Brian Hazard (0.89) and Sean Beeson (0.87) form two distinct peaks in Nathan Maingard's top 10 — one a fellow musician, the other classified as a Professional — and the gap between them and the rest of the set is the defining structural feature here. Similarity scores measure how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition; these two sit noticeably above the remaining eight neighbors.
The shape is two-peak, and the cluster below those peaks is strikingly cross-kind. Of the remaining eight neighbors, only Pascal Guyon (0.79) and Ken Caillat (0.78) share Maingard's own subcategory of Musicians and Bands. The rest span TV Channels — NBC Entertainment at 0.84 — Non-Profit organizations like American Red Cross (0.80), a TV Personality in Darren Kavinoky (0.80), Social Media via Twitter (0.80), and a TV Show in Entertainment Tonight (0.79). Ali Spagnola, a Lifestyle figure, sits at 0.86 — the third-highest score — adding another cross-kind data point near the top. The presence of a major broadcast network and a non-profit at scores above 0.80 signals that this audience's shape is not defined by music fandom alone; it overlaps substantially with audiences drawn to mainstream broadcast and cause-oriented content.
The two-peak structure, anchored by a musician and a professional on one side and a broad mix of broadcast and lifestyle entities on the other, suggests an audience that bridges a niche creative community with a wider, general-interest media-consuming public.