Rolling Stone's top 10 nearest neighbors contain no other music publications and only one fellow magazine — The Advocate at 0.90 — yet the set is dominated by comedians and actors, not editorial peers.
The shape is flat: scores run from Paul Feig at 0.92 down to Lena Dunham at 0.90, a span of just six hundredths. Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition; the tight band means no single neighbor pulls decisively ahead. Tallying the subcategories across the ten neighbors reveals the actual cluster: four comedians — Margaret Cho (0.91), Sarah Silverman (0.90), Chelsea Handler (0.90), and Kathy Griffin (0.90) — three actors — Paul Feig, David Lynch (0.91, subcategory: Directors), and Lena Dunham — one non-profit (Amnesty International USA at 0.91), one news publisher (HuffPost Queer Voices at 0.90), and The Advocate. Music brands, music publications, and musicians are entirely absent from the top 10.
The cross-kind pattern is the defining finding: Rolling Stone's nearest audiences are shaped by progressive celebrity culture and advocacy organizations, not by the music or general-interest magazine space the publication itself occupies.