Warner Bros. sits at the top of Sony Pictures' neighbor set at 0.98 — but the more telling structural fact is that the top 10 splits cleanly into two clusters: fellow film studios on one side, and musicians and actors on the other.
The shape is two-peak. The first cluster is entirely Film Studios: Warner Bros. (0.98), Lionsgate (0.97), Paramount Movies (0.95), Paramount Pictures (0.95), and Universal Pictures (0.93). These five form a tight band of same-kind neighbors, meaning Sony Pictures' audience composition closely mirrors that of the major studio peer group. The second cluster breaks from that pattern: Lindsay Lohan (0.92, Actors), DreamWorks Animation (0.92, Film Studios), Billboard (0.92, Websites), Lady Gaga (0.92, Musicians and Bands), and Charli XCX (0.91, Musicians and Bands). DreamWorks straddles both clusters by subcategory, but the presence of musicians, an actor, and a music-industry publication at nearly the same similarity level as the studios signals a second, distinct audience neighborhood — one oriented around pop music and celebrity culture rather than film production.
No sports, news, or retail entities appear in the top 10, and the celebrity neighbors skew toward musicians rather than actors (three Musicians and Bands versus one Actor in positions 6–10). The two-peak structure suggests Sony Pictures' audience is simultaneously shaped by studio fandom and by a broader entertainment-and-pop-culture orbit.