Adele's "Hello" Broke Pretty Much Every Digital Music Record

A million downloads in a week, for starters.

By now, you've probably heard Adele's "Hello."

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I know you've heard it because a mind-boggling 1.11 million people BOUGHT the song, according to Nielsen Music.

Bought, not streamed. That means "Hello" is, by far, the fastest-selling digital record of all time.

Second place? "Right Round" by Flo Rida.

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It took about six and a half years for this (awful) song to lose its spot at the top. But "Hello" didn't just unseat Flo Rida's track — it demolished it. With "Hello," Adele nearly doubled Flo Rida's 636,000 first week digital sales, Billboard reported.

"Hello" is also the 24th song to ever debut at No. 1 on the Billboard charts.

"Hello" also dominated on streaming services.

During its first week, Adele's song racked up some 20.4 million on-demand streams in the U.S. The previous record setter — Justin Bieber's "What Do You Mean" — managed just 10.1 million streams during its first week.

The only track to be streamed more in single week was Baauer's "Harlem Shake."

And that song was boosted by a flood of user-generated viral videos using the song's audio. About half of Adele's 61.6 million streams came from the single official YouTube video on her Vevo channel.

At this point, you can basically make up new records for "Hello" to break.

And the album on which it's featured, 25, hasn't even been released yet. It drops Nov. 20.

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