Reading Rainbow's top 10 neighbors span podcasts, comedians, actors, a technology brand, a website, and a humor publication — with no single neighbor pulling far ahead of the others.
The shape is flat: scores run from 0.70 (Night Vale podcast) down to 0.67 (The Good Place), a range of just 0.03 across all ten positions. That compression means no one entity dominates; the audience looks like a diffuse mix rather than a concentrated tribe. Tallying the subcategories across the top 10: Actors account for three neighbors (Alison Brie, 0.68; Donald Faison, 0.68; Neil Patrick Harris, 0.67 — appearing in positions 5, 6, and 13 of the full set, with three in the top 10), Comedians contribute two (Patton Oswalt, 0.69; Stephen Colbert, 0.67), and TV Shows contribute one fellow entry (The Good Place, 0.67) — the only neighbor sharing Reading Rainbow's own subcategory in the top 10. The remaining slots go to a Podcast (Night Vale podcast, 0.70), a Technology brand (Trello, 0.69), a Website (Eat This, Not That!, 0.68), and a Humor Memes and Satire outlet (The Oatmeal, 0.68). The cross-kind character is the defining feature: this is predominantly an actors-and-comedians neighborhood, with a technology brand and a humor site rounding out the mix.
The flat, cross-kind shape suggests Reading Rainbow draws an audience whose composition aligns more closely with comedy and entertainment personalities than with other children's or educational TV properties — at least within the top 10.