Trader Joe's List draws audiences shaped by politicians, comedians, and tech media — not other grocery or food brands. Across the top 10 neighbors, not one falls under Grocery and Superstores or any adjacent food subcategory, making this a pronounced cross-kind pattern.
The shape is flat: scores run from 0.92 down to 0.90 with no single dominant neighbor pulling away from the pack. Katie Porter leads at 0.92, followed closely by The Daily Show at 0.91 and Malala Yousafzai at 0.91. Trello and John Oliver sit at 0.90, with Andrew Yang and WIRED Science just behind at 0.90 and 0.90 respectively. The remaining top-10 slots go to the CDC (0.90), FedEx (0.90), and The Oatmeal (0.90).
Tallying subcategories across the ten: Politicians (2), TV Shows (1), Activists (1), Technology (1), Comedians (1), Magazines (1), Government (1), Transport and Logistics (1), and Humor Memes and Satire (1). The cluster is genuinely mixed — civically engaged media, tech-adjacent brands, and satirical content — with no subcategory appearing more than twice. The two Politicians entries and the two media-comedy entries (The Daily Show, John Oliver) hint at a civic-minded, digitally fluent audience, but no single tribe dominates.
This flat, cross-kind distribution suggests Trader Joe's List reaches an audience whose shape is defined less by food interest than by a broader profile that spans political awareness, tech engagement, and satirical media consumption.