THE TOP 10 WORST ROCK HITS of 2006 || Crash Thompson

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Whew… been a while since we did Billboard, eh. This time we’re doing the Top 10 Worst Rock Hits to chart on Billboard for 2006.

Settle in folks. This one gets bumpy.

#Billboard #top10 #2006

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Intro – 0:00
10 – 2:30
9 – 10:26
8 – 17:24
7 – 23:20
6 – 32:04
5 – 39:35
4 – 45:12
3 – 50:57
2 – 57:30
Dishonorable Mentions – 1:03:48
1 – 1:08:09

Other Top 10 Videos:

TOP 10 WORST ROCK HITS of 1990: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFPM3BYfnew&t
TOP 10 TWO-HIT WONDERS: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7pyPk0vAac&t
TOP 10 GUILTY PLEASURES: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U1APqPHifwQ&t
TOP 10 WORST PITCHFORK REVIEWS: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F9UW-O5crR0&t

Special thanks to @Rocked for the cameo! give ya boi a sub!

https://youtube.com/c/RockedreviewsNet

Nickelback is a Canadian rock band formed in 1995 in Hanna, Alberta. It is composed of guitarist and lead vocalist Chad Kroeger, guitarist, keyboardist and backing vocalist Ryan Peake, bassist Mike Kroeger, and drummer Daniel Adair. It went through several drummer changes between 1995 and 2005, achieving its current lineup when Adair replaced Ryan Vikedal.

Nickelback is one of the most commercially successful Canadian rock bands, having sold more than 50 million albums worldwide.[1] In 2009, Billboard ranked it the most successful rock group of that decade; “How You Remind Me” was the best-selling rock song and the fourth-best overall. The band ranked at No. 7 on the Billboard top artist of the decade list, with four albums among the publication’s top albums of the decade.[2]

The band signed with Roadrunner Records in 1999 and re-released its once-independent second studio album The State.[3] This album was commercially successful, as was its follow-up, Silver Side Up, in 2001.[4] The band then released its biggest hit, “How You Remind Me”, a No. 1 on the Billboard and Canadian Singles Charts.[5] The fourth album, The Long Road, was released in 2003 and spawned five singles, including Canadian No. 1 “Someday”, which also reached No. 7 on the Billboard Hot 100.[6]

In 2005, the band’s best-selling album to date, All the Right Reasons, produced three top-ten and five top-twenty singles on the Billboard Hot 100, including “Photograph”, “Far Away”, and “Rockstar”.[5] Dark Horse sold well in 2008, producing eight singles, one cracking the top ten on the Billboard Hot 100 and two in the top twenty. In 2011, the seventh album, Here and Now, topped the charts.[7][non-primary source needed] The eighth, No Fixed Address, was released in 2014,[8] followed by Feed the Machine in 2017.

Nickelback is based in Vancouver, British Columbia. It published through EMI Canada before signing a global distribution deal with Roadrunner Records. For Here and Now, it left EMI Canada for Universal Music Canada.

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About the Author: Crash Thompson

28 Comments

  1. I think you're missing the forest for the trees on How to Save a Life. I can see not digging the lyrics but that chorus KILLS. There's a reason it was used in every doctor show for a couple years there, it's really dramatic. There were definitely worse songs that year. Like, a lot of them.

  2. I've always thought how to save a life was about someone trying and failing in helping their friend due to the way the songs protagonist goes about it. Never really saw it as a how too but that's just me.

  3. Right out of the gate: song I liked in late middle/early high school. Ouch.

    (Shame "Lips of an Angel" only got a dishonorable mention; when you're trapped in a car playing nothing but the local pop station at its worst, that song is a goddamn torture device.)

  4. You could have stopped at the savage and succinct comparison of Saliva and convention goblins, but then you made it truly epic with that blink and you'll miss it image of the Lord of the Con Creeps. Allow me to join you in provoking the ire of his inevitable cringeworthy defenders by making myself clear in saying Vic Mignona can climb a wall of dicks and promptly hurl himself from it like a Frisbee.

  5. Weird, I was waiting for the premiere on this one and it never notified me? I think that's why this video has little views right now, the algorithm is just stepping on this one.

