From A Producer To A Global Superstar-Chapter 328: Billboard Chart

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 328: Billboard Chart

Valery had been staring at the screen so long her eyes started to burn.

Not because she did not understand numbers. Because she did, and these numbers were numbers that let her question how Dayo was doing this numbers.

She refreshed again.

Still the same.

Across Borders had entered the American market like it had been built here.

Not one breakout track.

Not two.

Every single song was sitting inside the Billboard Hot 100 projections.

Valery leaned back slowly, lips parting as if she wanted to laugh, but the laugh refused to come out.

"How," she muttered. "How are you doing this with a Korean album."

Her assistant, Mara, stood by the door with a folder, unsure if she should speak or keep quiet. In the past week, Valery had been moving like a woman trying to hold a flood back with her hands.

Mara finally asked softly, "Should I send this to the team."

Valery did not answer immediately. She scrolled again, eyes moving from streams to placements to sales equivalents.

It was not just one country streaming it.

It was American fans streaming it like they had been waiting for it.

Then she opened the full breakdown page.

The one that made her swallow.

Because now it was no longer feelings.

Now it was data.

UNITED STATES STREAMS AND BILLBOARD POSITIONS

This was the first forty eight hours of the Across Borders.

Spotify US streams were already high, and Apple Music US was strong behind it, but Spotify was the loudest.

Valery read the list slowly, like she was reading a verdict.

Track 1 Seven Clean

Projected Billboard Hot 100 debut at number 8

Spotify US first day streams about 7.9 million

Spotify US second day streams about 6.8 million

Two day total about 14.7 million

Track 2 Shoong

Projected Billboard Hot 100 debut at number 14

Spotify US first day streams about 6.1 million

Spotify US second day streams about 5.4 million

Two day total about 11.5 million

Track 3 Dreamers

Projected Billboard Hot 100 debut at number 21

Spotify US first day streams about 5.0 million

Spotify US second day streams about 4.6 million

Two day total about 9.6 million

Track 4 Bad Decisions

Projected Billboard Hot 100 debut at number 11

Spotify US first day streams about 6.7 million

Spotify US second day streams about 6.0 million

Two day total about 12.7 million

Track 5 Stay Alive

Projected Billboard Hot 100 debut at number 27

Spotify US first day streams about 4.4 million

Spotify US second day streams about 4.0 million

Two day total about 8.4 million

Track 6 Who

Projected Billboard Hot 100 debut at number 33

Spotify US first day streams about 3.9 million

Spotify US second day streams about 3.5 million

Two day total about 7.4 million

Track 7 Dynamite

Projected Billboard Hot 100 debut at number 38

Spotify US first day streams about 3.5 million

Spotify US second day streams about 3.1 million

Two day total about 6.6 million

Track 8 DDU DU DDU DU

Projected Billboard Hot 100 debut at number 45

Spotify US first day streams about 3.0 million

Spotify US second day streams about 2.8 million

Two day total about 5.8 million

Track 9 Celebrity

Projected Billboard Hot 100 debut at number 52

Spotify US first day streams about 2.7 million

Spotify US second day streams about 2.4 million

Two day total about 5.1 million

Track 10 Money

Projected Billboard Hot 100 debut at number 41

Spotify US first day streams about 3.2 million

Spotify US second day streams about 2.9 million

Two day total about 6.1 million

Track 11 Left and Right

Projected Billboard Hot 100 debut at number 29

Spotify US first day streams about 4.2 million

Spotify US second day streams about 3.9 million

Two day total about 8.1 million

Track 12 That That

Projected Billboard Hot 100 debut at number 57

Spotify US first day streams about 2.5 million

Spotify US second day streams about 2.2 million

Two day total about 4.7 million

Valery sat there, blinking.

This was not one song dragging the album.

This was the entire album moving like a wave.

Mara’s voice came again, quieter this time.

"Is this real ?."

Valery answered without looking up.

"It is real."

Then she scrolled down to the totals.

US Spotify two day total for the whole album was sitting around 90.7 million streams.

And that was only Spotify US.

Apple Music was also doing well.

YouTube Music was moving.

Even the songs fans did not understand were being replayed.

People were repeating the same line again and again online.

His accent is not foreign.

His pronunciation is not struggle.

He sounds like he belongs.

Valery exhaled slowly.

"Dayo," she whispered. "What are you ?."

UNITED STATES FAN REACTIONS

Valery clicked into the major US forums and the comment sections were boiling.

Not hate boiling.

Emotion boiling.

Jealousy mixed with pride.

Anger mixed with laughter.

Like Americans did not know whether to drag him or brag that he belonged to them.

Ethan Rivers: I do not even speak Korean but the pronunciation is clean, this is ridiculous.

Mariah Cruz : The songs make sense even when you do not understand it, that is talent.

Jayden Miles: I was mad he did not give us an album for years but I cannot lie this is insane.

Kiara Bennett : This man dropped a movie then dropped a Korean album like it is nothing.

Aisha Coleman: The intonation is scary, it does not sound like he is reading Korean, it sounds like he is from there.

Then the jealous ones came.

Logan Frost : So we begged for years and he went to Korea to feed them this is BS

And immediately the replies swallowed him.

Renee Walker: He dropped music, go stream it or go cry.

