The top 10 neighbors of the Charlie Rose Show span journalists, authors, food professionals, news publishers, and lifestyle brands — with no single neighbor pulling significantly ahead of the rest.
The shape is flat: scores run from 0.96 (Frank Bruni) down to 0.95 (Christiane Amanpour) and Paul Krugman, a band of roughly 0.007 across all ten. Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition; the narrow spread means no one neighbor dominates. Tallying the subcategories: five of the top 10 are journalists (The Daily Beast at 0.96, Andrew Ross Sorkin at 0.95, Amanpour at 0.95), two are authors (Frank Bruni at 0.96, Mark Bittman at 0.96), one is a professional (Eric Ripert at 0.96), one is a magazine (Saveur at 0.96), and one is a website (Eatocracy at 0.96). Journalists are the plurality, but the mix also pulls in food-world figures — Ripert, Bittman, Saveur, Eatocracy — alongside political and financial commentators like Sorkin and Krugman. No other TV Shows appear in the top 10.
The cross-kind composition — journalists and authors alongside food media, with no fellow TV show in sight — suggests this audience is shaped more by an appetite for long-form, expert-driven content than by the medium itself.