Attention Graph:

Walt Disney World

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Two distinct neighborhoods define Walt Disney World's audience shape: one anchored in theme-park and travel brands, the other in everyday consumer staples that have little obvious connection to a Florida resort.

The shape is classified as two-peak, and the scores make the split visible. Disney Cruise Line sits at the top (0.83), followed closely by Universal Orlando Resort (0.80) and Disney Parks (0.79) — three Destinations and Travel brands that form a coherent leisure-travel cluster. That first peak is tight and thematically legible: audiences who follow one Florida-area attraction or Disney-affiliated travel product look a lot like audiences who follow Walt Disney World.

The second peak is harder to explain by theme alone. Chili's Grill & Bar (0.74) and Firehouse Subs (0.72) are the next two closest neighbors, both casual or quick-service dining brands. Below them, Car Wash & Detailing (0.71) and It's Just Wings (0.70) continue the pattern — everyday service and food brands with no thematic link to theme parks. Gina Carano (0.69), an actor, and Circle K Gas (0.68) extend the range further. Busch Gardens Tampa Bay (0.68) is the only other Destinations brand in the top 10, reconnecting briefly to the leisure cluster before NFL Fantasy Football (0.68) closes the set.

The two-peak structure suggests Walt Disney World's audience is not simply a theme-park audience — it is a broad, family-oriented consumer audience that happens to over-index on leisure travel, and whose everyday consumption patterns align with mainstream dining and service brands as much as with competing attractions.

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