Everytown's top 10 nearest neighbors are a mix of journalists, politicians, podcasts, and political media — with no single dominant pull and scores compressed tightly between 0.98 and 0.97.
The shape is flat: Nate Silver leads at 0.9832, followed by Steve Kornacki at 0.9829 and Dan Pfeiffer at 0.9821, but the gap from first to tenth is narrow enough that no one neighbor defines the cluster. Tallying the top 10 by subcategory: four are Journalists (Nate Silver, Steve Kornacki, David Fahrenthold, Jonathan Swan), two are Politicians (Dan Pfeiffer, Brian Schatz), one is an Academic (Kevin M. Kruse), one is a Comedian (Sarah Cooper), one is a Humor/Satire account (Room Rater), and one is a Professionals entry (Jon Favreau). No other Activism organization appears in the top 10 — March For Our Lives sits just outside at position 30 in the broader dataset. The dominant subcategory is Journalists, but the mix of politicians, a comedian, a satirist, and a media professional signals that the audience is shaped less by cause-specific content and more by a broader political-media diet.
The cross-kind character of this cluster — an activism organization whose nearest audiences are primarily journalists and political commentators — points to an audience that consumes political information widely rather than clustering tightly around advocacy content alone.