Greenpeace's top 10 neighbors span environmental organizations, news publishers, magazines, websites, and a film director — a mixed cluster with no single subcategory dominating and scores compressed into a narrow band from 0.92 down to 0.90.
The shape is flat: EcoWatch (0.92) and Sierra Club (0.92) sit at the top, followed closely by WWF (0.92) — the three fellow environmental organizations forming the tightest cluster. But the set quickly broadens beyond Greenpeace's own subcategory. Getty Images (0.91), a brand in the "Other" subcategory, lands at position four, ahead of Michael Moore (0.90), a director. InsideClimate News (0.90) and National Geographic (0.90) represent news publishers and magazines respectively, while ARCHITECT Magazine (0.90) and The Guardian (0.90) add further editorial weight. BBC News (World) (0.90) rounds out the ten.
Tallying the subcategories: three Environmental organizations, four News Publishers, two Magazines, one Brand (Other), and one Director. No single subcategory commands the set. The cross-kind presence of Getty Images and Michael Moore alongside three environmental peers signals that Greenpeace's audience shape is not defined purely by environmental interest — it overlaps substantially with audiences drawn to international news, long-form editorial media, and documentary-adjacent content.
This flat, editorially diverse neighbor profile suggests an audience that engages broadly across civic and informational media rather than clustering tightly around a single cause or content type.