Two neighbors sit clearly above the rest: John Cusack at 0.87 and Seth MacFarlane at 0.86, with a visible gap before the next tier — the structural signature of a two-peak shape.
Those two peaks point in slightly different directions. Cusack is an Actor, like Ron Perlman; MacFarlane is a TV Personality. Together they define the two audience neighborhoods this shape bridges: one anchored in film acting, the other in television-driven entertainment. The next tier — Danny DeVito (0.85), Tom Hanks (0.85), and Michael Keaton (0.82) — are all Actors, reinforcing the film-acting cluster. But the non-Actor presence is consistent throughout the top 10: Jeff Ross (0.83) and Penn Jillette (0.81) are Comedians; Stephen King (0.83) is an Author; and Ron Howard (0.81) is a Director. Tallying the top 10 by subcategory: five Actors, two Comedians, one TV Personality, one Author, one Director. The majority are Actors, but the non-Actor neighbors are spread across enough distinct subcategories that no single alternative cluster dominates — the MacFarlane peak pulls toward a broader entertainment-and-comedy orbit rather than a single rival tribe.
The overall shape is an audience that lives primarily in the film-actor neighborhood while maintaining a real secondary pull toward comedy and television entertainment.