At 0.88, ARIA Las Vegas sits at one peak of Wynn's two-peak audience shape — but the second peak is Bitcoin Magazine at 0.80, a Magazines title with no connection to hospitality. That pairing defines the structural story here.
The shape is two-peak, bridging a dense Las Vegas hotel cluster and a looser set of finance- and media-adjacent neighbors. Nine of the top 10 neighbors are Hotels (subcategory), with The Palazzo at The Venetian Resort at 0.88, The Venetian Resort Las Vegas at 0.86, Bellagio Las Vegas at 0.85, and Virgin Hotels Las Vegas at 0.85 forming a tight Strip-property cluster. Caesars Palace is the one exception in the top 10, carrying an Entertainment subcategory rather than Hotels, at 0.82. The hotel cluster runs from 0.88 down to 0.84 with little separation — a compressed band of same-kind neighbors.
Bitcoin Magazine at 0.80 breaks that pattern sharply. It is the only non-hotel, non-entertainment neighbor in the top 10, and its subcategory — Magazines — shares nothing with the hospitality cluster above it. That gap between 0.84 and 0.80 marks the bridge between the two audience neighborhoods the shape flag identifies.
The two-peak structure suggests Wynn's audience is not simply "Las Vegas hotel visitors" — it carries a secondary composition that pulls toward finance and media content, visible even within the top 10.