Skyline Chili sits at the top of Cincinnati Zoo's neighbor set at 0.95 — not another zoo, not a wildlife organization, but a regional restaurant chain. That cross-kind lead is the defining structural fact here, and it points to a two-peak shape: one cluster anchored in Cincinnati's local food and hospitality brands, a second anchored in Ohio and Indiana sports.
The sports cluster is dense and high-scoring. The Cincinnati Bengals (0.94) and Cincinnati Reds (0.93) sit just below Skyline, joined by athletes Brandon Phillips (0.93) and AJ Green (0.91). The local-brand cluster runs alongside them: Rhinegeist (0.88) and Graeter's Ice Cream (0.88) are the next two neighbors, both Cincinnati-rooted. Together these six neighbors form a tight band between 0.88 and 0.95 — a distinctly regional audience shape. The sports cluster then extends outward to Todd Frazier (0.86), Jim Irsay (0.83), and the Ohio State Buckeyes (0.82), pulling the second peak toward broader Midwest sports fandom. The Courier Journal (0.80), a regional news publisher, is the only non-sports, non-food-and-drink neighbor in the top 10.
No other non-profit appears in the top 10, and the audience shape is defined almost entirely by subcategories — sports teams, athletes, and regional food and drink brands — that are structurally unrelated to the center entity's own kind.