Attention Graph:

Criminal

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Criminal's top 10 nearest neighbors span podcasts, comedians, actors, and a blog — no single subcategory dominates, and the scores compress into a narrow band from 0.86 to 0.89.

Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition. The shape is flat: Karen Kilgariff leads at 0.89, Matt Bellassai follows at 0.88, and the remaining eight neighbors — 99 Percent Invisible (0.88), You're Wrong About... (0.87), All Songs Considered (0.87), Defector (0.87), Adam Scott (0.87), Jemaine Clement (0.86), NPR Music (0.86), and John Mulaney (0.86) — trail by fractions. No neighbor pulls meaningfully ahead of the pack.

By subcategory, the top 10 breaks into three podcasts and radio (99 Percent Invisible, You're Wrong About..., All Songs Considered), three comedians (Kilgariff, Bellassai, Clement), one actor (Adam Scott), one blog (Defector), one news publisher (NPR Music), and one comedian-adjacent entry (Mulaney). The cross-kind pattern is notable: Criminal shares its subcategory with only three of its ten nearest neighbors; the other seven are comedians, an actor, a blog, and a news publisher. That mix suggests the audience Criminal draws is shaped less by podcast-listening habits alone and more by a broader sensibility that also aligns with public-radio-adjacent comedy and character-driven media.

The flat, mixed-subcategory cluster points to an audience that doesn't cluster tightly around any single content type.

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