The top 10 neighbors for Jordan Peele span activists, politicians, comedians, and actors — a mixed cluster with no single subcategory dominating and scores compressed between 0.97 and 0.95.
Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition. The shape is flat: Black Lives Matter leads at 0.97, but the remaining nine neighbors sit within a narrow band, and no single type pulls away from the rest. Tallying the subcategories across the top 10: activists appear three times (Bree Newsome at 0.95, DeRay Mckesson at 0.95, Brittany Cunningham at 0.95); politicians twice (Rep. Ilhan Omar at 0.95, Rashida Tlaib at 0.95); actors twice (Keegan-Michael Key at 0.96, Donald Glover at 0.96); and comedians once (W. Kamau Bell at 0.96). NPR's Code Switch, a podcast, rounds out the set at 0.95. Jordan Peele's own subcategory — Comedians — appears in the top 10 only through W. Kamau Bell; the rest of the cluster is drawn from activism, politics, and acting.
What this shape describes is an audience that sits at the intersection of entertainment and civic engagement, with no single neighbor type owning the signal.