Hmm.. Strange thought borne from this discussion.
(this is just insane pontification and mental masturbation, but feedback is welcome.)
One could envision a non-spinning black hole as being analogous to a standing gravity wave with an infinite amplitude, because the amplitude is being reinforced by the matter it has pulled inside.
With that analogy in mind, a more understandable gravity wave (such as from a neutron star merger) could be seen as an expanding spherical shockfront. If the amplitude of that shockfront is sufficient, that it too can scoop up even tiny amounts of matter as it expands, and overpower all other forms of repulsion such that singularity formation at the crest of the wave is inevitable, an interesting kind of singularity should occur, right? One that is spherical, and keeps expanding outwards, but is hollow inside?
If it failed to keep eating, it would shatter into a shower of high speed black holes, but if rate of ingestion was sufficient to match its rate of expansion, this would occur, right?
Some part of my brain says this cannot happen because massed objects, (including singularities) cannot travel at light speed, and thus cannot be sustained in the critical section of the wave as it propagates... but still... hmmm...