Future Wraps Fifth-Longest Hot 100 Charting Streak After 166 Weeks

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Future is spotted at the Gold Room on Jan. 19, 2017 in Atlanta.

The departure of "King’s Dead" completes a run that began in April 2015.

Future wraps the fifth-longest charting streak ever on the Billboard Hot 100 as he departs the list dated June 2, his first absence after 166 consecutive weeks of boasting at least one song on the ranking.

The superstar rapper’s run began way back on April 18, 2015, when the single “Commas” debuted at No. 98, and lasted through the Black Panther soundtrack cut “King’s Dead,” with Jay Rock, Kendrick Lamar and James Blake, which peaked at No. 21 in March and left the chart after 20 weeks. In that span, Future landed 53 hits on the Hot 100 and pushed his career total to 68 charting entries.

Future’s stretch of 166 weeks is the fifth-best stint in Hot 100 history, dating to the chart’s inception on Aug. 4, 1958.

Here’s a look at the current leaderboard for most consecutive weeks on the Hot 100:

431, Drake
326, Lil Wayne
216, Rihanna
207, Nicki Minaj
166, Future
161, Chris Brown
159, JAY-Z
152, Nelly
150, Justin Bieber

Unsurprisingly, the list features several rap acts, who often provide guest verses in line with the collaborative nature of the genre. Similarly, Rihanna, Brown and Bieber, while not primarily rappers, are are often recruited to sing the main hooks on several pop and rap hits.

During his lengthy run, Future nabbed his first top 10 Hot 100 hit as a lead artist, “Mask Off,” which climbed to No. 5 in May 2017. It also ranked as his second-longest-charting tune in that window, with its 31 weeks on the chart trailing only “Low Life,” featuring The Weeknd, which posted 35 weeks.

The MC's constant hitmaking lined up with his steady output: He has released six studio albums since 2015, with five debuting at No. 1 on the Billboard 200DS2 (2015); What a Time to Be Alive, a joint album with Drake (2015); Evol (2016); a self-titled set (2017); and HNDRXX (2017). His 2017 works also scored the Atlanta native a slice of chart history when he became the first act to debut two albums at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 in consecutive weeks.