Fashion and finance brands dominate the Brooklyn Nets' nearest audiences — not other basketball teams. The New York Knicks sit at the top with a similarity of 0.93, the only other sports team in the top 10, but the rest of the set is a cross-kind mix that spans TV personalities, athletes from other eras, a TV drama, and multiple fashion labels.
The shape here is broad: scores run from 0.93 down to 0.84 with no sharp drop-off, and the neighbor set pulls from at least six distinct subcategories. After the Knicks, the next three neighbors are Tyra Banks (TV Personalities, 0.89), Amar'e Stoudemire (Athletes, 0.89), and PoseFX (TV Shows, 0.89) — all within a hundredth of each other. Marc Jacobs (Fashion, 0.87) and ViacomCBS (Entertainment Platforms, 0.86) follow closely. Mixcloud (Entertainment Platforms, 0.85), Citi (Finance, 0.85), Kenneth Cole (Fashion, 0.85), and Chris Rock (Comedians, 0.84) round out the ten. That's two fashion brands, two entertainment platforms, one finance brand, one TV personality, one athlete, one TV show, one comedian, and one fellow sports team — a genuinely heterogeneous cluster with no single subcategory accounting for more than two slots.
The breadth of this neighbor set signals an audience whose shape is shared across New York media, fashion, and culture broadly rather than anchored to basketball alone.