The two strongest pulls in Brian Hazard's neighbor set come from opposite ends of the celebrity spectrum: Sean Beeson (0.94), a Professionals-subcategory figure, and Ali Spagnola (0.92), a Lifestyle-subcategory creator — neither is a fellow musician, and together they form the two peaks that define this audience's shape.
The top 10 breaks down as follows by subcategory: Musicians and Bands (Nathan Maingard at 0.89, Lenny Kravitz at 0.86), Social Media Brands (Twitter at 0.89), Non-Profit Organizations (Recording Academy / GRAMMYs at 0.89), TV Shows (Entertainment Tonight at 0.89), TV Channels (NBC Entertainment at 0.87), Telecommunications (Skype at 0.87), and Websites (Billboard at 0.86). That leaves only two neighbors — Maingard and Kravitz — sharing Brian Hazard's own Musicians and Bands subcategory, while the remaining eight span Professionals, Lifestyle, Social Media, Non-Profit, TV Shows, TV Channels, Telecommunications, and Websites. The two-peak structure is anchored by Beeson and Spagnola pulling the audience toward professional and lifestyle content, with the music-industry cluster (GRAMMYs, Billboard, Kravitz) forming a secondary but coherent grouping.
The overall shape suggests an audience that bridges a music-industry-aware segment and a broader professional/lifestyle-content-consuming segment, rather than clustering tightly around any single kind of entity.