Two technology brands sit at the top of The Boring Company's neighbor set, and they pull with nearly identical force: Hyperloop at 0.90 and Neuralink at 0.90 — the two-peak structure that defines this audience's shape.
Below that pair, the top 10 spread across a wider range of subcategories than the leading scores might suggest. Lex Fridman (0.86, Academics) and World and Science (0.83, Technology) reinforce a science-and-engineering orientation, while SpaceX (0.83) and Elon Musk (0.83, Tech Personalities) extend the cluster into adjacent Musk-ecosystem brands. TESLARATI (0.82, Websites) and Tesla (0.81, Auto) add two more nodes from that same orbit. Then the top 10 closes with two entries that break the pattern entirely: Coach (0.81, Jewelry and Accessories) and Cathie Wood (0.81, Professionals). Those two arrivals — an accessories brand and a finance figure — signal that the audience shape extends beyond the tech-and-space cluster even within the closest neighbors.
Tallying subcategories across the top 10: Technology (4), Auto (1), Academics (1), Tech Personalities (1), Websites (1), Jewelry and Accessories (1), Professionals (1). The dominant kind is the center entity's own subcategory, but the presence of Coach and Cathie Wood at near-equivalent scores to SpaceX and Tesla indicates this audience's shape is broader than a pure tech-enthusiast profile.
The two-peak structure — Hyperloop and Neuralink as co-anchors, with a long tail that mixes tech, auto, finance, and accessories — suggests an audience that clusters tightly around speculative infrastructure and emerging technology, but whose composition also overlaps with consumer and investment audiences at the margins.