The top 10 neighbors for Paul Bissonnette form a dense, mixed cluster — hockey media, sports journalists, and hockey-specific properties — with scores running from 0.97 down to 0.93 in a tight band that leaves no single standout.
Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition. John Buccigross leads at 0.97, followed immediately by Spittin' Chiclets (0.96) and USA Hockey (0.96). Those three set the tone: a sports journalist, a hockey podcast, and a governing sports league. The next tier — Bob McKenzie (0.95), Darren Dreger (0.94), and Pierre LeBrun (0.94) — are all journalists or journalist-classified figures covering hockey. Rounding out the ten: the NHL (0.93), Hockey Night in Canada (0.93), Jayson Stark (0.93), and The Hockey News (0.93).
Tallying subcategories across the ten: four are Journalists, two are Sports Leagues, one is Podcasts and Radio, one is TV Shows, one is Magazines, and one is Athletes (Bob McKenzie, per his subcategory field). Bissonnette himself is classified as an Athlete, making McKenzie the only fellow Athlete in the top 10. The dominant neighbor kind is journalists — not athletes, not podcasters — which means the audience shape here is defined primarily by hockey media consumers rather than by fans of athletes specifically. The near-absence of other Athletes in the top 10 reinforces that pattern.
The flat shape and compressed score range signal an audience that is deeply embedded in hockey media broadly, with no single entity pulling it in a distinct direction.