Work From Home / NASCAR Mobile - NASCAR Digital Media They don't want none unless you've got buns, hon. If the hottest songs right now are any indication, booty is the latest trend that music fans are getting behind — and the numbers back it up. In just three weeks, Last week, Meghan Trainor's curves-embracing All About That Bass hit No. 1 on Billboard's Hot 100, days after Is this posterior influx merely a coincidence, or are we in the midst of a rump revolution? "It seems like in the past when songs like this have become popular, it's just been one at a time," says Hillary Busis, a staff editor at Unlike Queen's Whether it's The call for more caboose could also be seen as a stark response to Robin Thicke's Blurred Lines dominating the charts and conversation last summer, says Lindsay Zoladz, pop critic at New York magazine. In that song's contentious video, "very thin, and, in most cases, white women were used as props very cheaply," Zoladz says. "In a way, that reinforced a lot of stereotypes about the way women's bodies are presented in music videos. There's something of a corrective to that" going on right now. But as swimsuits and shorts are packed away and the cool weather settles in, will a barrage of buttocks still flood our songs and screens? "We're probably at peak-butt, for no other reason than the fact that All About That Bass is already out, Anaconda is already out," Busis says. "Anybody else who has a butt song would risk seeming derivative. Although I guess that's never stopped pop musicians before." What will march on is "the actual topic of self-image," Ramirez says. "If anything, the more big artists that take this on, the more of a topic it will be."
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