  6. i will die on the hill that rockstar is so bad it’s hilarious. my dad unironically enjoyed it when i was a kid so i heard it semi-often and it gets funnier every time, that song is such a clusterfuck i adore it. also i had a friend in middle/high school whose biggest personality trait was liking the fray and it SHOWED

  7. 1) So far, none of my songs has surpassed Huck Johns' biggest hit in views.
    2) Even a complete nobody like me can pay a professional photographer for their work.
    3) Pantera do have a complicated legacy but I love them and most likely always will. But yeah, Rebel Meets Rebel is pretty terrible.

  8. 10. I want to say this was in a Madden game back in the day.
    9. Pete Wentz is the only reason they were famous.
    8. It's okay Rob, just focus on your Halloween remake, it will all be good.
    7. I personally loved A Mark A Mission…/Dusk & Summer era, the same one that birthed Spider-Man 2: The Song (you know it!). I also liked the intimate and predominately acoustic stylings of the first two records. DC did go through an awkward period after blowing up and the later records are nothing to be desired IMO. However, DC dropped a record in 2022 that I thoroughly enjoyed and could get behind; a lot more than Crooked Shadows. Anyway, here's "Screaming Infidelities"
    6. I remember seeing the music video on vh1, and they censored words like "drugs", "assholes", and "pills from a Pez dispenser". Any music video that features Gene Simmons, Wayne Gretzky, The Iceman, Lupe Fiasco, Nelly Furtado, Paul Wall, Jerry Cantrell, "Jennifer Mosely", 1/2 of Garfunkel and Oates, and the Naked Cowboy deserves a better song than this (they can keep Kid Rock and Ted Nugent)
    5. I never knew they had a hit passed "Click Click Boom".
    4. A "hypnotist" played this at my college. That is all.
    3. Pay Your Photographers!
    2. Christian Music can rock (i.e. Define the Great Line, Redeemer, Never Take Friendship Personal, The Weak's End). Just don't step into the circle and whatever TFK said.
    1. This was everywhere. Any popular primetime drama from 2005-2008 had this song playing in every pivotal downer scene. I never had a personal attachment to this song, hence I never paid close attention to the lyrics until this video. It makes me side with MCR's FLW more than this.

  9. I thought “how to save a life” was about a child being sat down by their parent(s) l about a divorce from both the perspectives of the child and the parents. Had no idea it was about helping someone with mental illness.

  10. Great shout-out to the COLTS! I'm a Hoosier and a lifelong Colts fan so I'm not sure if your a fan or not because you never talk about sports but it gave me a smile when I seen that. If you are a Colts fan well I think this year is going to be amazing because they a stacked and Matt Ryan is a beast.

  11. I think I speak for every wrestling fan when I say if you didn't mention Wrestlemania 23 before the next segment, I would've shut the whole video off.

    Divorced from that context, the song isn't all that great though.

  12. I was seven years old when these songs came out. If there's anything I can remember about what radio stations tended to play in 2006, it's that those piano ballad songs like #1, "Bad Day", and "Chasing Cars" were EVERYWHERE.

    Even though nowadays I have somewhat of a newfound appreciation for them, I absolutely hated them at the time. It was the sort of music you'd hear playing in a hospital waiting room as you leaned your head against the wall and yawned the entire time.

    That being said, I probably would have still taken those whiny piano songs over whatever trash-tier post-grunge was all over the charts in those days. Nickelback was unavoidable, and those Hinder and Buckcherry songs were godawful then and they're still godawful now.

    Anyway, this video was fun and nostalgic. I'm really liking these "top ten songs by year" videos you've been making – would you be interested in doing more in the future?

  13. I really dig Educated Horses and Foxy, Foxy. I actually thought Hellbilly Deluxe 2 was pretty lackluster and the lead single, Sick Bubblegum, was downright bad. I really like the different sounds on the album, stuff like Devils Rejects and Lords of Salem.

  14. I have no idea what TFK is. It's nice to know that I made it into my 30's before having to hear this. I have a much stronger constitution now than I did at 15.

  15. Been watching your channel since highschool and the records behind you in this video are great sir 🫡🫡

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