The ten nearest neighbors to Town & Country span auction houses, luxury hotels, beauty brands, real estate publications, and fashion labels — a mix that reflects the breadth of the audience rather than any single dominant pull. The shape is flat: scores run from Sotheby's at 0.94 down to Charlie Rose Show at 0.90, a range of just four points across all ten positions.
Tallying the subcategories across the top 10 confirms the cross-kind character of this cluster. Four of the ten neighbors are fellow Magazines — ELLE Decor (0.94), The Real Deal (0.91), NYT Real Estate (0.91), and Condé Nast Traveler (0.90) — so the audience does overlap meaningfully with other print titles. But the remaining six span entirely different kinds: Sotheby's and Christie's (both subcategory: Other, i.e., auction houses) at 0.94 and 0.92; goop (Beauty, 0.92); Luxury Hotels (Hospitality & Lodging, 0.91); Dior (Womens Apparel, 0.91); and Jonathan Adler (Home, 0.91). The auction houses sitting at the very top of the list — ahead of every other magazine — is the most structurally notable detail: the audience Town & Country shares most tightly is one that also follows fine-art sales.
The overall picture is an audience defined by a consistent orientation toward luxury goods, high-end travel, and prestige media, with no single category owning the shape.