The top 10 neighbors for Dr. Phil span TV personalities, actors, food brands, and discount retail — with no single neighbor pulling far ahead of the rest. Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition; scores across the top 10 run from 0.93 down to 0.90, a narrow band that defines the flat shape.
Julie Chen Moonves leads at 0.93, the only other TV Personality in the top 10, followed immediately by The Dr. Phil Show (0.93) — the program's own channel account, confirming tight audience coherence between the person and the property. Shemar Moore, an actor, sits at 0.92, and then the cluster shifts into consumer brands: Little Debbie (0.92, Sweets) and Dollar General (0.92, Grocery and Superstores) round out the top five. Ibotta (0.91, Technology) and Young & The Restless (0.91, TV Shows) follow, with Soap Opera Digest (0.90, Magazines), Blue Bunny (0.90, Sweets), and Hidden Valley Ranch (0.90, Food) completing the set.
The subcategory mix — one TV Personality, one actor, three TV Shows, one magazine, and four consumer packaged-goods brands — points to an audience that clusters around daytime and network television alongside everyday household and grocery consumption. The cross-kind presence of discount retail and snack brands alongside soap-adjacent media is the defining character of this neighbor set, not any single dominant entity.
This flat, broadly distributed pattern suggests Dr. Phil's audience is shaped by a consistent lifestyle and media-consumption profile rather than loyalty to any one content category.