Two distinct audience neighborhoods pull on Rob Riggle's top 10: a comedy-and-actor cluster anchored by Jim Gaffigan (0.88) and Eric Stonestreet (0.87), and a second, quieter peak built around baseball analytics and craft-beer culture.
The shape is two-peak. The first cluster is dense with comedians and actors: Ed Helms (0.86), Nick Offerman (0.82), Jason Segel (0.81), Anna Kendrick (0.81), and Josh Gad (0.81) all sit within a tight band, joined by comedians Nikki Glaser (0.81) and Bill Burr (0.80). The one TV show in the top 10, Schitt's Creek (0.82), fits the same comedic-ensemble register. That's six actors and two comedians in the top 10 — a heavily same-kind and cross-kind blend, with Riggle himself categorized as an Actor.
The second peak is more unexpected: FanGraphs Baseball (0.80) and Baseball Prospectus (0.80) — both Websites — land inside the top 10 alongside the entertainment cluster, with no thematic overlap between the two groups. Ben Folds (0.81), the lone Musician in the top 10, sits at the seam between the two peaks.
The two-peak structure suggests Riggle's audience is not a single homogeneous group but a coalition: one half shaped by ensemble comedy and character actors, the other by analytically oriented sports media.