Attention Graph:

Warner Records

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The top 10 neighbors for Warner Records compress into a narrow band of record labels and music industry brands — no individual artists, no media outlets appear until well outside the top 10.

The shape is flat: scores run from 0.98 down to 0.96 with no single dominant neighbor pulling away from the pack. Columbia Records leads at 0.98, followed closely by Island Records (0.98), Capitol Records (0.97), Warner Music Group (0.97), and Atlantic Records (0.97). RCA Records (0.97), Universal Music Group (0.96), a second Island Records handle (0.96), Virgin Music (0.96), and Def Jam Recordings (0.96) round out the set. Every one of these neighbors carries a Music subcategory — with the single exception of Island Records (handle: islandrecords), classified as a Website — making this one of the most same-kind top-10 clusters the data can produce. Eight of the ten neighbors share Warner Records' own Brands / Music classification exactly.

The structural finding is the near-total absence of individual artists or media channels from the top 10; those entities begin appearing only further down the wider neighbor graph. Within this band, the audience shape is essentially the audience of the major-label ecosystem itself — people who follow the institutional layer of the music industry rather than any single artist or outlet.

This flat, label-dense cluster signals an audience whose attention is organized around the music industry as an institution, not around any particular genre, artist, or media format.

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