Kermit the Frog's ten nearest neighbors are a mix of comedians, actors, and TV personalities — no single neighbor pulls away from the pack, and no other Fictional Characters subcategory entry appears in the top 10. The shape is flat: scores run from 0.87 down to 0.83 with no dominant spike.
Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition. The top neighbor, Anthony Jeselnik (0.87), is a Comedian — a cross-kind match for a Fictional Character. Right behind him sits Nick Offerman (0.87) and Ed Helms (0.87), both Actors, followed by Bill Nye (0.87) as a TV Personality and Cards Against Humanity (0.86) as the lone Toys and Games brand in the set. Tallying the top 10: five Actors (Nick Offerman, Ed Helms, Glenn Howerton, Zach Braff, Rob McElhenney), two Comedians (Anthony Jeselnik, The Lonely Island), one TV Personality (Bill Nye), one Toys and Games brand (Cards Against Humanity), and one Fictional Character (Jason Segel — wait, that's an Actor). Correcting the tally: the top 10 is five Actors, two Comedians, one TV Personality, one Toys and Games brand, and Jason Segel (0.85) as a sixth Actor. No other Fictional Characters subcategory entry appears in the top 10.
The cluster is dominated by adult comedy-adjacent performers — actors and comedians whose audiences skew toward irreverent, ensemble-driven entertainment — with Cards Against Humanity (0.86) as the one non-person outlier reinforcing that comedic, slightly subversive register.
The flat shape across this top 10 suggests Kermit the Frog's audience doesn't belong to any single performer's tribe; it sits at the intersection of several overlapping comedy and character-actor audiences simultaneously.