At 0.84, Freightliner Trucks is the strongest pull in Pilot Flying J's top 10 — and the second peak belongs to a very different kind of neighbor.
The shape here is two-peak. The first cluster is built around commercial trucking infrastructure: Freightliner Trucks (0.84), Blue Beacon Truck Wash (0.81), and International Trucks (0.77) are all Automotive or Services entities oriented toward heavy-duty vehicles. TravelCenters of America (0.79) and Love's Travel Stops and Country Stores (0.75) add two fellow Gas Stations subcategory neighbors, completing a tight trucking-corridor cluster at the top of the set.
The second peak is less obvious. Motel 6 (0.75) and Studio 6 (0.71) — both Budget lodging — sit alongside Cinnabon (0.75), The Burger Den (0.75), and Ross Stores (0.72), a QSR, a bakery, and a department store. These are not trucking brands; they are the kinds of stops associated with extended-travel or value-oriented retail corridors. The audience shape bridges both clusters — professional road users on one side, budget-travel consumers on the other — without either fully displacing the other.
No other Gas Stations subcategory neighbors appear in the top 10 beyond TravelCenters of America and Love's Travel Stops, making the trucking-services cluster the more structurally dominant of the two peaks.
This two-peak shape suggests an audience that spans a professional commercial-driving segment and a broader budget-travel consumer segment, with the two groups sharing enough behavioral overlap to pull in neighbors from both worlds.