The top 10 neighbors for Astrology Zone span magazines, blogs, art institutions, and news publishers — with no single standout pulling ahead of the rest. Similarity scores run from 0.98 (Interview Magazine) down to 0.97 (The Metropolitan Museum of Art), a band of less than one percentage point across all ten positions. That compression is the defining structural fact here.
The neighbor set is dominated by print and digital editorial: four of the top 10 are magazines — Interview Magazine (0.98), The Cut (0.97), Condé Nast (0.97), and Wallpaper Magazine (0.97) — alongside two blogs, Hyperallergic (0.97) and Intelligencer (0.97). The remaining four positions go to a news publisher (Observer, 0.97), two non-profits (Tate, 0.97; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 0.97), and one education-subcategory organization (Guggenheim Museum, 0.97). Astrology Zone is itself classified as a Website, and no other Website appears in the top 10 — the nearest audiences are shaped almost entirely by upmarket editorial and cultural institutions rather than by peer websites.
The flat shape here signals an audience that moves fluidly across a specific cultural register — arts-and-culture magazines, art-world non-profits, and urban editorial blogs — rather than clustering tightly around any single entity or content type.