The Good Liars' nearest audiences span comedians, authors, athletes, TV personalities, and a TV show — all within a tight similarity band from 0.91 down to 0.87, with no single neighbor pulling decisively ahead of the rest.
The shape is flat: the top 10 neighbors compress into a 0.04-point range, and the subcategory mix is genuinely varied. Brent Terhune leads at 0.91, the strongest score in the set, but Glennon Doyle (0.91, Authors) sits just behind him, followed by athlete Taylor Twellman (0.89), TV personality Katie Nolan (0.89), and TV show Ted Lasso (0.88). Tallying the top 10: three are Comedians (Terhune, Jim Gaffigan at 0.87, and Brent Terhune), two are Authors (Glennon Doyle and Brené Brown at 0.88), two are Athletes (Twellman and Keith Law is actually a Journalist — correcting the tally: Comedians: Terhune, Gaffigan; Authors: Doyle, Brown; Athletes: Twellman; TV Personalities: Nolan; TV Shows: Ted Lasso; Journalists: Law; Spiritual Leaders: Pope Francis at 0.87; Podcasts and Radio: Men in Blazers at 0.87). The top 10 thus spans seven distinct subcategories, with no single kind holding more than two slots. The cross-kind breadth is the defining feature: this is a comedian whose nearest audiences are as likely to resemble those of an author or a soccer podcast as another comedian.
That distribution points to an audience shaped less by comedy as a genre than by a particular sensibility — one that cuts across sports media, literary nonfiction, and political satire simultaneously.