Attention Graph:

Market Rebellion

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Market Rebellion's top 10 neighbors span financial TV shows, real estate news publishers, and property technology platforms — a mix that reflects two overlapping professional audiences rather than a single tight niche.

The shape is flat: scores run from HousingWire at 0.86 down to Houzz at 0.81, a range of only five points across ten neighbors. No single entity dominates. Tallying the subcategories across the top 10 reveals two clear clusters. The first is financial TV programming: CNBC Halftime Report (0.84), Mad Money On CNBC (0.84), and CNBC's Fast Money (0.82) are all TV Shows. The second is real estate media and platforms: HousingWire and Inman News (0.83) are News Publishers covering property markets, while Zillow (0.83) and Trulia (0.82) are Technology-subcategory brands in the same space. Benzinga, a financial Websites entry, sits at 0.83 and bridges the two clusters. Only one neighbor — Jim Cramer (0.82), a TV Personality — falls outside those two groupings, and he connects directly to the CNBC programming cluster. Market Rebellion itself is subcategory Finance; no other Finance-subcategory entity appears in the top 10.

The flat shape across this finance-and-real-estate mix suggests Market Rebellion's audience is defined less by a single media habit than by a consistent profile that travels equally well across market-moving TV content and property investment information.

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