Jim Gaffigan (0.88) sits at one peak of Eric Stonestreet's two-peak audience shape, and a dense cluster of baseball journalists and analytics sites forms the other — a pairing that has little to do with what either side is about and everything to do with who watches.
The shape is genuinely bifurcated. On the entertainment side, Rob Riggle (0.87) and John Krasinski (0.87) — both Actors, like Stonestreet — sit just below Gaffigan, joined by History In Pictures (0.84), a Fact Quote and Lyric Account. That cluster reads as broadly comedic, mainstream-television audiences. Then the second peak emerges: Matthew Berry (0.82), Baseball Prospectus (0.82), FanGraphs Baseball (0.82), and Buster Olney (0.82) arrive in a tight band, followed by Jayson Stark (0.82) and Baseball Reference (0.82). Four of those six are Journalists covering baseball; two are baseball analytics Websites. The scores are nearly identical across the group, signaling a coherent second audience neighborhood rather than scattered overlap.
Stonestreet's top 10 thus splits cleanly between a comedic-actor cluster and a baseball-media cluster — two distinct audience compositions sharing the same fan base, with no single neighbor dominating enough to collapse the structure into a spike.