Fashion brands dominate HollywoodLife's nearest audiences — not other celebrity news outlets. Across the top 10 neighbors, the mix spans fashion labels, entertainment media, social platforms, and film studios, with no single entity pulling far ahead of the rest.
The shape is broad: scores run from 0.88 down to 0.82 across the top 10, with no sharp drop-off between them. Chanel (social) leads at 0.88, followed by Victoria Beckham (0.86) and Twitter (0.85). Entertainment Weekly (0.84) is the only other magazine in the top 10 — HollywoodLife's own subcategory — making the neighbor set predominantly cross-kind. Miramax (0.83) and Searchlight Pictures (0.83) represent film studios, while E! Entertainment (0.83) and Karlie Kloss (0.83) round out a cluster that blends fashion-adjacent celebrity with entertainment media. Save the Children US (0.83) is the one non-profit in the set — a structural outlier by subcategory, though its score sits squarely within the band. Calvin Klein (0.82) closes the top 10, reinforcing the fashion lean.
Tallying subcategories across the 10: Fashion brands account for two entries (Chanel, Calvin Klein), with one each from Musicians and Bands, Social Media, Magazines, Film Studios (two entries counted as one subcategory), TV Channels, Models, and Non-Profit. Fashion and entertainment infrastructure — not peer celebrity magazines — define the shape of this audience.
The broad, evenly distributed pattern suggests HollywoodLife's audience is drawn from a wide cultural orbit where fashion, celebrity, and entertainment media all converge at roughly equal weight.