I'm curious if people (do, should, will) post their playlists online.
For example, I maintain an RSS feed which lists the Title, Artist, and Album information for all the songs I play in an evening. (I want to add BPM Real Soon Now...)
It's nice, too, because whenever somebody wants to know what that really cool song was that I played last night, they now have a place to look. (You know, like unless you KNOW the title of "Mr. Ghost Goes To Town" or "Celery Stalks at Midnight" or "Blues My Naughty Sweetie Gave To Me", there's no way you'd ever be able to find them on the iTunes Music Store. And these are songs you hear *ALL* the time!)
Each playlist includes the music we use to teach[*] our lessons (so you'll probably see Indigo Swing's version of "My Baby Just Cares For Me" and Campus Five's excellent rendition of Harry James / Helen Forrest's "Mister Five by Five" a *WHOLE* lot) but long about song 5 or 6 or so, the actual dance starts up... My 'signature' opening is "Baron Plays the Horses" 'cuz I like the race-track sax intro.

[* - We teach an 8-Week Series, so the "Week #" at the top indicates how far we are into the lesson. Week One, for example, might use different material than Week Seven.]
FYI - Where I spin, most of the people tend to be on the "Intermediate Plus" side; they like Jump Blues, Rock and Roll, and not-too-fast Balboa music -- mostly ~150-200BPM. Also, the sound system there, uhm, shall we say, "prefers" more contemporary, higher-fidelity recordings, so I tend to avoid tinny "vintage" tracks -- much to my chagrin!

Anyway, I'm curious if other people keep track of what they spin, and would be willing to share. I know I'm kind of sticking my neck out, opening myself up to criticism, but what can I say? I believe in transparency; information wants to be free! Hehe....
(I'm also curious to see who believes their playlists are sacred, tightly guarded intellectual property... And why?)
Cheers!