Two distinct audience neighborhoods sit at the top of Kid Cudi's similarity graph: Tyler, The Creator at 0.88 and Anonymous Central at 0.87 — a fellow musician and an activism account, separated by less than a point but representing structurally different audience types.
The shape is two-peak, and the gap between those two leaders and the rest of the top 10 is meaningful. Doja Cat (0.85), The Weeknd (0.83), and Zendaya (0.82) form a recognizable cluster of Musicians and Bands and Actors — the kind of cross-entertainment overlap common to a musician with broad cultural reach. But Anonymous Central's position at 0.87 is the structural outlier: an Organizations/Activism subcategory account sitting nearly level with the top musician neighbor. The remaining seven positions spread across TV Shows (Euphoria, 0.84), Tech Personalities (Hideo Kojima, 0.83), Magazines (Complex Sneakers, 0.82), Footwear (Nike (social), 0.82), and Comedians (George Lopez, 0.82) — a genuinely mixed set with no single subcategory dominating beyond the three musicians.
The two-peak structure suggests Kid Cudi's audience bridges a music-and-entertainment cluster on one side and a countercultural, activism-adjacent cluster on the other — two distinct audience compositions that happen to converge here.