Fair Fight's top 10 neighbors form a dense, mixed cluster of journalists, politicians, non-profits, and activists — with scores spanning only 0.97 to 0.97, a narrow band that reflects the flat shape of this audience.
Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition. The top 10 run from Stacey Abrams at 0.98 down to Jamelle Bouie at 0.97 — a range of barely two percentage points across ten neighbors. No single entity dominates; the cluster is genuinely even.
Tallying the subcategories across the top 10: journalists lead with four entries — Nikole Hannah-Jones (0.98), Abby D. Phillip (0.97), Yamiche Alcindor (0.97), and Jamelle Bouie (0.97). Non-profits account for two — Southern Poverty Law Center (0.98) and Equal Justice Initiative (0.97). Politicians appear once with Stacey Abrams, activists once with Sherrilyn Ifill (0.97), and authors twice with Ibram X. Kendi (0.97) and Clint Smith (0.97). Fair Fight's own subcategory — Activism — does not appear among the top 10 neighbors; the nearest audiences are shaped primarily by journalism and civil-society non-profits rather than other activist organizations.
The flat, tight band across these ten neighbors suggests an audience with a consistent, well-defined profile that overlaps broadly with progressive civil-rights media and legal advocacy rather than concentrating around any single peer.