Men's Wearhouse's nearest audiences are dominated by basketball — players, analysts, and the media that covers the sport — with no other fashion brand appearing in the top 10.
The shape is flat: the top 10 neighbors span a narrow similarity band from 0.64 down to 0.62, with no single standout. InsideHoops.com leads at 0.64, followed closely by athletes Allen Iverson (0.64) and Jalen Rose (0.64). Ben Simmons (0.64) and basketball magazine SLAM (0.63) continue the pattern. Of the 10 neighbors, seven carry the Athletes subcategory — Reggie Miller (0.63), Chris Webber (0.63), and Draymond Green (0.62) among them. The remaining three are Bing (0.64, Technology), RetailMeNot.com (0.64, Other), and SLAM (0.63, Magazines) — the only non-athlete entries in the set. The WNBA (0.62, Sports Leagues) rounds out the cluster just outside the top 10 proper but visible in the wider neighbor set. No other fashion brand appears among the top 10 neighbors, making this a distinctly cross-kind audience shape: a formalwear retailer whose nearest audiences are built almost entirely around basketball figures and the platforms that serve them.
The flat, basketball-heavy cluster suggests Men's Wearhouse draws an audience whose attention is organized around the sport rather than around retail or apparel more broadly.