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ENHYPEN Lands Fifth Top 10 on Album Sales Chart With ‘Dark Blood’

ENHYPEN Lands Fifth Top 10 on Album Sales Chart With ‘Dark Blood’

ENHYPEN lands its fifth top 10-charting effort on Billboard’s Top Album Sales chart (dated June 17) as the Korean pop group’s Dark Blood bows at No. 2 with 85,000 copies sold in the United States in the week ending June 8 (up 31,696%) according to Luminate. It’s the best sales week yet for the act. The album was released as a digital download on May 22, but its CD release on June 2 prompts its debut on the Top Album Sales chart.

Also in the top 10 of the new Top Album Sales chart, Stray Kids, Jelly Roll, Foo Fighters, Avenged Sevenfold, Rancid and Bob Dylan all see their latest releases debut.

Billboard’s Top Album Sales chart ranks the top-selling albums of the week based only on traditional album sales. The chart’s history dates back to May 25, 1991, the first week Billboard began tabulating charts with electronically monitored piece count information from SoundScan, now Luminate. Pure album sales were the sole measurement utilized by the Billboard 200 albums chart through the list dated Dec. 6, 2014, after which that chart switched to a methodology that blends album sales with track equivalent album units and streaming equivalent album units. The new June 17, 2023-dated chart will be posted in full on Billboard‘s website on June 13.  For all chart news, follow @billboard and @billboardcharts on both Twitter and Instagram.

Like many K-pop releases, the CD edition of Dark Blood was issued in collectible CD packages (17 total, including exclusives for Barnes & Noble, Target, Walmart, the Weverse store and a signed edition sold through the group’s official webstore), each containing a standard set of bonus items and randomized elements (photo cards, post cards, photo books). Of Dark Blood’s 85,000 copies sold in the week ending June 8, CD sales comprise 99.4% of the sum, with the rest in digital download album sales. The set was not released in any other configuration (such as vinyl or cassette).

At No. 1 on Top Album Sales, Stray Kids blast in with 5-STAR, selling 235,000 copies – the largest sales week ever for the Korean pop act and the biggest for any album in 2023. It’s the third chart-topper for the ensemble, following MAXIDENT and ODDINARY, both in 2022.

The CD edition of 5-STAR was available in collectible CD packages (18 total, including exclusives for Barnes & Noble, Target, Walmart and a signed edition in the group’s webstore), each containing a standard set of bonus items and randomized elements (photo cards, mini posters, sticker sets, photo books). There were also four alternative digital versions of the album, sold only in the act’s webstore, each containing the base song tracklist, but with alternative covers and bonus voice memos from individual members of the eight-member group, each selling for $6.99.

Nearly all of 5-STAR’s first-week album sales were CDs (98%; 231,000), with about 2% from digital album sales (about 4,000). The set was not available in any other configuration.

Jelly Roll jumps in at No. 3 with his first top 10-charting album, Whitsitt Chapel, selling 63,000 copies – his best sales week. Whitsitt’s sales were aided by three vinyl LPs (including a color variant exclusive for Walmart), a standard CD, a signed CD sold through Jelly Roll’s webstore, a deeply discounted digital album (only $4.20 for a limited time during the tracking week in his webstore), nine deluxe CD boxed sets that included branded merch and a copy of the CD and a “hymnal” Zine/CD package.

Foo Fighters’ But Here We Are debuts at No. 4 with 55,000 copies sold – the band’s 12th top 10-charting set. It was available in relatively few iterations for purchase – compared to other new albums that bowed the same day. But Here We Are was only released as a standard CD, cassette, digital download an album and two vinyl variants (a black vinyl and a white-colored vinyl). Despite its basic vinyl offerings, it still sold well on wax, with 23,000 of its sales on vinyl (it debuts at No. 1 on the Vinyl Albums chart). The new studio album is the first since the act’s drummer Taylor Hawkins died in early 2022.

Avenged Sevenfold bows at No. 5 with Life Is But a Dream…, selling 28,000 copies in its first week. It’s the sixth top 10 for the rock band. The set’s sales were supported by its availability across a dozen vinyl variants, resulting in 11,000 vinyl sales and a No. 2 bow on the Vinyl Albums chart.

Taylor Swift’s chart-topping Midnights falls 1-6 with 24,000 sold (down 88%).

Bob Dylan’s new Shadow Kingdom starts at No. 7 with nearly 12,000 sold, mostly from CD sales (7,000). The album was only available in three configurations – a CD, digital download album and vinyl LP.

