Critical reception
The song has received mixed reviews from music critics. Kevin John Coyne of Country Universe rated the song a D, stating until McEntire put out something better, he would keep listening to " Consider Me Gone." Matt Bjorke of Roughstock gave the song 4 and a 1/2 stars out of 5, stating that "in the hands of a less-seasoned vocalist this song could’ve been something horribly lacking but in Reba’s hand’s it’s a remarkable success."Promotion
McEntire performed the song thus-far on three occasions. First, being on the release date of her new album ''Music video
The video for the song was directed by Randee St. Nicholas, and was released in August 2010. Filmed over 2 days in a warehouse in Nashville (a lightning storm and tornado warning pushed shooting an extra day), the video begins with Reba wearing a black hooded cloak humming the song to herself while entering the warehouse as a train passes by. She is then seen in a dimly lit hallway with swinging lights hanging above her. After taking her things off, she takes out a box-cutter and opens boxes containing radios, which she puts on a rack filled with other radios. She then proceeds to sing the song into a microphone to a guy sitting in a chair, who just stares into space and remains blank-faced. Reba then turns on every radio on the rack behind her as she continues singing to the guy. As the final chorus hits, she ties the man up with her microphone cord, puts on her things, and leaves. As Reba gets into her car, the tied up guy finally realizes how he treated Reba, and opens his iPhone to see multiple text messages sent to him by Reba that read "Turn On The RADIO!!!!!!"Chart performance
"Turn On the Radio" debuted at number 54 on the ''Billboard'' Hot Country Songs chart for the week of July 24, 2010. The single is McEntire's 60th Top 10 single on the country charts, making her the first female country artist in history to achieve that many top 10 hits. The song peaked at number one on the ''Billboard'' Hot Country Songs chart for the week of January 1, 2011, making it McEntire's 25th and final number 1 song on the chart, tying Dolly Parton for most number 1 songs by a female country artist.Year-end charts
Certifications
References
{{Reba McEntire singles 2010 singles Reba McEntire songs Song recordings produced by Dann Huff Big Machine Records singles 2010 songs Music videos directed by Randee St. Nicholas