Actors dominate Dan Aykroyd's nearest audiences, but the top 10 spread wide enough — and diversely enough — to mark this as a genuinely broad-shaped cluster rather than a tight niche.
Henry Winkler is the strongest pull at 0.83, the only neighbor that clears the 0.80 threshold. From there the scores descend gradually: Valerie Bertinelli (0.77, TV Personalities), Drew Carey (0.77, Comedians), Kevin Bacon (0.76, Actors), and David Spade (0.75, Actors). The subcategory tally across the top 10 runs five Actors (Henry Winkler, Kevin Bacon, David Spade, William Shatner, Michael Keaton), two TV Personalities (Valerie Bertinelli, Jon Taffer), two Musicians and Bands (Weird Al Yankovic, Foo Fighters), and one Comedian (Drew Carey). That mix — actors as the plurality but not the totality — is the defining structural feature. The audience shape is not purely actor-adjacent; it absorbs musicians and a comedian at comparable levels, with Weird Al Yankovic at 0.72 and Foo Fighters at 0.70 sitting only modestly below the actor cluster.
No athletes, brands, or non-entertainment entities appear in the top 10, though the wider graph extends into those territories. What the top 10 establishes is an audience that tracks broadly across legacy entertainment figures — actors, TV personalities, comedians, and classic-era musicians — without concentrating sharply on any single one.