
Taylor Swift's Album Enjoys A Summertime Chart Revival
Folklore Is One of Eight Swift Albums Charting This Week
The Grammy-winning Album of the Year is the only title from Swift to rise on any ranking in the U.S. this week, and it manages to climb on each list on which it appears. Folklore lifts to No. 6 on the Top Alternative Albums chart, No. 14 on the Top Rock & Alternative Albums ranking, and to No. 61 on the Billboard 200. The set earns the greatest gain on that latter tally, where it improves by seven spots.
Consumption of Taylor Swift's Folklore Grows
Consumption of Folklore increased by just under 5% from one week to the next, which helps to explain its rise in the U.S. According to Luminate, the album moved just under 14,600 equivalent units between sales and streaming activity, up from 13,950 during the previous period.
'August' Fuels Swift's Return to the Spotlight
Folklore has been back in the news recently, as it became Swift's latest album to reach half a decade on the Billboard 200. The title may have received a boost thanks to the renewed attention, or perhaps because the end of summer holds a special meaning for the project. Folklore includes the track 'August,' so streams and sales of that cut, which contribute to the success of the full-length, tend to grow toward the end of July and certainly as August begins.
With August Here, Folklore Could Climb Again
There's a good chance that since August 1 marks the beginning of a new tracking period, Folklore could climb again in a few days when Billboard publishes updated rankings. It may even rise once more as millions of fans return to 'August' and, in some instances, Folklore as a whole to honor that standout track.
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"You gotta hook up a propane heater for the mash, there's like, five what they don't tell you is, propane's not included." The propane czar of all television himself lets out a knowing chuckle and replies, "Oh, that won't be a problem for me." A cardboard cutout of Mangione sharing a friendly embrace and toasting glasses of ale with Snoop Dogg heads up the equipment stand. "Brew up a new hobby, Snoop," Mangione's speech bubble reads, with season 13 guest star Snoop adding, "Drank responsibly, Chuck!" Johnny Hardwick Hardwick, who voiced the paranoid, hilarious, plotting, and conspiratorial Dale throughout King of the Hill's original 13-season run, died in 2023. Of the core four members of KOTH's alley gang, including series star Hank Hill (voiced by co-creator Mike Judge), Boomhauer (also Judge), and Bill Dauterive (Stephen Root), Dale's penchant for magical thinking and creatively inept schemes marked him as an enduring fan favorite. 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The episode takes a Dale-heavy turn when the book nook ends up introducing something else to Arlen: bed bugs. He puts his considerable experience as the owner and operator of extermination service Dale's Dead-Bug to rid Rainey Street of the pests, which are now dividing the community that the books had just brought together. The episode ends in a blaze of glory with Dale triumphant, before flashing to a touching title card that reads, "In loving memory: Johnny Hardwick," and features a photo of Dale beside a photo of the late actor. Jonathan Joss Jonathan Joss, the Native American actor who lent his voice to the esteemed, and also partly scheming John Redcorn across King of the Hill's original run, died in June 2025. (A running gag on the show is that John is the true father of Joseph, Dale's son with wife Nancy.) Joss was shot and killed by his neighbor, Sigfredo Ceja Álvarez, following an alleged dispute on their San Antonio properties. 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