At 0.96, Joe Mantegna sits at one peak of a two-peak structure — and Shemar Moore (0.94) anchors the other, with Melissa McBride close behind at 0.94. Together, these two clusters pull in opposite directions: one toward the cast of a long-running CBS procedural, the other toward the ensemble of a post-apocalyptic drama.
All ten of the top neighbors are actors, with the sole exception of NCIS, a TV Show at 0.91. The actor cluster is dense and consistent — Chandler Riggs (0.91), Pauley Perrette (0.91), Jeffrey Dean Morgan (0.90), and Michael Weatherly (0.90) all score within a tight band just below the two peaks. What the subcategory distribution makes plain is that this audience is shaped almost entirely by its own kind: nine of the ten neighbors are fellow actors, and the one outlier is a TV show rather than a brand, athlete, or personality. The two-peak shape reflects a genuine split between two distinct acting ensembles whose audiences overlap heavily with Vangsness's own — not a diffuse spread across categories, but a concentrated bridge between two specific television worlds.
The overall picture is an audience defined by deep investment in scripted television casts, with almost no signal from outside the actor and TV-show space in the top 10.