The NBA's top 10 nearest neighbors span three distinct subcategories — TV Channels, Musicians and Bands, and Athletes — with no single neighbor pulling far ahead of the rest, and no other Sports League appearing anywhere in the set.
The shape is flat: scores run from 0.98 at the top down to 0.96 at position 10, a band of less than two points across the entire range. NBA TV (0.98) and NBA on ESPN (0.98) sit at the top, followed immediately by Drake (0.97) — a Musician and Band whose audience composition tracks the league's almost as closely as its own broadcast channels do. NBA on TNT (0.96) and Floyd Mayweather (0.96) round out the top five, with J. Cole (0.96), Kendrick Lamar (0.96), Rihanna (0.96), Dwight Howard (0.96), and Chris Paul (0.96) completing the set. By subcategory count: four are Musicians and Bands, three are TV Channels or Shows, two are Athletes, and one is a fellow Athlete from outside basketball. No other Sports League appears in the top 10.
The composition tells the structural story: the NBA's audience shape is defined as much by hip-hop musicians as by its own broadcast infrastructure, with athletes from other sports (Mayweather, Howard, Paul) filling the remaining slots. The cross-kind pull toward Musicians and Bands is not incidental — it matches the broadcast neighbors in proximity.
This flat, mixed-subcategory cluster suggests an audience that moves fluidly between basketball coverage and a specific lane of music culture, treating both as part of the same attention space.