At 0.99, the Cincinnati Reds sit at one peak of a two-peak structure — and the Cincinnati Bengals form the second at 0.97, together anchoring an audience that bridges baseball and football fandom within a single city.
The shape is unmistakably Cincinnati-and-Ohio. The top 10 neighbors include four Sports Teams — the Reds (0.99), Bengals (0.97), Ohio State Buckeyes (0.88), and Indianapolis Colts (0.88) — plus three fellow Athletes: AJ Green (0.94), Todd Frazier (0.88), and Jim Irsay (0.88). The remaining three neighbors are Cincinnati Zoo (0.93, Non-Profit), Urban Meyer (0.88, Professionals), and Ohio State Football (0.87, Sports Teams). That's five Sports Teams, three Athletes, one Non-Profit, and one Professionals — a neighbor set dominated by Ohio and Indiana sports institutions, with the Cincinnati Zoo as the one non-sports outlier. The cross-kind finding is minimal: Brandon Phillips is an Athlete, and most of his nearest neighbors are either Sports Teams or fellow Athletes, meaning the audience shape closely mirrors his own kind. The Zoo's presence at 0.93 is the structural anomaly — a non-sports organization sitting higher than any individual athlete outside AJ Green.
The two-peak structure reveals an audience that is simultaneously a Cincinnati baseball crowd and a Cincinnati-area football crowd, with Ohio State fandom layered underneath.