At 0.95, Gary Dell'Abate is the single strongest pull in Robin Quivers's top 10 — and the Stern Show (0.94) and Howard Stern (0.93) follow within two hundredths of a point, forming a tight cluster that accounts for three of the top four positions. The shape is two-peak: that Stern-universe trio sits in one neighborhood, and a second, distinct cluster emerges further down the list.
The first peak is almost entirely Stern-adjacent. Gary Dell'Abate, Stern Show, and Howard Stern are all TV Personalities or TV Shows connected to the same broadcast world, and Artie Lange (0.92, Comedians) and howardtv (0.90, TV Channels) extend that cluster to five of the top five neighbors. The second peak begins around position six and is structurally different: Ken Olin (0.86, TV Personalities), Phil Arballo (0.86, Politicians), Jerry Seinfeld (0.84, Comedians), Adam Carolla (0.83, Comedians), and Don Winslow (0.83, Authors) represent a broader mix of comedians, politicians, and authors — none of them Stern-universe figures. The subcategory tally across the full top 10 runs: TV Personalities (3), Comedians (3), TV Shows (1), TV Channels (1), Politicians (1), Authors (1). Robin Quivers shares her own subcategory — TV Personalities — with three neighbors, but the dominant structural story is the Stern cluster at the top and a comedy-and-commentary cluster below it.
The two-peak shape suggests an audience that is simultaneously anchored to a specific broadcast ecosystem and drawn to a wider range of comedic and political voices.