Fashion brands dominate Tommy Hilfiger's nearest audiences, but the top 10 also pull in a music awards body, a celebrity news website, and a pair of musicians — a cross-kind spread that signals something wider than a pure fashion cluster.
The shape is broad: nine of the ten neighbors score above 0.89, and no single neighbor pulls dramatically ahead of the rest. Calvin Klein leads at 0.94, followed closely by Versace at 0.92, Chanel (social) at 0.91, and Dolce & Gabbana at 0.90. All four are Fashion-subcategory brands, and H&M (0.90), Armani (0.89), Louis Vuitton (0.89), and HUGO BOSS (0.87) extend that run to eight of the ten. The two departures are Billboard (0.90, Websites) and the Recording Academy / GRAMMYs (0.90, Non-Profit) — both music-industry properties sitting at scores that match or exceed several of the fashion neighbors. That pairing is the structural surprise: the audience shape that fits Tommy Hilfiger also fits the infrastructure of mainstream pop music, not just the runway.
The broad shape, with scores compressed between 0.87 and 0.94, reflects an audience that overlaps widely across the fashion landscape while carrying a consistent music-culture signal alongside it.