Attention Graph:

March For Science

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The top 10 neighbors for March For Science span journalists, comedians, activists, podcasts, and websites — with scores compressed into a narrow band from 0.96 to 0.95, and no single entity pulling clearly ahead of the rest.

The shape is flat: Jennifer Gunter (0.96), Merriam-Webster (0.96), and Tamara Keith (0.96) sit at the top, separated by less than a hundredth of a point from John Oliver (0.96), The Mysterious LOLGOP (0.96), The Onion (0.96), Last Week Tonight (0.96), Fresh Air (0.96), Kevin M. Kruse (0.96), and Nina Totenberg (0.96). Tallying subcategories across the ten: journalists (Tamara Keith, Nina Totenberg), comedians (John Oliver), activists (Jennifer Gunter), academics (Kevin M. Kruse), websites (Merriam-Webster, The Onion), podcasts and radio (Fresh Air), TV shows (Last Week Tonight), and humor/satire (LOLGOP). March For Science's own subcategory — Activism — appears in only one neighbor, Jennifer Gunter, whose subcategory is Activists. The dominant pattern is cross-kind: public radio voices, political satirists, fact-checkers, and NPR-adjacent journalists, not other activist organizations.

The flat, tightly compressed cluster points to an audience defined less by a single affinity than by a consistent orientation — toward public-interest media, political commentary, and evidence-based discourse across multiple formats.

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