Ed Helms and Nick Offerman form a clear leading pair in Lauren Graham's top 10 — at 0.94 and 0.91 respectively, they sit noticeably above the rest of the neighbor set, producing the two-peak structure the shape flag identifies.
Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition. Both peaks are actors, and the broader top 10 is dominated by the same subcategory: Jason Segel (0.88), Glenn Howerton (0.88), and Rob McElhenney (0.86) extend the actor cluster. Comedians form the second-largest group — Anthony Jeselnik (0.89), Nikki Glaser (0.88), and The Lonely Island (0.86) — sitting just below the two peaks and blending into the same neighborhood. The remaining three neighbors are a TV show (Drunk History, 0.86), a TV personality (Ken Jennings, 0.86), and a comedian (Jim Gaffigan, 0.86). No brands, websites, or musicians appear in the top 10; the cluster is almost entirely performers — actors and comedians — with a single media property rounding it out.
The two-peak structure, anchored by Helms and Offerman, suggests this audience is shaped by a specific band of comedy-adjacent ensemble television rather than any single genre or franchise.