The Atlantic Photo and ABC News sit at nearly identical scores — 0.87 and 0.87 respectively — forming a tight news-publisher peak at the top of ABC News Live's neighbor set, while a second, distinct cluster of TV shows and actors pulls in from the mid-0.80s down through the 0.76 range.
The shape here is genuinely two-peaked. The first peak is news publishing: The Atlantic Photo (0.87), ABC News (0.87), and Google News (0.77) anchor an audience that looks like it follows text-and-image news brands. The second peak is scripted television and actors: Veep (0.83) and The Leftovers (0.80) are the TV-show representatives, while Mark Ruffalo (0.77) and Darren Criss (0.76) represent the actor subcategory. Bridging the two peaks is Deb Haaland (0.82), the lone politician in the top 10, whose audience shape sits squarely between the news-publisher and scripted-entertainment clusters. Banana Republic (0.79) is the only fashion brand in the top 10, a cross-category outlier that doesn't fit neatly into either peak. Notably, no other TV channel — ABC News Live's own subcategory — appears in the top 10, meaning its nearest audience neighbors are defined entirely by news publishers, TV shows, actors, and one politician.
The two-peak structure suggests this audience is simultaneously shaped by news-consumption habits and by engagement with prestige scripted television, rather than by live-channel viewing as such.