Daniella Park: If you love him you will support him anywhere, stop acting like he owes you.

Tariq Benson: We are angry but we are still proud, that is the truth.

And that was the real mood.

They were annoyed.

But they were also smiling while they complained.

THE UNITED STATES INDUSTRY REACTS

Then it moved to the entertainment industry side.

Because when Billboard projections started showing all tracks inside the Hot 100, people in the industry could not pretend it was fan noise only.

It was numbers.

People started posting reactions.

Radio hosts started talking.

Music commentators started making clips.

Some were excited.

Some were threatened.

Some were confused.

A popular US music reviewer posted.

This is one of the strangest flexes I have seen in years. He dropped a Korean album and it is charting in America like it was made for us.

A big podcast host posted.

The movie is still trending and now the album is charting too, what is going on.

An industry insider account posted.

If these projections hold, this is not a normal artist. This is a cultural force.

Valery watched it all and felt her stomach tighten.

Because she had been in this game long enough to know something.

When the industry starts calling you force, they either want to sign you or destroy you.

NEWS OUTLETS AND ARTICLES

Then came the headlines.

One after the other.

From blogs.

From music outlets.

From entertainment sites.

From industry newsletters.

Valery opened the compiled page that her media team had been tracking, and it had already reached twenty nine headlines in less than a day.

She read them out loud without meaning to.

Billboard Watch USA

Korean Album Shocks US Charts as Every Track Enters Hot 100 Projections

SoundPulse

Dayo Drops Korean Album and America Streams Like It Understands Every Word

PopWire

From Train to Busan to Billboard, Dayo Turns One Week Into Two Different Takeovers

CultureScope

The Accent Debate, How Does He Sound Like That

HitTracker

Twelve Tracks, Twelve Entries, This Is Not a Normal Release

StudioLine

Industry Split, Some Call It Genius, Others Call It Impossible

ViralMeter

Fans Admit They Are Angry, But They Still Cannot Stop Streaming

MusicRoom USA

Korean Lyrics, American Numbers, Dayo Forces a New Conversation

Spotlight Daily

The Movie Is Still Hot and Now the Album Is Hot, The Timing Is Brutal

TrendPress

US Fans Create Their Own Promotion Wave Without Being Asked

ChartMode

Projected Debut, Multiple Songs in Top 30 Range, A Rare Event

Pulse Review

A Foreign Language Album With Domestic Level Replay Energy

The Culture Desk

This Is Not K Pop, This Is Not US Pop, This Is Something Else

ArtistWatch

Who Trained Him, Who Helped Him, Or Is He Just Built Like This

Scene Weekly

From Independent to Unavoidable, Dayo Is Becoming a Problem for Gatekeepers

BreakRoom Entertainment

The Most Dangerous Part, He Did Not Even Promote Like Normal

TuneReport

No Long Rollout, No Big Press Run, Yet the Streams Are Climbing

ForumFlash

Fans Say They Feel Betrayed, Then Immediately Post Clips Singing Along

MediaStreet

The Korean Album That Made Americans Argue About Pronunciation

The Listener

Even People Who Hate Zombies Are Now Watching the Movie Because of the Album

SoundBoard

The Movie Boosts the Album, The Album Boosts the Movie, A Perfect Loop

Insider Notes

Labels Watching Quietly, Nobody Wants to Admit They Missed This

PopCulture Radar

Dayo Does Not Act Like He Is Competing, He Acts Like He Already Won

Music Biz Weekly

When The Data Looks This Clean, Someone Behind The Scenes Gets Nervous

NightTalk USA

The Moment Fans Realized They Are Watching a Global Star, Not A Local One

The Playlist Post

Every Track Inside Top 100 Projections, This Is A Full Album Event

Echo News

The Korean Album With American Impact, Not Hype, Not Talk, Numbers

StreamFront

Spotify US Reports Heavy Repeat Plays, Fans Looping Tracks Like Addiction

Culture Shock Digest

From Korea To America Without Translation, Dayo Makes The Impossible Look Casual

Valery stopped reading.

Because even her own voice sounded unreal saying it.

Mara swallowed.

"So what do we do."

Valery stared at the screen again, and for the first time in a while, her expression shifted into something sharper.

"We do not touch it," she said quietly. "We watch it."

"Why?."

"Because when something is moving this naturally, you do not interrupt it with clumsy hands."

Then she paused and added the part that mattered.

"And because the moment America accepts something like this, it starts building culture around it just keep the promotion going."

Valery opened X again the saw a trend that was going on a fan put Physical album of Across Borders in the middle. then Train to Busan tickets around arranging it from day one that the movie Air in the U.S till day

Like a shrine.

Valery frowned as she watched the first post that kicked it into motion. The handle was not a celebrity. Just a regular fan. A guy. Name on his profile, Jeffrey Miller.

Profile picture plain.

But his post was already climbing.

Jeffrey had laid the album flat on a wooden table, clean and centered. Across Borders.

Still wrapped in the plastic.

Then he arranged his Train to Busan ticket stubs around it like a frame.

Day one ticket. Day two ticket. Day three. Day four. Day five. Day six. Day seven.

And the engagement jumped so fast Valery’s eyes narrowed.

Because she understood it now.

This was not only a chart run.

This was turning into a movement.