List of Media Forest most-broadcast songs of 2009 in Romania

Since 2009,[1] Israeli broadcast monitoring service Media Forest has been publishing the top ten most-broadcast Romanian and foreign songs on Romanian radio stations and television channels on a weekly basis. Nine radio stations—Europa FM, Info Pro, Kiss FM, Magic FM, National FM, Pro FM, Radio 21, Radio România Actualități and Radio ZU—and five television channels—1 Music Channel, Kiss TV, MTV Romania, Party TV and UTV Romania—were taken into consideration for the charts' compilation in 2009.[1][2] They are based on the number of times tracks are broadcast, determined by acoustic fingerprinting. Media Forest also releases year-end charts in regards to the radio airplay, listing the most broadcast songs of Romanian origin[upper-alpha 1] of the respective year weighted by the official audience numbers provided by Asociația pentru Radio Audiență (Romanian Association for Audience Numbers).[3][4] David Deejay and Dony reached number one on the 2009 ranking with "So Bizarre".

The Black Eyed Peas' "I Gotta Feeling" was the most-broadcast radio song for eight weeks.

In that year, eight and 11 singles were listed by Media Forest as the most-broadcast tracks on radio and television respectively. The first were "Takin' Back My Love" by Enrique Iglesias and Ciara (radio) and "Undeva-n Balcani" by Puya and George Hora (television) in July 2009. "I Gotta Feeling" by the Black Eyed Peas spent eight weeks as the most-broadcast single on radio stations, longer than any other, while in terms of television airplay, this feat was achieved by Edward Maya and Vika Jigulina's "Stereo Love" with a total of six non-consecutive weeks. "Chica Bomb" by Dan Balan was the final top song of 2009 on both listings.

Most-broadcast songs

Key
Indicates number-one song of the year[5]

Radio

Enrique Iglesias (pictured) and Ciara's "Takin' Back My Love" was the first top radio airplay song listed by Media Forest.
Artist(s)[6]TitleIssue dateWks.
Enrique Iglesias featuring Ciara "Takin' Back My Love" 6 July 2009 3
David Deejay featuring Dony "So Bizarre"‡ 27 July 2009 2
Neylini "Muleina (DJ Andi Remix)" 10 August 2009 2
David Deejay featuring Dony "So Bizarre"‡ 24 August 2009 1
David Guetta featuring Kelly Rowland "When Love Takes Over" 31 August 2009 1
Pitbull "I Know You Want Me (Calle Ocho)" 7 September 2009 4
Inna "Amazing" 5 October 2009 3
The Black Eyed Peas "I Gotta Feeling" 26 October 2009 8
Dan Balan "Chica Bomb" 21 December 2009 2

Television

"Stereo Love" by Edward Maya (pictured) and Vika Jigulina received the most television broadcasts for six non-consecutive weeks.
Artist(s)[7]TitleIssue dateWks.
Puya featuring George Hora "Undeva-n Balcani" 6 July 2009 1
A. R. Rahman and the Pussycat Dolls
featuring Nicole Scherzinger
"Jai Ho! (You Are My Destiny)" 13 July 2009 1
Edward Maya and Vika Jigulina "Stereo Love" 20 July 2009 1
A. R. Rahman and the Pussycat Dolls
featuring Nicole Scherzinger
"Jai Ho! (You Are My Destiny)" 27 July 2009 1
David Deejay featuring Dony "So Bizarre" 3 August 2009 1
Edward Maya and Vika Jigulina "Stereo Love" 10 August 2009 5
David Deejay featuring Dony "So Bizarre" 14 September 2009 2
Connect-R "Burning Love" 28 September 2009 1
Pitbull "I Know You Want Me (Calle Ocho)" 5 October 2009 1
Inna "Amazing" 12 October 2009 4
Puya featuring Kamelia and George Hora "Change" 9 November 2009 1
Inna "Amazing" 16 November 2009 1
Radio Killer "Voila" 23 November 2009 2
JLS "Beat Again" 7 December 2009 1
Dan Balan "Chica Bomb" 14 December 2009 5

Notes

  1. Media Forest also includes Moldovan artists such as Dan Balan on the chart.

References

  1. "Media Forest – Know You Are On Air". Media Forest. Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  2. "Media Forest – The World's #1 Music Discovery, Rating and Purchasing Experience". Media Forest. Archived from the original on 11 June 2009. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
  3. "Media Forest – FAQ – Media Forest Technology". Media Forest. Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  4. "Media Forest – FAQ – Seasonal/Annual Charts". Media Forest. Retrieved 19 June 2020.
  5. "Media Forest – Chart 2009". Media Forest. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
  6. "Media Forest – Weekly Charts – 2009". Media Forest. Retrieved 14 June 2018. Note: Navigate through the chart archives by selecting items from the far right drop down menu.
  7. "Media Forest – Weekly Charts – 2009". Media Forest. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
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