George Takei's top 10 nearest neighbors are a mix of comedians, actors, authors, and a TV show — with no single standout pulling far ahead of the rest.
Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition. The scores across Takei's top 10 span a narrow band, from John Cleese at 0.94 down to Mel Brooks at 0.90 — a range of just four points, which is the defining feature of a flat shape. No neighbor dominates; the cluster holds together evenly.
Comedians make up the majority of the top 10: John Cleese (0.94), Dave Attell (0.92), John Fugelsang (0.91), Ricky Gervais (0.91), and Patton Oswalt (0.91) all carry the Comedians subcategory. The remaining five positions go to Neil Gaiman (0.91, Authors), Jason Alexander (0.91, Actors), The Late Show (0.90, TV Shows), Kevin Nealon (0.90, Comedians), and Mel Brooks (0.90, Comedians). Takei's own subcategory — Actors — appears once in the top 10, with Jason Alexander as the sole fellow actor. The cluster is predominantly comedians, with a single author, a single TV show, and one other actor rounding it out.
The overall picture is an audience that gravitates toward wit-forward, culturally engaged figures rather than toward other actors specifically.