In 2017, Women Only Made Up 7.5% of Country Radio’s Top 40

Yes, this topic again. And if you don’t like reading about it, tough titty. Perhaps if mainstream country radio put out a modicum of effort to even try to hide the fact they’re outright excluding certain artists from radio play strictly due to their gender, we could shut the hell up about all of this. You’re tired of reading about it? Well I’m twice as tired writing about it. But the problem continues to get worse instead of better, clearly corroborated by the end-of-year numbers for country radio and the abysmal representation of women once again. The numbers don’t just compel one to speak up on the issue, they downright require it.

And no, this isn’t just about putting crappy pop performers on country radio simply because they’re women. Obviously, quality should be the biggest qualifier of what should succeed on country radio, not an artist’s sets of chromosomes. It just happens top be that restoring some gender balance would likely result in better quality, and more country-sounding music as well, with certain exceptions of course.

And don’t act like this isn’t a problem because it’s solely being driven by what people want to listen to. Pretty consistently, the singles released by women do better on the Hot Country Songs chart—which factors in sales and streams—than they do on radio. For example, the Maren Morris song “I Could Use a Love Song” sits at #25 on the year-end Hot Country Songs chart, but falls all the way to #44 on the radio chart. Miranda Lambert’s “Tin Man” comes in at #43 on the year-end Hot Country Songs chart, but doesn’t register at all in the Top 60 on radio. Miranda Lambert’s latest album The Weight of These Wings comes in at #4 on the end-of-year album sales chart, yet without a single song registering in the Top 60 on radio.

And for the record, Chris Stapleton had the #1 and #2 best selling albums of 2016 with his From A Room installments, and also doesn’t have a single song in the radio Top 60. So the idea this discrepancy on country radio is due to sales or appeal is bunk. Country radio is whatever the country music industry is telling their fat cat cronies at radio to play, and they’re not playing women.

Country radio consultant Keith Hill encapsulated the sentiment the country radio format has towards women best when he said, “If you want to make ratings in country radio, take females out,” even though the numbers don’t always bear this out. And sure, maybe folks just like listening more to men than women, but with this ridiculous discrepancy?

This is not a “snowflake” issue. When you have radio consultants saying on record that radio should stop playing women, and it bears itself out so dramatically as illustrated here, it’s a distinct bias that should be an embarrassment to the country radio industry, which should pride itself in respecting the women of country like the legacy of the genre has always done. 


Want to know how bad it is for country women, here’s a breakdown:

No Solo Women Artists in the Top 10 Most-Played Songs on Country Radio in 2017

And except for Lady Antebellum, which includes one female member (out of three), and a guest appearance by Lauren Alaina on Kane Brown’s “What Its,” there’s no women representation whatsoever.

No Solo Women in the Top 15 Most-Played Songs on Country Radio in 2017

A Maren Morris guest appearance on Thomas Rhett’s terrible “Craving You” (#11) is the only additional caveat.

Only 1 Solo Woman in the Entire Country Radio Top 20

That’s Carly Pearce, and her song “Every Little Thing” that comes in at #16. And the only reason it was able to crack the Top 20 is because it benefited from iHeartMedia’s “On The Verge” program which awards additional spins to certain songs across their fastly-crumbling radio empire.

Only 3 Solo Women in the Country Radio Top 30

With Kelsea Ballerini’s “Yeah Boy” coming in at #22, and Lauren Alaina’s “Road Less Traveled” at #25, that gives women a meager and embarrassing 10% representation when looking at the Top 30. But wait until we zoom out a little farther . . .

Only 3 Solo Women in the Country Radio Top 40

That means only 7.5% of the artists played in the Top 40 were women, with the Top 40 being the radio industry standard for representing the playlists of most stations, with a side note of Little Big Town’s “Better Man” coming in at #34. Little Big Town’s lineup includes two men, and two women.

Only 1 Nominee for the CMA Female Vocalist of the Year in the Country Radio Top 40

That’s right, so even the most popular and successful women of the genre aren’t getting radio play. Miranda Lambert, Carrie Underwood, Kacey Musgraves, and even Maren Morris were all locked out of the year-end Top 40 in 2017. Only Kelsea Ballerini makes an appearance, and she was still locked out of the Top 20.

Only 4 Solo Women in the Country Radio Top 50

Even as you continue to zoom out your perspective on country radio, the gender bias doesn’t improve as you start to consider the margins and also-rans. It arguably gets even worse. Even adding Maren Morris and “I Could Use a Love Song” at #44, it still only improves the percentage of women to 8%.

Only 5 Women in the Country Radio Top 60

You have to count past 51 songs and artists until you come to one who has won a CMA for Female Vocalist of the Year, and that’s Carrie Underwood with “Dirty Laundry.” So even zooming out as far as Billboard makes the year-end country radio charts available, the representation of women is still only 8.3%, and the current CMA Female Vocalist of the Year, Miranda Lambert, is still nowhere to be found.


Country Radio Year End Top 40

*Women shown in red

  1. “Body Like a Backroad” – Sam Hunt
  2. “Small Town Boy” – Dustin Lynch
  3. “You Look Good” – Lady Antebellum
  4. “Dirt On My Boots” – Jon Pardi
  5. “Hurricane” – Luke Combs
  6. “My Girl” – Dylan Scott
  7. “What Ifs” – Kane Brown
  8. “No Such Thing as a Broken Heart” – Old Dominion
  9. “Do I Make You Wanna” – Billy Currington
  10. “In Case You Didn’t Know” – Brett Young
  11. “Craving You” – Thomas Rhett
  12. “Somebody Else Will” – Justin Moore
  13. “Yours If You Want It” – Rascal Flatts
  14. “Drinkin’ Problem” – Midland
  15. “Flatliner” – Cole Swindell
  16. “Every Little Thing” – Carly Pearce
  17. “A Guy With A Girl” – Blake Shelton
  18. “The Fighter” – Keith Urban
  19. “More Girls Like You” – Kip Moore
  20. “Black” – Dierks Bentley
  21. “How Not To” – Dan + Shay
  22. “Yeah Boy” – Kelsea Ballerini
  23. “The Weekend” – Brantley Gilbert
  24. “Think A Little Less” – Michael Ray
  25. “Road Less Traveled” – Lauren Alaina
  26. “Fast” – Luke Bryan
  27. “Any Ol’ Barstool” – Jason Aldean
  28. “They Don’t Know” – Jason Aldean
  29. “If I Told You” – Darius Rucker
  30. “Hometown Girl” – Josh Turner
  31. “Every Time I Hear That Song” – Blake Shelton
  32. “Today” – Brad Paisley
  33. “When It Rains It Pours” – Brad Paisley
  34. “Better Man” – Little Big Town
  35. “Sober Saturday Night” – Chris Young
  36. “Kill a Word” – Eric Church
  37. ‘God, Your Mama, and Me” – Florida Georgia Line
  38. “All The Pretty Girls” – Kenny Chesney
  39. “Heartache on the Dancefloor” – Jon Pardi
  40. “Ask Me How I Know” – Garth Brooks
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