Astronomy Picture of the Day (0.79) and The Man in the High Castle (0.79) sit at the top of Peanuts' neighbor set within a fraction of a point of each other — a textbook two-peak structure, with one peak anchored in science and technology content and the other in prestige television.
The shape is two-peak, and the two clusters are genuinely distinct. The technology peak groups Astronomy Picture of the Day (0.79) with NASA HQ Photo (0.70) further down the list — both subcategorized as Technology under Miscellaneous. The TV peak clusters around The Man in the High Castle (0.79), Shailene Woodley (0.78), Dianna Agron (0.75), and Emmy Rossum (0.74) — three actors and a TV show whose audiences apparently share the same compositional profile. SeatGeek (0.76) and Indian Country Today (0.75) sit between the two peaks without belonging cleanly to either. No other Fictional Characters entity appears in the top 10 — Peanuts is the only entity of its subcategory in the set, meaning its nearest audiences are shaped almost entirely by cross-kind neighbors. The top 10 also include Deb Haaland (0.75), the lone politician, and two magazines — Men's Health UK (0.73) and Men's Journal (0.73) — rounding out a neighbor set that spans five different subcategories.
The two-peak structure suggests Peanuts draws an audience that bridges a science-and-curiosity cluster and a prestige-drama-and-actor cluster, with neither fully dominating.