The ten nearest neighbors in Dan Rather's similarity graph are overwhelmingly politicians and political-adjacent entities — not fellow journalists. Scores run within a tight band from 0.96 to 0.94, the hallmark of a flat shape: no single neighbor dominates, and the cluster holds together as a type rather than a hierarchy.
Politicians account for four of the ten slots: Amy Klobuchar (0.96), Pete Buttigieg (0.95), Rick Wilson (0.95), and Jen Psaki (0.95). The remaining neighbors extend the political-world perimeter: The Lincoln Project (0.96) as a political group, Marc E. Elias (0.95) and Shannon Watts (0.95) as a professional and activist respectively, Democracy Docket (0.94) as an activism organization, and Auschwitz Memorial (0.95) as a non-profit. Only one neighbor shares Rather's own subcategory of Journalists: Peter Alexander at 0.95.
The cross-kind pattern here is the structural finding. Rather's audience shape aligns far more tightly with the political-commentary ecosystem — politicians, political operatives, and civic organizations — than with the journalism peer set. The single journalist neighbor sits mid-cluster, indistinguishable in score from the politicians around it.
This flat, politically saturated neighbor profile suggests an audience defined less by journalism as a craft and more by sustained engagement with political accountability content.