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Bruno Mars joins music royalty with debut album history — and admits he hates one of his biggest hits

Bruno Mars has officially joined music royalty despite publicly admitting he can’t stand one of the songs that got him there.

The pop superstar’s 2010 debut album Doo-Wops & Hooligans has just entered one of music’s most exclusive clubs, spending a jaw-dropping 750 weeks on the Billboard 200 albums chart.

That puts it alongside all-time classics from Eminem, Pink Floyd, Bob Marley, and Metallica.

The record, packed with early hits like Just The Way You AreGrenade and The Lazy Song, was the launch pad for Mars’ superstardom.

Bruno Mars performing on stage.
Bruno Mars’ debut album Doo-Wops & Hooligans reached 750 weeks on the Billboard 200 albums chart. Christopher Polk
Bruno Mars performs on stage at the Revlon concert for the Rainforest Fund at Carnegie Hall.
Bruno Mars performs on stage at the Revlon concert for the Rainforest Fund at Carnegie Hall on April 3, 2012, in New York City. WireImage

But while those tracks helped define a decade of pop, the singer himself has admitted he’s not exactly fond of one of them.

“I hate that song, by the way,” Mars told GQ in 2013, referring to The Lazy Song.

He’s kept the joke alive over the years too, once sharing a clip on Instagram captioned: “When someone tells me they actually like The Lazy Song …” followed by a deadpan stare straight into the camera.

That same “lazy” little anthem, however, just hit Diamond status (10x Platinum), proving fans still can’t resist its laid-back charm, even if the man who wrote it can.

Bruno Mars and four people in monkey masks, all wearing plaid shirts and sunglasses, posing for "The Lazy Song" music video.
“I hate that song, by the way,” Mars said in 2013, referring to The Lazy Song on the album. YouTube/Bruno Mars

A record-breaking run

Doo-Wops & Hooligans has now officially logged 750 weeks on the Billboard 200, meaning it’s been one of America’s 200 biggest albums every single week for over 14 years.

Illustration of the album cover for Bruno Mars' "Doo-Wops & Hooligans," depicting a man walking on a winding yellow path under a rocket.
Doo-Wops & Hooligans is one of America’s 200 biggest albums every single week for over 14 years. Elektra

Only a handful of legendary records have ever done the same, including:

The Dark Side of the Moon — Pink Floyd

Legend — Bob Marley & The Wailers

Legend (Bob Marley and the Wailers album) 1984 album cover featuring Bob Marley looking to the right, with his hand on his chin.
Bob Marley’s album also reached this milestone. Tuff Gong

Metallica — Metallica

Chronicle: The 20 Greatest Hits — Creedence Clearwater Revival

Curtain Call: The Hits — Eminem

Album cover for Eminem's "Curtain Call: The Hits" showing his legs and torso in a suit, standing on a stage covered with red roses and green stems.
Eminem also achieved this accomplishment. Interscope Records

Journey’s Greatest Hits

According to Billboard, the album still moves around 11,800 equivalent units a week, fueled by streams of its endlessly replayed hits.

Bruno is breaking streaming and sales records

Bruno Mars performing on stage.
Mars’ debut single Just The Way You Are has gone 21x Platinum. WireImage
Recording artist Bruno Mars performs onstage.
Mars performs onstage during the GRAMMY Awards at Madison Square Garden on January 28, 2018, in New York City. Getty Images for NARAS

Mars’ debut single Just The Way You Are has also now become the highest-certified song in RIAA history, going 21x Platinum and surpassing Sunflower by Post Malone and Swae Lee.

With that, he’s tied with The Weeknd and Rihanna for the third-most Diamond-certified singles of all time.v

Rosé accepts the Song of the Year Award for "APT" at the 2025 MTV Video Music Awards.
Mars has collabed with BLACKPINK’s Rosé. Getty Images for MTV
Lady Gaga and Bruno Mars perform onstage.
Lady Gaga and Bruno Mars perform onstage during the GRAMMY Awards at Crypto.com Arena in February in Los Angeles, California. Getty Images for The Recording Academy

And earlier this year, he became the first artist in Spotify history to reach 150 million monthly listeners — holding the No. 1 spot on the platform, thanks to massive collabs like Die With a Smile with Lady Gaga and Apt. with BLACKPINK’s Rosé, both of which hit a billion streams faster than any other songs in Spotify’s history.

For all his playful self-criticism, The Lazy Song might be exactly what cemented Bruno Mars’ global appeal. It’s cheeky, catchy, and effortlessly cool.

Even if he hates it, fans clearly don’t. 14 years later, that mix of pop polish and personality has turned Doo-Wops & Hooligans into one of the most enduring debut albums of all time.