The top 10 neighbors for GQ Style span five distinct subcategories — magazines, non-profits, websites, TV channels, and news publishers — with no single neighbor pulling far ahead of the others. Similarity scores run from 0.98 down to 0.95, a narrow band that defines the flat shape.
Five of the ten neighbors are magazines: GQ Magazine (0.98), Harper's Bazaar (0.96), Variety (0.96), Glamour (0.96), and The Hollywood Reporter (0.96). That same-kind cluster is the backbone of the set. But the remaining five neighbors are a cross-kind mix that cuts against a purely fashion-and-style reading: Amnesty International USA (0.96) and Human Rights Watch (0.96) are non-profits, Who What Wear (0.95) is a website, Teen Vogue (0.95) is a magazine, and Al Jazeera English (0.95) is a TV channel. The presence of two major human-rights organizations at near-identical scores to fashion titles is the most structurally notable feature of this top 10 — their audiences are shaped closely enough to GQ Style's that they land inside the same narrow similarity band as Harper's Bazaar and Glamour.
The flat shape, combined with that cross-kind mix, suggests GQ Style draws an audience whose composition overlaps broadly with both style media and globally-minded editorial and advocacy channels.