Andy Roddick sits at 0.92 — the strongest pull in Brooklyn Decker's top 10 — while Jerry Seinfeld forms a distinct second peak at 0.90, and together these two neighbors define a two-cluster shape: one anchored in athletics, one in comedy.
The top 10 breaks down as follows by subcategory: Athletes (Roddick, 0.92), Comedians (Seinfeld, 0.90), Magazines (Deadspin, 0.88; Triathlete Magazine, 0.84), TV Shows (CBS Sunday Morning, 0.86), Food (Steak-umm, 0.86), Directors (Ken Burns, 0.86), Authors (Seth Godin, 0.86), Journalists (Brian Williams, 0.85; Bill Simmons, 0.84). Brooklyn Decker's own subcategory — Actors — produces no neighbors in the top 10; the nearest actor in the full neighbor set appears well outside this window. What the top 10 actually contains is a mix of sports-adjacent media (Deadspin, Triathlete Magazine, Bill Simmons) clustering around the Roddick peak, and a second cluster of culturally literate, broadly appealing figures — a comedian, a documentary director, a business author, a veteran news anchor — clustering around the Seinfeld peak. The two magazines that appear (Deadspin and Triathlete) reinforce the sports-media thread rather than the entertainment one, while CBS Sunday Morning and Ken Burns sit more naturally in the second cluster.
The shape reveals an audience that bridges two distinct worlds — sports-media followers and culturally engaged generalists — without being fully owned by either.