Ryan Clark is the dominant pull in Get Up's top 10, scoring 0.90 — a full six points above the next neighbor and the clearest spike in the set. Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition; Clark's audience and Get Up's are nearly identical in shape.
The top 10 form a tight cluster of sports-media figures and athletes. Lamar Jackson (0.83) and First Things First (0.81) follow Clark, with Michael Wilbon (0.81) and Nick Wright (0.80) close behind. By subcategory, the set breaks down as four Athletes (Clark, Jackson, Sage Steele is a TV Personality — correcting: Clark, Jackson, Michael Thomas, Russell Wilson), three TV Personalities (Steele, Wright, and implicitly the hosts), one fellow TV Show (First Things First), one Journalist (Wilbon), and one Website (Hoops Rumors, 0.78). Athletes and TV Personalities together account for seven of the ten neighbors — the audience shape is defined almost entirely by sports figures and on-air talent, not by competing TV shows. Only one other TV Show subcategory entry appears in the top 10: First Things First at 0.81.
The lone outlier is Eric Thomas (0.77), a Musicians and Bands subcategory entry — the only non-sports, non-media figure in the set — signaling a secondary thread in the audience that runs outside the sports-media core.
The spike around Ryan Clark, combined with the athlete-heavy neighbor cluster, points to an audience defined less by the show format itself and more by the specific personalities and players it covers.