The top 10 neighbors for IFC Films span magazines, entertainment trade publications, a film festival, a TV channel, and a non-profit museum — with no single neighbor pulling far ahead of the rest.
The shape is flat: scores run from 0.98 (The Black List) down to 0.96 (IndieWire), a band of less than two points across all ten. The subcategory mix tells the clearest story. Magazines dominate — NYLON (0.97), Variety (0.96), and Teen Vogue (0.96) all appear — alongside trade and entertainment media like IFC the TV channel (0.97) and Backstage (0.97). Sundance Film Festival (0.97) is the one events-and-awards entry. MoMA (0.96) is the lone non-profit institution. Only one neighbor shares IFC Films' own subcategory: no other Film Studio appears in the top 10. The audience's shape is defined instead by entertainment media, fashion and culture magazines, and arts institutions — a cross-kind cluster rather than a same-kind one.
That mix points to an audience oriented around arts and culture broadly, where film is one node in a wider network of media consumption that runs from trade press to fashion publishing to museum-going.