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Fargo

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Jimmy Fallon sits at the top of Fargo's neighbor set — not another prestige drama, but a late-night TV personality at 0.68 — and that cross-kind signal defines the shape of this audience.

The pre-computed shape is "two-peak," and the data bears it out. The first cluster is built around TV personalities and actors: Jimmy Fallon (0.68), Megan Mullally (0.68), Jane Lynch (0.68), Colin Hanks (0.65), and Neil Patrick Harris (0.64) all land in the top seven. The second peak is fellow TV shows: True Detective (0.63), Saturday Night Live (0.62), and CBS Sunday Morning (0.62) form a distinct cluster of their own. Between those two poles sits Trent Reznor (0.65), the lone musician in the top 10, bridging the two neighborhoods without anchoring either.

Tallying the top 10 by subcategory: five are Actors, one is a TV Personality, one is a Musicians and Bands entry, and three are TV Shows — including True Detective as the only other prestige drama in the set. The actor-heavy cluster is notably cross-kind relative to Fargo itself; these are not shows that resemble Fargo thematically but audiences whose composition mirrors its own. The TV Shows cluster, by contrast, represents same-kind overlap, though it skews toward variety and morning programming rather than serialized drama.

The two-peak structure suggests Fargo's audience is pulled in two directions simultaneously: toward the celebrity-driven, personality-forward world of actors and hosts, and toward the broader TV-watching public that also follows long-running institutional programming.

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