David Feherty's top 10 neighbors are a dense, single-sport cluster — golfers, golf media, and golf organizations, with almost no daylight between them in score or kind.
The shape is flat: scores run from 0.99 down to 0.97 across the top 10, a band so narrow that no single neighbor stands out as a structural anchor. Jason Day leads at 0.99, followed by Golf Channel at 0.98 and Rory McIlroy at 0.98 — but the gap between first and tenth (Jack Nicklaus at 0.97) is smaller than the gap between many entities and their second-closest neighbor. By subcategory, seven of the top 10 are Athletes, two are Sporting Events (U.S. Open at 0.97, The Open at 0.97), and one is a Sports League (PGA Tour at 0.97). No TV Personalities — Feherty's own subcategory — appear in the top 10. The neighbor set is entirely golf: tour players, major championships, and the governing body of professional golf. Golf Digest at 0.97 is the only media property in the top 10, and it sits comfortably inside the same tight band.
The flat shape with a cross-kind composition tells a clear story: Feherty's audience is defined by the sport itself, not by the TV personality category he occupies — his viewers look more like followers of tour players and major championships than like audiences of other broadcasters or hosts.