The top 10 neighbors for Dan Bongino compress into a narrow band — scores run from 0.99 down to 0.98 — with no single dominant pull and no clear outlier. Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition; the tight clustering means the shape is defined by the character of the group, not by any one standout.
Tallying the subcategories across the top 10: TV Personalities account for three slots (Sean Hannity at 0.98, The Leo Terrell at 0.98, Liz Wheeler at 0.98), Politicians two (Jim Jordan at 0.99, Dinesh D'Souza at 0.98 — filed under Authors, not Politicians; correcting: Jim Jordan 0.99 Politicians, one other), News Publishers two (One America News at 0.99, Newsmax at 0.98), and one each of Actors (James Woods at 0.99), Podcasts and Radio (Mark R. Levin at 0.99), Authors (Dinesh D'Souza at 0.98), Journalists (Jack Posobiec at 0.98), and Government Officials (Jenna Ellis at 0.98). The mix spans TV Personalities, News Publishers, Politicians, Journalists, Government Officials, Authors, and Actors — a cross-subcategory spread with no single kind dominating. Bongino's own subcategory, Journalists, appears once in the top 10 with Jack Posobiec at 0.98; the rest are drawn from adjacent political-media roles rather than fellow journalists.
The flat shape reflects an audience that moves coherently across a wide range of political-media figures and outlets, rather than concentrating around any single type.