Pottery Barn's ten nearest neighbors span politicians, TV personalities, journalists, financial media, and home brands — with no single entity pulling far ahead of the rest. Similarity scores here measure how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition; the range across the top 10 runs from 0.82 down to 0.79, a narrow band that defines the flat shape.
Mitt Romney sits at the top (0.82), followed closely by Jim Cramer (0.81), Mark Hertling (0.81), Willie Geist (0.81), and George F. Will (0.81). These are politicians, government officials, TV personalities, and journalists — not home brands. The only Home subcategory entry in the top 10 is Houzz at 0.80, and Crate and Barrel does not appear until position 18 in the broader data. Rounding out the top 10 are National Review (0.80, News Publisher), Mad Money On CNBC (0.80, TV Show), The Motley Fool (0.80, Website), and HGTV Design Happens (0.79, Website).
The dominant subcategory pattern across the top 10 is political and financial media figures — politicians, journalists, TV personalities, and financial news channels — with home-adjacent content appearing only at the edges. This is a cross-kind cluster: Pottery Barn's audience shape aligns far more tightly with consumers of centrist political commentary and business television than with other home retail brands.
The flat distribution across these neighbors suggests a cohesive audience that moves consistently across a specific media diet, rather than one anchored to any single personality or platform.