Men in Blazers' top 10 neighbors span TV personalities, authors, athletes, journalists, comedians, a research organization, a news publisher, a men's apparel category, and a TV show — a wide compositional mix with no single subcategory dominating and no score separating cleanly from the pack.
The shape is flat: the top neighbor, Katie Nolan (0.95), sits only 0.03 points above the tenth, Bill Simmons (0.93). In between are Brené Brown (0.94) and Glennon Doyle (0.94), both authors; Taylor Twellman (0.94), an athlete; NASA's Perseverance Mars Rover (0.93), a research organization; Megan Rapinoe (0.93), another athlete; Sports Business Journal (0.93), a news publisher; Jon Stewart (0.93), a comedian; and Men's Apparel (0.93), an apparel category. That is a cross-kind cluster: Men in Blazers is a podcast, and not one other podcast appears in the top 10. The neighbors are predominantly individual celebrities and influencers — athletes, authors, journalists, comedians, and TV personalities — alongside a handful of media properties and one consumer category.
The cross-kind breadth here, from a Mars rover to a fashion category to political comedians, signals an audience whose shape is defined less by any single interest vertical than by a consistent demographic or behavioral profile that cuts across many content types.