Vice TV's nearest audiences span non-profits, magazines, and fellow TV channels in a tight band — no single neighbor pulls far ahead of the rest.
The shape is flat: the top 10 scores run from Amnesty International USA at 0.94 down to Margaret Cho at 0.93, a spread of less than two points. That compression means no structural anchor — the audience looks equally like several distinct kinds of entities at once. Three of the top 10 are non-profits: Amnesty International USA (0.94), UN Human Rights (0.93), and UNICEF (0.93). Two are fellow TV channels: HBO (0.93) and Al Jazeera English (0.92, just outside the top 10 by rank). Two are entertainment trade magazines: The Hollywood Reporter (0.94) and IndieWire (0.93). GQ Style (0.93) rounds out the magazine presence. Margaret Cho (0.93) is the lone comedian in the top 10, and Paul Feig (0.93) the lone actor — both Celebrities and Influencers subcategories, neither dominant.
The cross-kind mix here is the defining feature: human-rights organizations and entertainment trade press sit at the same audience distance from Vice TV as HBO does, suggesting an audience that moves fluidly between prestige media consumption and civic-issue engagement rather than clustering tightly around any one content type.