At 0.92, Brian Hazard (a musician) and Sean Beeson (a professional) form two distinct peaks well above the rest of the top 10 — the structural signature of a two-peak audience shape.
Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition. Those two leaders sit noticeably ahead of the next tier: Alyssa Milano at 0.87, Nathan Maingard at 0.86, and Chris Rock at 0.84. Below them, the remaining five neighbors — Gap (social) (fashion brand, 0.84), Project Runway (TV show, 0.83), American Red Cross (non-profit, 0.83), Pascal Guyon (musician, 0.83), and CBS News (news publisher, 0.83) — cluster tightly within a narrow band.
The subcategory mix across the top 10 is notably cross-kind: Musicians and Bands appear three times (Brian Hazard, Nathan Maingard, Pascal Guyon), Actors twice (Alyssa Milano, and implicitly the broader tier), with a Comedian, a Professional, a fashion brand, a TV show, and a non-profit rounding out the set. Ali Spagnola's own subcategory — Lifestyle — has no direct match among the top 10 neighbors, meaning the audience shape is defined almost entirely by adjacent kinds rather than by other lifestyle creators. The two peaks themselves span different subcategories (musician vs. professional), which is what gives this graph its bridge character: the audience sits at an intersection, not inside a single community.
The overall picture is an audience that bridges independent music and professional/creator circles, with mainstream entertainment and civic brands also pulling meaningfully at the edges.