Simon Pegg and Pee-wee Herman sit at nearly identical scores — 0.88 and 0.88 respectively — forming a genuine two-peak structure at the top of Chris Meloni's neighbor set, with no single dominant pull separating them.
The shape is two-peak, and both peaks are actors, but the cluster around them reveals something more specific than the subcategory alone suggests. Eight of the top 10 neighbors are actors: alongside Pegg and Pee-wee Herman, Ian McKellen (0.87), Danny DeVito (0.86), Jane Lynch (0.85), Neil Patrick Harris (0.84), Susan Sarandon (0.82), and Elizabeth Banks (0.81) all cluster tightly. The two non-actor entries are Comedy Central (0.83, TV Channels) and Doug Benson (0.82, Comedians) — both comedy-adjacent. The actor neighbors themselves skew toward performers with strong comedy or cult-fandom associations, and the presence of Comedy Central and Benson reinforces that tilt. This is not a generic actor cluster; it reads as an audience that follows performers who move between dramatic and comedic registers, with a particular pull toward ensemble and character-driven work.
The tight band of scores — from 0.88 down to 0.81 across the top 10 — means the audience shape is broadly shared across this specific actor-comedy axis rather than anchored to any single figure.