Interview Magazine's top 10 neighbors form a dense, undifferentiated cluster — scores run from 0.99 down to 0.98 with no single entity pulling away from the pack. The shape is flat: magazines, art institutions, and culture-adjacent websites occupy the same narrow band, and no one neighbor defines the audience more than any other.
Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition. The top two neighbors are The Cut (0.99) and PAPER Magazine (0.98), both fellow magazines — the same subcategory as Interview itself. Refinery29 (0.98) and Astrology Zone (0.98) follow as websites, while The Metropolitan Museum of Art (0.98) and MoMA The Museum of Modern Art (0.98) represent the non-profit arts institution cluster. Hyperallergic (0.98) arrives as a blog, Artforum (0.98) as another magazine, Vulture (0.98) as a news publisher, and Guggenheim Museum (0.98) as an education-classified organization.
Tallying the subcategories across the top 10: four are magazines, three are non-profit or education-classified arts institutions, one is a blog, one is a news publisher, and one is a website. The cross-kind presence of three major art museums — the Met, MoMA, and the Guggenheim — sitting at near-identical scores to the magazine neighbors is the most structurally notable feature of this set.
The flat shape, combined with the art-institution cluster, suggests an audience whose composition is simultaneously shaped by fashion-culture publishing and fine-arts engagement, with no single adjacent entity commanding a stronger pull than the others.