Kofi Kingston's top 10 neighbors are almost entirely fellow athletes — eight of the ten share that subcategory — and the scores compress into a narrow band from 0.98 to 0.99, with no single neighbor pulling meaningfully ahead of the rest. Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition; the tight clustering means this audience looks nearly identical to a broad set of peers rather than being anchored to any one of them.
R-Truth leads at 0.9853, followed by Mark Henry at 0.9848 and Booker T. Huffman at 0.9847 — a spread of less than one hundredth of a point across the top three. The remaining athletes — Nic Nemeth (0.9795), Cesaro (0.9791), Drew McIntyre (0.9789), John Morrison (0.9789), and William Regal (0.9788) — hold nearly the same position. The two non-athlete entries, Paul Heyman (TV Personality, 0.9844) and WWE Network (TV Channel, 0.9819), sit inside the same tight range rather than standing apart from it, suggesting the audience overlap extends naturally to WWE-ecosystem media properties as well as to individual performers.
The flat shape here reflects an audience that is deeply embedded in a single content world — one where the distinctions between individual wrestlers and the broader promotional apparatus produce nearly indistinguishable audience profiles.