most optimal sleep, 'wealthmaxxing' to strive to make more money, 'healthmaxxing' to create more healthy habits, and more. Teens have confusing slang — and we're pretty sure all generations have thought that about their teens too — but if you need help deciphering what Gen Z and Gen Alpha are talking about or doing online, we've compiled this handy guide of SheKnows Wolf Monte, Somersault Wonder, & More Unique Celebrity Baby Names Celebrity Exes Who Are Co-Parenting Right These 17 Celebrity Couples Have the Sweetest Baby-Naming Traditions Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
9 minutes ago
- Yahoo
No bumblebees here: Steelers' new alternate uniforms honor 1933 Pittsburgh Pirates
The Pittsburgh Steelers are going retro. On their throwbacks. On occasion. Monday morning, the team revealed its new − or old, depending on your perspective − throwback uniform, which is a nod to the Steelers' inaugural team in 1933, when they were known as the Pittsburgh Pirates. The Steelers last sported a version of this look in 1994, when the NFL celebrated its 75th season and teams throughout the league delved into a throwback experience that became common in later years. Pittsburgh will break out the new/old uniform on October 26, a "Sunday Night Football" date at Acrisure Stadium with the Green Bay Packers. If the Steelers are fortunate, new quarterback Aaron Rodgers will also recapture his own throwback form as he attempts to defeat his original team and become only the fifth quarterback in league history to notch a win against all 32 of its teams. RANKING NFL UNIFORMS WORST TO BEST: Who looks good? Who doesn't? Where do Steelers check in? WINNERS AND LOSERS: Who benefits from Steelers OLB T.J. Watt's mega-extension? . This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Steelers' new uniforms: Pittsburgh's alternate look honors 1933 team
Yahoo
9 minutes ago
- Yahoo
We Asked Actual Gen Z Teens To Explain the 'Gen Z Stare' & Here's What They Really Think
According to teens, the Gen Z stare is just one generation misunderstanding another. Sound familiar? The concept of a Gen Z stare has recently gained attention on TikTok as millennials, Gen X, and boomers take aim at a perceived lack of etiquette in the Zoomer generation. They describe it as a blank stare that Gen Z gives, usually in customer service settings, in response to questions or a greeting. More from SheKnows Teens Are 'Meltmaxxing' Now - Here's What That Actually Means On the other side of the TikTok debate is Gen Z, who argue that the stare is in response to difficult customers when there is nothing left to respond with aside from a blank expression. In the video above, we asked Gen Z members of the SheKnows Teen Council to react to the Gen Z stare and share their explanations for the look. 'I don't think I've done it that crazy,' 15-year-old Theo says after watching a viral video of someone recreating the Gen Z stare. Like many members of his generation, Theo is frustrated by the sweeping generational generalization. 'I feel like the stereotype is that we're not used to talking to real people one-on-one, I guess, and we're so used to our screens that we don't really know what to do,' he adds. 'I feel like that's not true.' Olivia, 17, admits that she has probably done a Gen Z stare or two in her time. 'I feel like I can sometimes be a little socially awkward and just not know what to do,' she says. 'Especially when I'm with my parents,' she adds. 'Like when you walk into a restaurant and you're first and the hostess asks you what the reservation name is.' Many members of Gen Z are teens, after all, so is it really fair to hold them to the same standards as adults? Olivia's defense of the Gen Z stare was also echoed by 18-year-old Chloe, who says she has used the Gen Z stare in her customer service job when she wasn't sure how best to respond. 'I think it's just a tactic to avoid the most drama in the situation so you don't end up antagonizing the other person or exhausting yourself trying to explain something over and over again,' she says. Next, we had teens react to a video from Shaheen Alarakhia, a mental health counselor who calls the Gen Z stare a 'lost in translation moment.' 'Here's what I do notice about Gen Z in therapy, and I think this translates to the Gen Z stare. They are very thoughtful of other people's time and energy,' Alarakhia says, explaining that the Gen Z stare might be part of young people's cut-to-the-chase mentality. Small talk and niceties seem to be a lost art in younger generations. 'I think this is really good point,' 16-year-old Joris tells us, explaining that learning to chit-chat with customers in his jewelry shop job 'didn't feel that natural' to him. 'I think when there are customers that are kind of around my age… they don't really want to do the introduction thing, and it feels like it's kind of forced on both of us.' The teens we spoke to broadly agreed that the Gen Z stare primarily signifies a cultural divide between generations, which occurs, to some extent, in all generations. Millennials are still criticized for their 'failure to launch,' and Gen X's 'slacker' stereotype follows them. The Gen Z stare is emerging as one of many things we'll ascribe to Zoomers because nothing unites adults like complaining about youths. Best of SheKnows Wolf Monte, Somersault Wonder, & More Unique Celebrity Baby Names Celebrity Exes Who Are Co-Parenting Right These 17 Celebrity Couples Have the Sweetest Baby-Naming Traditions Solve the daily Crossword