MUSICPREDICTIONS.COM


Think you can predict the success of pop songs better than others?  Here's your chance to prove it.

In whatever genre(s) of current popular music you want (Alternative, Country, Hip-Hop-R&B, Hot AC, Pop and Rhythmic Top 40), you'll simply predict whether you think new songs will do better or worse than the projected chart peak position number listed by "the house".  You'll be competing against others nationally who consider themselves experts.  Find out how you measure up...



Login:


username (email)


password



Note: you will need to create a joint musicpredictions/musicwars account even if you have had calpreps.com account(s) in the past (it's an entirely different password system)
create account

trouble logging in?





For our contests, we use the Hot 100 Airplay compilation chart, as well as each of the individual genre charts. Each is a separate contest-- you can choose any and all you'd like to participate in. On the pick screen, for any song you want to compete on (you can pick and choose the songs you want-- no need to pick every song) just enter whether you think the song will do better or worse than the projected peak position number listed by "the house". For example, if the projection for a song is that it will peak at #17, you can select that you think it will get to #16 or higher...or that you think it will peak at #18 or below. All ties lose. On every song you pick, you'll get a win or a loss, so you score will be +1 or -1. Your total score is just the addition of all the individual song scores. So, if you are correct 22 times and wrong 17 times, your score is +5. Best score wins. Each week, the songs available for picking on a given chart are any debuts and all bulleted songs in their 4th week on the chart. The idea behind having 1st and 4th week songs is that it forces you to develop two different skills in order to be successful. The two types of prediction are very different-- one based on your ear (and your knowledge of the artist), while for the other, statistics/trends enter the equation.