Verizon sits at the top of CSI Miami's similarity graph at 0.96 — not another crime drama, not a broadcast network, but a telecommunications brand. That cross-kind result sets the tone for a top 10 that spans an unusually wide range of subcategories.
The shape is broad, meaning no single neighbor dominates and many entities above baseline share this audience's composition. After Verizon, the next closest neighbors are Spalding (0.94, Sports brand), CSI: NY (0.93, TV Shows), 2 Broke Girls (0.92, TV Shows), and Two and a Half Men (0.92, TV Shows). Three fellow TV Shows in the top five is the clearest same-kind cluster in the set, but they account for only three of the ten positions. The remaining seven span Telecommunications, Sports, Magazines (High Times, 0.92), Websites (Cheddar Gadgets, 0.91), Fashion (Hollister Co., 0.91), Sports Teams (Seattle Seahawks, 0.90), and Fictional Characters (Thor, 0.89). No two of those seven share a subcategory, which is the defining structural feature here: the TV Shows cluster is real but sits inside a much wider scatter of unrelated kinds.
The breadth of that scatter — telecom, sports equipment, fashion retail, a fictional superhero — indicates an audience whose shape is not defined by genre loyalty to crime procedurals alone, but by a broader cross-category profile that happens to overlap with many different kinds of entities simultaneously.