Lucky Day's ten nearest neighbors split almost evenly between consumer food brands and athletes — a mix that spans subcategories without any single neighbor pulling far ahead of the rest. Scores run from 0.9529 (OREO Cookie) at the bottom of the set to 0.9667 (Pringles) at the top, a range of just 0.014 across all ten — the defining feature of a flat shape.
Six of the ten neighbors are Brands: three in Food (Pringles at 0.97, Doritos at 0.96, Lay's at 0.96), two in Restaurant (Papa John's Pizza at 0.96, Little Caesars Pizza at 0.96), and one in Grocery and Superstores (Walmart (social) at 0.95). The remaining four are Athletes: R-Truth at 0.96, Paul Wight at 0.96, and Mark Henry at 0.96, with OREO Cookie rounding out the set at 0.95 in Sweets. No neighbor shares Lucky Day's own subcategory of Video Game Franchises in the top 10. The audience shape here is defined by mass-market snack and fast-food brands alongside athletes — not by anything thematically adjacent to the center entity itself.
This flat, cross-kind cluster points to an audience whose shape is broadly shared with mainstream consumer brands and sports figures rather than concentrated in any single niche.