It is a list where Eminem sits next to Shakira ("Whenever, Wherever" at #84), and The Strokes sit next to 50 Cent. In the 2000s, a hip-hop fan and a rock fan still listened to the same radio stations. We watched the same MTV.
When we think of the 2000s, a rush of conflicting images appears: low-rise jeans, flip phones, the rise of MySpace, and the birth of the MP3 player. But more than any fashion trend or gadget, the decade is defined by its soundtrack. It was an era of transition—the last dying breaths of CD sales and the chaotic birth of digital downloads. Bridging the gap between the grunge of the '90s and the EDM of the 2010s, the 2000s were a genre-fluid decade. vh1 100 greatest songs of the 2000s
In 2011, just as the decade closed its chapter, VH1 released a definitive list: . It was a monumental task, attempting to squeeze an era of garage rock revival, crunk hip-hop, emo confessionals, and booty-shaking dance-pop into 100 slots. The list sparked bar debates, nostalgia trips, and the inevitable "How did that song rank higher than this ?!" It is a list where Eminem sits next