The top 10 neighbors for JET span magazines, TV channels, actors, musicians, a journalist, and a spiritual leader — all compressed into a similarity band running from 0.99 to 0.98, with no single entity pulling away from the rest.
Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audience compositions resemble each other. The shape is flat: Ebony Magazine leads at 0.99, followed within a fraction of a point by TV One (0.99), Hill Harper (0.99), Essence (0.99), Iyanla Vanzant (0.99), BET Her TV (0.99), Jill Scott (0.99), Roland S. Martin (0.99), Regina King (0.99), and Black Enterprise (0.99). The spread across the full ten is less than 0.006 — structurally, these neighbors are indistinguishable in rank.
Tallying subcategories across the top 10: three are fellow magazines (Ebony, Essence, Black Enterprise), two are TV channels (TV One, BET Her TV), three are actors (Hill Harper, Regina King, and one more), one is a musician (Jill Scott), one is a journalist (Roland S. Martin), and one is a spiritual leader (Iyanla Vanzant). JET's own subcategory — Magazines — accounts for three of the ten neighbors, meaning the majority of the cluster is cross-kind: TV channels, actors, musicians, and a journalist all share audience shape with a print magazine. No single subcategory dominates; the mix is genuinely heterogeneous.
That heterogeneity, held together at near-identical similarity scores, points to an audience defined less by any single content format than by a consistent community of interest that cuts across media types.