SEVENTEEN’s former No. 1 SEVENTEEN 10th Mini Album: FML dips 3-8 with 9,000 sold (down 27%).

Rock act Rancid rounds out the debuts in the top 10, as its new studio effort Tomorrow Never Comes bows at No. 9 with a little more than 8,000 sold. It’s the second top 10-charting effort for the veteran band.

Closing out the top 10 is the Guardians of the Galaxy, Vol. 3: Awesome Mix Vol. 3 soundtrack, falling 4-10 with 8,000 sold (down 22%).

In the week ending June 8, there were 2.102 million albums sold in the U.S. (up 16.7% compared to the previous week). Of that sum, physical albums (CDs, vinyl LPs, cassettes, etc.) comprised 1.732 million (up 27.6%) and digital albums comprised 370,000 (down 16.6%).

There were 960,000 CD albums sold in the week ending June 8 (up 59.4% week-over-week) and 762,000 vinyl albums sold (up 2%). Year-to-date CD album sales stand at 15.480 million (up 6.1% compared to the same time frame a year ago) and year-to-date vinyl album sales total 21.098 million (up 24.3%).

Overall year-to-date album sales total 45.032 million (up 9.8% compared to the same year-to-date time frame a year ago). Year-to-date physical album sales stand at 35.816 million (up 15.8%) and digital album sales total 8.216 million (down 11.1%).

