The top 10 neighbors span actors, sports properties, comedians, and a TV show — no single kind dominates, which is the defining feature of a broad audience shape.
Angela Kinsey leads at 0.93, followed by Brian Baumgartner at 0.90 — both actors, both castmates. John Krasinski appears at 0.86, making three actors in the top six. The Office itself sits at 0.87, the only TV show in the top 10, confirming that the show's own channel draws an audience shaped nearly identically to Fischer's. That cluster of four — three actors and their shared series — forms the clearest structural unit in the set.
What surrounds it is the more telling finding. Cut 4, an MLB-affiliated sports team account, lands at 0.89 — higher than Krasinski — placing it inside the core cluster despite having no thematic connection to the others. theCHIVE, a humor website, follows at 0.85. Trevor Bauer, an athlete, comes in at 0.84, alongside Capt. Andrew Luck, a fictional character account, at 0.84. Fantasy Footballers, a sports podcast, and Bert Kreischer, a comedian, round out the ten at 0.84 and 0.84 respectively. Tallying the subcategories: three actors, one TV show, one sports team, one website, one athlete, one fictional character, one podcast, and one comedian — eight distinct subcategories across ten neighbors.
That spread signals an audience whose shape is defined less by any single content category than by a consistent demographic or behavioral profile that cuts across entertainment, sports humor, and fantasy sports simultaneously.