The Christian Science Monitor's top 10 nearest neighbors span four distinct subcategories — News Publishers, Journalists, Activists, and Research Organizations — with no single neighbor pulling far ahead of the rest.
The shape is flat: scores run from 0.96 (Media Matters) down to 0.95 (POLITICO Magazine) across all ten positions, a band of less than 0.01. That compression means no structural anchor — the audience doesn't belong to one tribe so much as it sits at the intersection of several. Four of the top 10 are fellow News Publishers: National Journal (0.96), Politico (0.96), NPR Politics (0.96), and Axios (0.95). Three are individual Journalists: Ezra Klein (0.95), Greg Sargent (0.95), and Steve Kornacki (0.95 — just outside the top 10 in the visible set). Rounding out the ten are Media Matters and Indivisible Guide (both Activism, 0.96 and 0.95), Tom Perez (Politicians, 0.95), Ezra Klein (Journalists, 0.95), and Pew Research Center (Research Organizations, 0.95). The cross-kind presence of activism organizations and a politician alongside mainstream news publishers is the notable structural feature: this audience doesn't resolve cleanly into a "news reader" profile.
The flat, mixed-subcategory cluster suggests an audience shaped by political engagement broadly — one that moves across institutional journalism, individual political commentators, and advocacy organizations without concentrating in any single lane.