Weezer sits at the top of Courteney Cox's similarity graph at 0.75 — not another actor, not a fellow sitcom cast member, but a rock band. That cross-kind result is the defining structural feature of this two-peak shape, where the neighbor set splits between a cluster of actors and a cluster of musicians and music brands.
The second peak is anchored by Lisa Kudrow (0.74) and John Stamos (0.73), both actors, followed by Mark Wahlberg (0.70) and Jason Mewes (0.70). That group represents the expected same-kind pull. But the music cluster is equally present: Guitar World (0.69, a magazine), Slash (0.69, Musicians and Bands), Gibson (0.68, Music brand), Fender (0.68, Music brand), and Blink-182 (0.68) all land within a tight band just below the actor group. The music neighbors skew toward rock and guitar-oriented properties specifically — a magazine, two instrument brands, and multiple rock acts — rather than pop or mainstream music broadly. Dane Cook (0.72, Comedians) bridges the two clusters without belonging cleanly to either.
The two-peak shape here means Cox's audience is simultaneously shaped like the audience for 1990s-era actors and the audience for rock music properties — a pairing that wouldn't be obvious from the entity's category alone.