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Deadspin

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Deadspin's top 10 neighbors span journalists, athletes, websites, comedians, actors, TV personalities, authors, and a podcast — a wide subcategory mix compressed into a narrow similarity band running from 0.96 down to 0.92.

The shape is flat: no single neighbor dominates. Darren Rovell leads at 0.96, followed closely by Rex Chapman (0.95) and Keith Law (0.94) — but the gap between first and tenth is small enough that no structural spike emerges. Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition; the tight band means Deadspin's audience shape is shared broadly across a diverse neighbor set rather than anchored to one type.

Journalists are the most represented subcategory in the top 10, with Rovell, Law, and Bill Simmons (0.93) all carrying that label. But the cluster doesn't consolidate around sports journalism alone. The Players' Tribune (0.94) and The MMQB (0.92) are sports-adjacent websites, while Katie Nolan (0.93) is a TV personality, Eugene Levy (0.92) an actor, Glennon Doyle (0.92) an author, and Men in Blazers (0.92) a podcast. No other magazine — Deadspin's own subcategory — appears in the top 10. The cross-kind reach here is the defining structural feature: an audience that looks like sports journalists and sports websites, but equally like comedians, actors, and authors well outside that lane.

The flat shape across such a varied neighbor set suggests an audience defined less by a single content type than by a consistent sensibility that cuts across sports media, entertainment, and cultural commentary.

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