Pabst Blue Ribbon is the single strongest signal in Daniel Tosh's top 10 — an alcohol brand (0.91) edging out a fellow comedian by a fraction of a point. That near-tie defines the two-peak structure here: one peak anchored by a consumer brand, the other by stand-up comedy.
The comedy peak is dense. Bert Kreischer sits at 0.91, essentially level with Pabst Blue Ribbon, followed by Sal Vulcano (0.86), Joe Gatto (0.86), and Tom Segura (0.82) — all Comedians by subcategory. Two TV Personalities from the same orbit, James Murray (0.85) and Brian Quinn (0.85), extend that cluster, and the TV show Impractical Jokers (0.84) anchors it further. That's a tight, recognizable comedy-and-prank bloc occupying most of the top 10.
The second peak pulls in a different direction. Pat McAfee (0.87) is the highest-scoring Athlete in the set, and Trailer Park Boys (0.84) — a TV Show subcategory — rounds out the ten. Neither fits the stand-up comedy mold, suggesting the audience also overlaps with sports-media and irreverent ensemble content. Pabst Blue Ribbon's position at the very top reinforces that the brand dimension of this audience shape is real, not incidental.
Taken together, the top 10 describe an audience that bridges a specific comedy community and a broader male-skewing entertainment and consumer-brand cluster — with the two peaks nearly equal in pull.