At 0.94, 10 Spot/MadRag — a women's value apparel chain — is the single strongest pull in SNIPES's similarity graph, sitting well above every other neighbor and marking this as a spike-shaped audience structure.
The gap between 10 Spot/MadRag and the rest is notable: the next nine neighbors all fall between 0.80 and 0.82, forming a tight secondary band. That band is strikingly cross-kind. Not one other footwear retailer appears in the top 10. Instead, the cluster spans musicians and bands (Angie Martinez at 0.82, RZA at 0.81, Wu Tang Clan at 0.80), casual dining (Louisiana Fried Chicken at 0.82, Golden Krust Caribbean Bakery and Grill at 0.81), a general grocery chain (C Town Supermarkets at 0.82), a finance brand (New York Life at 0.82), a magazine (Complex at 0.82), and a moving and storage service (Safeguard Self Storage at 0.80). Musicians and bands are the most represented subcategory with three entries, but no single category dominates the secondary tier — the mix is genuinely heterogeneous.
The overall shape points to an audience defined less by footwear or streetwear adjacency and more by a specific neighborhood-level consumer profile that cuts across retail, food, music, and services.