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Welcome to News Originals with me, Bev, here in Washington, D.C.The inability of human beings to put down their mobile phones is destroying relationships and detonating families. Ask any parent of teenagers what causes the most conflict in their house, and I promise you they'll say it's the perpetual nagging of "Put that down!", the vanishing attention span, the boyfriend breakup that can't be left at the front door, and the school bully who now travels home in your child's pocket.We don't need a government to tell us these devices are harming our kids. We are painfully aware of it. But Starmer's social media ban for under-16s will do nothing meaningful to address the addictive and destructive nature of these platforms. Kids will find workarounds. Parents will create fake accounts to stop the constant nagging. Some children will simply be allowed access to Snapchat because their parents want them to talk to their friends after school, as kids have always done.But be under no illusion. For all of us, this is the creaking open of the digital cage door, dressed up as a welcoming velvet rope.Just as narrative control once meant that arguing against unscientific lockdowns rendered you a "granny killer," arguing that this TikTok ban is wrong will now make you a "paedophile enabler." It does not.Every right-minded person wants children to grow up safely. The paedophiles won't disappear. They'll move to gaming platforms or other sites accessed through VPNs. They'll go back to hanging around school gates, as they did in the old days.If you have any imagination at all, and can see where this inevitably leads, you know that none of it is good. It will fundamentally change the relationship between the individual and the internet in the UK, potentially forever.The addictive nature of the algorithm is our true enemy. Call out the tech companies for that. Demand to see their research into targeted advertising.One of the most pernicious stories I've ever heard is that if a teenage girl takes a selfie and then deletes it, her phone can immediately serve up a makeup advert designed to catch her at her most vulnerable moment.So why is it up to me, rather than Keir Starmer, to tell you about that?Have you ever heard him criticising the tech bros whose own children rarely hold a smartphone? No, not really. That might make conversations around the Davos dinner table a little awkward.Do you feel that any politician has genuinely helped parents and children arm themselves against this influence through tools or apps that actually work?Not a single MP seems to be begging teachers to remove screens from classrooms and homework altogether, as they have done in Sweden.The antidote to staring at a wall, as one girl said in an interview today, is sport. It's music. It's drama. It's clubs. Invest in our teenagers if you genuinely want to get them out of their bedrooms.I freely admit that parents should not be left to fight the largest technology companies in the world on our own. It is not a fair fight.I tell my children that their phones are designed to make them addicted. It is up to them to develop the discipline to put them down and switch them off.And as parents, we must model that behaviour ourselves. Mealtimes with phones out of sight. Not constantly walking around with one in our hand. Charging them downstairs at night.It isn't easy. But good parenting has never been easy.The cost of this policy is so significant that it's no wonder Starmer is presenting it as a parting gift before he is potentially forced from office. He is, in my view, fulfilling the ambitions of a global surveillance framework championed by his allies at the UN, the WHO and the WEF.And if he can get this critical piece of digital infrastructure over the line, he'll likely walk into a very well-paid position at the NGO top table, because it is going to make a small number of people extremely rich.Let me ask you this:How do you stop a 13-year-old from using Snapchat without checking the 30-year-old as well?You can't.So every one of us is going to have our faces scanned.We are effectively cut-and-pasting the Australian model, a model many assume has already proven successful. Not necessarily. It was only implemented in December last year. It is far too soon to know whether it has had any meaningful impact on grooming, bullying, self-harm, poor mental health, or teenage wellbeing more broadly.Yes, there has been a measurable decline in child accounts. But how many of those users simply claimed to be adults and created new accounts?That doesn't prove children are safer.We can watch and learn from Australia. But we cannot pretend the experiment has already delivered a definitive verdict. It hasn't.Starmer described the ban as "a huge step for our country." He said it represents our values and forms part of a cultural transformation in how children grow up.But the government has no evidence that a blanket ban will work better than targeted restrictions on harmful features such as addictive algorithms.In reality, this means that before you, as an adult, read a post, store a photo, or send a message, you'll be expected to prove your identity and demonstrate that you're a citizen pre-approved to access information.Who do they think they are?Empty our bins. Fix our roads. Run our hospitals.Otherwise, get out of our lives.The default setting of Britain used to be that the state left you alone unless you gave it a reason not to. That principle has been gradually eroded—and much more quickly in recent years.This isn't a boot stamping on a face. You would have rejected that. Instead, it's the slow erosion of individual freedom.Now you're presumed to be a suspect with a phone until you prove otherwise.They didn't ask you, "Do you mind if we build a national biometric database?"Because most of us would have said, "No thanks. I'm quite happy without one."Instead, they effectively ran a pilot scheme through online pornography.Almost a year ago, age-verification checks for adult content went live in the UK. Predictably, Pornhub traffic reportedly fell by 77%.That may not be a bad thing. But let's be honest: VPN sales surged.How many of those VPNs ended up in the hands of teenagers whose parents can no longer see what they're doing online?There were no marches in the streets. No television panellists screaming outrage because, frankly, unrestricted access to pornography is not a cause many people are prepared to publicly champion.But the government paid attention. Then it moved on to stage two.Apple and Google have now been ordered to install software capable of examining user content, under threat of criminal penalties if they refuse. Refusing to comply could expose executives to prison sentences of up to five years.And remember: in September 2025, Starmer stood behind a lectern and announced a mandatory digital ID scheme with the confidence of a man who assumed it would be popular.Britain's digital ID push isn't about streamlining paperwork. It's about hardwiring state power into everyday life.The public responded with almost three million signatures on a single petition—the fourth-largest petition in parliamentary history.He completely underestimated you.Public support for digital ID collapsed from +35 to -14.That was the nation telling the Prime Minister a very clear "No."And who decides which platforms are dangerous?There is already outrage online that Bluesky—the self-described "nice" platform—is exempt from this ban.I spent a few minutes looking through it today. It was a mixture of sunset photographs and some of the most bitter political activists imaginable, demanding boycotts and bans against anyone who steps outside their narrow ideological boundaries.I can see why Keir Starmer likes it.This generation of 16-year-olds has been given the vote, but not the ability to read about politics online.Perhaps the BBC will do that job for the government.This government doesn't seem particularly concerned about preventing violent crime, but it does seem very concerned about limiting what people can see and discuss online.Social media, of course, is not the first technology to transform teenage life.I remember stretching the telephone cord into the hallway so I could have a conversation without my parents listening.Teenagers are hard-wired to seek independence. They need private conversations with friends. That's important.They have always wanted spaces where adults aren't listening.A Snapchat call between friends is not the same thing as an algorithmically driven platform competing for a child's attention every waking hour.This debate has become far too simplistic.Social media is not pure poison.The real challenge lies in teaching young people how to live with technology, because they will have to do so for the rest of their lives.We teach children how to cross the road. We teach them about healthy eating.Why aren't we teaching attention management?Why aren't we teaching children practical techniques for putting their phones down?How to recognise addictive design features.How to switch notifications off.How to create phone-free periods during the day.How to sleep without a device beside the bed.How to concentrate on one task at a time.These are life skills now—perhaps some of the most important life skills of all.A social media ban may help some families. It may help children who are compliant and responsive to authority. It may reduce exposure to harmful content. For some, it may ease the relentless pressure of online life.Let's hope it does.But at what cost to our civil liberties?No law can replace engaged and competent parents, empowered teachers, and children who have learned to control technology rather than be controlled by it.Let me know what you think in the comments.Like and share this wherever you can, and subscribe to GB News on YouTube.See you again soon.

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