T Magazine's top 10 neighbors form a tight, undifferentiated cluster — scores run from 0.99 down to 0.97 with no single neighbor pulling away from the pack. The shape is flat: no dominant anchor, no outlier, just a dense band of overlapping audiences.
Six of the ten neighbors are magazines: WWD (0.99), The Cut (0.98), Vanity Fair (0.98), Interview Magazine (0.98), PAPER Magazine (0.97), and Harper's Bazaar (0.97). Two are websites — Refinery29 (0.98) and The Business of Fashion (0.98) — both operating in the fashion and lifestyle editorial space by subcategory. The remaining two break the editorial pattern: Net-a-Porter (0.98), a Fashion brand, and Guggenheim Museum (0.97), an Education organization. That pairing — a luxury retail brand and a major art institution — alongside the magazine-heavy core signals that T Magazine's audience sits at the intersection of fashion publishing, luxury commerce, and cultural institutions, rather than being defined by any single one of those lanes.
The flat shape, with scores compressed into a 0.02-point range across all ten neighbors, suggests an audience that is broadly shared across a well-defined cultural cluster rather than uniquely attached to any single peer.