Three comedians — Annie Agar (0.70), Tom Segura (0.68), and Bert Kreischer (0.68) — sit inside the top 10 nearest neighbors of a baseball podcast, making the cross-kind presence of stand-up comedy one of the more structurally notable features of this audience shape.
Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition; a score of 0.74 means the overlap is strong. Major League Baseball leads the top 10 at 0.74, the only neighbor that shares the direct sport. Below it, the set fans out across a wide mix of subcategories: the three comedians cluster between 0.68 and 0.70, NFL Memes (Humor Memes and Satire, 0.70) adds a fourth humor-adjacent entry, and PFF Fantasy Football (0.69) and NFL Fantasy Football (0.68) bring NFL fantasy content into the frame. David Ross (Athletes, 0.67), Rob Friedman (Professionals, 0.67), and Kyle Schwarber (Athletes, 0.67) round out the ten. The broad shape is apt: no single neighbor dominates, and the subcategory distribution spans Sports Leagues, Comedians, Humor Memes and Satire, Blogs, and Athletes without any one type controlling the cluster. Talkin' Baseball shares its subcategory — Podcasts and Radio — with none of the top 10 neighbors, meaning the audience's shape is defined almost entirely by cross-kind overlap rather than by other podcasts.
The overall picture is an audience that sits at the intersection of baseball fandom, multi-sport fantasy engagement, and comedy consumption — a broad, genre-crossing profile with no structural niche.