Attention Graph:

The Bold & The Beautiful

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The nearest audiences to The Bold & The Beautiful span an unusually wide range of entity types — daytime TV shows, casual dining chains, discount retailers, and packaged food brands all cluster within a tight similarity band, with no single neighbor pulling far ahead of the rest.

The shape is broad. The Talk leads at 0.93, the only neighbor that clears 0.91, but the drop-off from there is gradual rather than steep. LongHorn Steakhouse (0.91) and Outback Steakhouse (0.90) sit just behind it — both restaurants, not TV shows — followed by Big Lots (0.89) and the two Young & The Restless accounts, Young & The Restless and Young and Restless, each at 0.89. By position 10, Wheel of Fortune still registers 0.88. That compressed range across ten very different entity types is the defining structural feature here.

Tallying the subcategories across the top 10: five are TV Shows, four are Restaurants, and one is Grocery and Superstores. The TV Show neighbors are all daytime or game-show formats — The Talk, Young & The Restless, Young and Restless, Let's Make a Deal, and Wheel of Fortune — which places The Bold & The Beautiful squarely inside a daytime CBS audience cluster. The restaurant neighbors — LongHorn Steakhouse, Outback Steakhouse, Steak 'n Shake, and Hardees — are a cross-kind finding: casual and fast-casual dining brands whose audiences happen to share the same shape as a daytime soap opera's viewership.

The broad shape, with high scores sustained across both same-kind TV shows and cross-kind restaurant and retail brands, points to an audience with a consistent demographic signature that many mainstream consumer brands recognize as their own.

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