AskMen's nearest audiences span news publishers, non-profits, politicians, and global institutions — a wide mix with no single dominant neighbor pulling far ahead of the rest.
The shape is flat: the top 10 similarity scores run from TIME at 0.87 down to UNICEF at 0.85, a band of just 0.02. That compression means no one entity defines the audience shape — the cluster as a whole does. By subcategory, the top 10 breaks down as: three News Publishers (BBC News (World) at 0.85, NowThis News at 0.85, Reuters at 0.85), two Non-Profits (World Health Organization at 0.86, UNICEF at 0.85), one Comedian (Trevor Noah at 0.86), one Government organization (United Nations at 0.85), one Politician (Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez at 0.85), one Tech Personality (Bill Gates at 0.85), and one Magazine (TIME at 0.87). No other Website — AskMen's own subcategory — appears in the top 10.
The cross-kind character here is the real finding: an audience shaped primarily by global news, international institutions, and civic figures rather than by other web publications.