Attention Graph:

The Hardy Report

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Scott Dworkin (0.88) and Rob Reiner (0.86) form two distinct peaks in The Hardy Report's similarity graph — an activist and an actor sitting at the top of a neighbor set that is otherwise dominated by individual political voices rather than other websites or news publishers.

The shape is two-peak, with Scott Dworkin at 0.88 and Rob Reiner at 0.86 pulling slightly ahead of a dense cluster that follows close behind. Tea Pain (0.86, Humor Memes and Satire) sits just below them, and Frank Figliuzzi (0.85, Professionals) and Michael Cohen (0.84, Politicians) round out the top five. Across all ten neighbors, the subcategory breakdown runs: two Activists, two Actors, one Humor Memes and Satire, one Professionals, one Politicians, one TV Personalities, one Journalists, and one Websites — that lone Website being Palmer Report at 0.81, the only neighbor sharing The Hardy Report's own subcategory. The dominant kind in the top 10 is individual political and media personalities, not institutional publishers. Actors (Rob Reiner at 0.86, Ken Olin at 0.83) sit alongside activists and legal commentators, suggesting the audience shape bridges celebrity political commentary and professional analysis rather than tracking a single lane.

The overall picture is an audience defined by politically engaged individual voices — spanning activists, actors, and legal professionals — with institutional media nearly absent from the top 10.

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