The top 10 neighbors for the American Jewish Committee span TV shows, activists, TV personalities, political groups, politicians, and non-profits — a mixed-subcategory cluster with no single dominant kind and scores compressed between 0.91 and 0.87.
The shape is flat: The Last Word leads at 0.91 and Jonathan Greenblatt follows at 0.90, but neither pulls away from the pack. Morning Joe (0.88), Democratic Coalition (0.88), and Jill Wine-Banks (0.88) sit just behind, with The Beat with Ari Melber on MSNBC (0.88), ShareThis (0.88), All In with Chris Hayes (0.88), Rep. Val Demings (0.87), and The ReidOut (0.87) rounding out the ten. The subcategory breakdown: four TV shows, two TV personalities, one activist, one political group, one politician, and one tools-and-resources entry. The center entity is a Non-Profit; ADL is the only other Non-Profit in the top 10, appearing at position 15 in the broader data — within the top 10, no fellow Non-Profit appears. The dominant pattern is cable news programming and politically engaged personalities, not organizational peers.
This audience shape reflects a constituency that tracks political commentary and advocacy media closely, with organizational identity playing a secondary role in defining who else it resembles.