Attention Graph:

The Americans

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The Americans draws audiences whose shape is defined not by other prestige dramas but by a dense, politically engaged media cluster — journalists, politicians, comedians, and public-affairs TV, all scoring within a narrow band.

The shape is flat: the top neighbor, Seth Meyers (0.85), sits only 0.02 points above the tenth, Stephen Colbert (0.83), with no single entity pulling decisively ahead. Tallying the top 10 by subcategory: Journalists account for one slot (Jim Sciutto, 0.83), Politicians for one (Tammy Duckworth, 0.84), Actors for one (Julia Louis-Dreyfus, 0.84), TV Personalities for one (Seth Meyers, 0.85), and TV Shows for two — Saturday Night Live (0.84) and Frontline (0.82, just outside the strict top 10 but visible in the wider set). The remaining slots go to a blog (Schneier Blog, 0.84), a non-profit (American Medical Association, 0.84), a musician (Mikel Jollett, 0.83), and a comedian (Stephen Colbert, 0.83). Only two neighbors share The Americans' own subcategory of TV Shows — Saturday Night Live at 0.84 and GallupNews at 0.83 — meaning the dominant pull comes from outside scripted television entirely.

The cross-kind character of this cluster — late-night hosts, political journalists, and civic organizations sitting alongside a spy drama — points to an audience defined less by genre preference than by a consistent orientation toward public affairs and media literacy.

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