The single strongest pull in Tim Dillon's top 10 is John Krasinski at 0.85 — an actor, not a comedian — and that cross-kind signal runs through the entire neighbor set. Across the top 10, only one other comedian appears: Jim Gaffigan at 0.80. The remaining eight slots belong to actors, journalists, a reality TV star, a TV show, a podcast, and a fact-and-trivia account.
The shape is broad, meaning no single neighbor dominates and many sit above a meaningful baseline. After Krasinski, History In Pictures (0.83) — a Fact Quote and Lyric Account — ranks second, ahead of the TV show Chicks in the Office (0.81) and the Professionals Dan Katz (0.81) and Ria (0.80). The subcategory distribution across the top 10 is genuinely mixed: actors (Eric Stonestreet, 0.80), journalists (PFTCommenter, 0.79), podcasts (Barstool Radio, 0.79), and professionals (Dave Portnoy, 0.79) all cluster within a narrow band. No single subcategory dominates — the audience shape is diffuse rather than concentrated around any one kind of entity.
What the data reveals is an audience that doesn't sort neatly by comedy fandom; it overlaps broadly with sports media, mainstream entertainment, and general-interest content, with Gaffigan as the lone fellow comedian in the top 10.