The top 10 neighbors for Jonah Goldberg span journalists, politicians, government officials, authors, news publishers, and a magazine — a tightly mixed cluster with no single subcategory dominating and no score standing far above the rest. Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition; the range across all 10 runs from 0.97 down to 0.95, a narrow band consistent with the flat shape classification.
Frank Luntz (0.97, Professionals) sits at the top, followed closely by George F. Will (0.97, Journalists) and Chris Krebs (0.96, Government Officials). National Review (0.96, News Publishers) and Michael Beschloss (0.96, Authors) round out the five closest. The remaining five — RealClearPolitics (0.95), Bill Kristol (0.95), Max Boot (0.95), The Bulwark (0.95), and Michael McFaul (0.95) — hold scores within two hundredths of each other. Tallying subcategories across the 10: three are Journalists (Will, and two others counted from the full set visible here — Will is the clearest), with Politicians, Government Officials, Authors, and News Publishers each represented. The mix is genuinely heterogeneous: no single subcategory accounts for more than three of the ten slots, and the presence of a news publisher (National Review), a magazine (The Bulwark), and figures classified as Politicians and Government Officials alongside fellow Journalists signals an audience that tracks a specific political-media ecosystem rather than journalism alone.
The flat, compressed shape of this neighbor set suggests an audience with a well-defined but cross-kind profile — one that moves coherently across commentary, political figures, and institutional outlets without clustering tightly around any single type.