Calvin and Hobbes is the single strongest pull in Fitbit's top 10 — at 0.88, a humor-and-satire account outscores every fitness, sports, and media neighbor in the set. That's the two-peak structure here: one cluster anchored in active-lifestyle content, another in broadly appealing, good-natured media.
The active-lifestyle cluster is real and coherent. Runner's World (0.85) and NBC Olympics (0.82) sit just below Calvin and Hobbes, followed by athlete Chloe Kim (0.81) and Abby Wambach (0.80). Tough Mudder (0.76) and Hoka (0.73) are the only other Fitness-subcategory neighbors in the top 10 alongside Fitbit itself, meaning the fitness cluster is present but not dominant by count. Athletes (four neighbors: Kim, Wambach, Rex Chapman at 0.80, and Michael Phelps at 0.79) form the largest single subcategory in the set.
The second peak is harder to label by subcategory alone. Goose Island Beer Co. (0.82) and Tulsi Gabbard (0.80) sit comfortably inside the top 10 alongside sports journalists The MMQB (0.80) and The Athletic MLB (0.80). The pattern across these neighbors — humor, craft beer, political figures, sports media — points to an audience that is broadly curious and culturally engaged rather than narrowly fitness-focused.
The shape reveals an audience that follows active sports and fitness content but is equally at home with general-interest and entertainment media.