Jimmy Kimmel sits at the top of Michael Rapaport's neighbor set at 0.87, but the two-peak shape means a second distinct cluster pulls nearly as hard — and the composition of those two peaks tells the real story.
The first peak is built around TV personalities and late-night adjacency. Jimmy Kimmel (0.87) and Keith Olbermann (0.81) anchor it, with Jimmy Kimmel Live (0.81) and Bill Maher (0.81) reinforcing the cluster. These are opinionated, politically engaged TV voices — a subcategory pattern that recurs across the top 10. The second peak is fellow actors: Jeremy Piven (0.86), Alyssa Milano (0.84), and John Cusack (0.82) all land within a tight band, suggesting a distinct audience neighborhood shaped by actors who are publicly vocal outside their screen work.
Rounding out the top 10 are StanceGrounded (0.82), an Activist, and Jeff Ross (0.80) and Whitney Cummings (0.80), both Comedians — subcategories that don't dominate but add texture to the mix. No news publishers or politicians appear in the top 10, though both categories surface in the broader neighbor set visible in the graph.
The two-peak structure — TV personalities on one side, actors on the other — suggests Rapaport's audience sits at the intersection of entertainment fandom and politically engaged media consumption, drawn to figures who combine cultural visibility with outspoken public personas.