The People's Choice, Literally
To understand the American Music Awards, you have to ignore almost everything you think you know about other major awards shows, like the Oscars or the Grammys. The AMAs are not decided by a mysterious academy of industry insiders voting in a quiet room.
The process is right there in the open: nominations are based almost entirely on data. The show partners with Billboard, and nominees are chosen based on key fan interactions, including streaming numbers, album and song sales, and radio airplay. Once the nominees are set, the winners are determined by votes cast by the general public online. In short, the AMAs are a pure popularity contest, and they’re not hiding it. This structure means the nominee list is a direct reflection of what the American public has been listening to on repeat, buying, and requesting for the past year. It's less a critical endorsement and more a statistical fact.
Prestige vs. Popularity
This data-driven approach puts the AMAs in stark contrast to the Grammys, often considered the music industry’s highest honor. The Grammys are awarded by the Recording Academy, a body of thousands of musicians, producers, engineers, and other voting members. Their process is meant to reward artistic and technical achievement—what the industry itself deems “the best.” This can lead to critically acclaimed but commercially modest albums winning major categories. The AMAs, on the other hand, couldn’t care less about critical acclaim if it doesn’t translate to clicks, streams, and sales. This is why an artist like Taylor Swift or Drake can dominate AMA nominations year after year; their commercial footprint is simply enormous. It's not a judgment on their art so much as a measurement of their market share. One award measures prestige as defined by peers; the other measures popularity as defined by the masses.
Decoding 'Consumption'
In the modern music landscape, “consumption” is a complex and all-encompassing metric. It's not just about who bought the most CDs at Target. Today, it’s a digital-first ecosystem. A single song’s success is measured by its streams on Spotify and Apple Music, its official video views on YouTube, its use in viral videos on TikTok, its digital download sales on iTunes, and its spins on terrestrial and satellite radio. Each of these interactions is a data point that feeds into the Billboard charts, which in turn feed the AMA nominations. This is why artists who have mastered the art of digital omnipresence often outperform legacy acts. Think of artists like Morgan Wallen or Bad Bunny. Their albums may not be in every household, but they generate billions of streams, dominating playlists and algorithms. Their success is a testament to consistent, high-volume engagement, making them perfect standard-bearers for a consumption-based awards show.
A Mirror to the Mainstream
So, what is the point of an award that just reflects what’s already popular? Its value lies in its honesty. The AMAs function as a clear, unbiased mirror of American musical tastes. There are no snubs for being “too commercial” because being commercial is the entire point. The show provides a fascinating annual snapshot of what songs soundtracked American life—the gym playlists, the road trip anthems, the viral dance challenges. While the Grammys try to anoint a few works for the historical canon, the AMAs simply tell you what was big, right now. It celebrates the artists who have built the most powerful and direct connection with their audience, bypassing critical gatekeepers entirely. In an industry that is increasingly about artists cultivating direct fan relationships, the AMAs might just be the most modern and relevant awards show of them all.















