Bill Burr sits at the top of Mark Hamill's neighbor set — a comedian, not an actor — at 0.90, the strongest pull in a top 10 that spreads broadly across subcategories rather than concentrating in any one.
The shape here is broad: scores run from 0.90 down to 0.83 across the top 10, with no single neighbor dominating and no sharp drop-off. After Bill Burr, the next nine neighbors are a mix of Actors and adjacent subcategories. Actors account for six of the ten: Wil Wheaton (0.86), Tom Hanks (0.85), Anna Kendrick (0.84), Kaitlin Olson (0.84), Seth Rogen (0.84), and Zach Braff (0.83). The remaining four are Seth MacFarlane (0.83, TV Personalities), Jason Segel (0.83, Actors — making seven total), Penn Jillette (0.83, Comedians), and Bill Nye (0.83, TV Personalities). Recounting precisely: Actors — Wheaton, Hanks, Kendrick, Olson, Rogen, Braff, Segel = seven; TV Personalities — MacFarlane, Nye = two; Comedians — Burr, Jillette = two. That's eleven across ten slots because Segel was counted twice above — correcting: the top 10 contains seven Actors, one TV Personality (MacFarlane), one TV Personality (Nye), and two Comedians (Burr, Jillette). The dominant subcategory is Actors, but the leading individual score belongs to a Comedian, and two TV Personalities round out the set — a cross-subcategory spread that resists a single-tribe reading.
The broad shape, with scores compressed between 0.90 and 0.83, indicates an audience whose composition is recognizable to a wide range of entertainment figures rather than tightly bound to any one corner of the celebrity landscape.