Mark Hoyle, better known as LadBaby, has announced that after five 
consecutive years at the top of the Official UK singles charts on Christmas 
weekend with a series of parody records praising sausage rolls that were 
fundraisers for a food bank (beating a record for Christmas No. 1s held 
previously by the Beatles), he will not be putting out a Christmas record 
this year, thereby throwing everything up for grabs in a country where 
bookmakers will take bets on the Christmas No. 1:

https://www.officialcharts.com/chart-news/ladbaby-christmas-number-1-single-2023/?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=LadBaby+2023+breaking+news&utm_content=LadBaby+2023+breaking+news+CID_a1a2f48613ac9ae2e0126e810994a521&utm_source=CampaignMonitor&utm_term=Find+out+More

The whole Christmas No. 1 thing has become more noticeable in the last two 
decades as the spot seemed to be held every year by the coronation record 
of the winner of a reality comp (usually "The X Factor"), which was 
thwarted in 2009 when Rage Against the Machine, which has never hit the top 
in its home country of the U.S., got the Christmas No. 1 with "Killing in 
the Name" after an Internet campaign for the song to knock out the "X 
Factor" winner.

For the record the Fab Four's Christmas number 1s were "I Want to Hold Your 
Hand" (1963), "I Feel Fine" (1964), "Day Tripper"/"We Can Work It Out" 
(1965) and "Hello Goodbye" (1967).

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