Gloria Steinem's ten nearest neighbors are a media cluster — journalists, literary websites, and magazines — with no other activist in the set. Similarity here measures audience shape: a score of 0.99 means two entities draw audiences with comparable composition, not that they are thematically alike.
The top 10 break down as three journalists — Rebecca Traister (0.99), Lauren Duca (0.99), and Jay Rosen (0.98) — three websites — Longreads (0.99), Slate (0.98), and Nieman Lab (0.98) — two magazines — The Atlantic (0.99) and The Paris Review (0.98) — one book publisher, Timothy McSweeney (0.99), and one news publisher, Vox (0.98). The scores span only 0.005 from top to bottom, the defining feature of a flat shape: no single neighbor pulls away from the pack. What the neighbors share as a group is a media-and-letters orientation — long-form journalism, literary publishing, and press criticism — rather than anything drawn from Steinem's own subcategory of Activism.
The flat, media-saturated shape suggests an audience that moves fluidly across serious journalism and literary culture, treating those spaces as a single continuous environment.