Comedians dominate Richard Marx's nearest audience neighborhood — not other musicians. Across the top 10 neighbors, ranked by audience similarity (a measure of how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition), comedians and actors account for seven of the ten slots, with no fellow Musicians and Bands appearing anywhere in the set.
The shape is broad: scores run from 0.92 down to 0.87 with no single neighbor pulling far ahead of the rest. Brent Terhune leads at 0.92, followed by PatriotTakes (0.89), a humor-and-satire account, and Jim Gaffigan at 0.89. Lewis Black (0.88) rounds out the comedian cluster, giving comedians four of the top five positions. Actors fill the remaining celebrity slots: Eugene Levy at 0.87 and Dick Van Dyke at 0.87. The two non-celebrity entries in the top 10 are Snopes.com (0.88), a fact-checking website, and Keith Law (0.87), a journalist — both consistent with an audience that skews toward media-literate, politically engaged consumption. Angry Staffer, a government official account, appears at 0.87, reinforcing that political-commentary thread.
The cross-kind pattern here is the defining structural fact: an audience shaped almost entirely by comedians, actors, and political commentary accounts, with no musician neighbors in the top 10 at all.