Michael Moore's nearest audiences are a dense cluster of journalists, politicians, and left-leaning news publishers — with no other directors appearing anywhere in the top 10, and the spread across neighbors remarkably compressed.
The shape is flat: the top neighbor, Bill Maher (0.98), sits only 0.02 points above the tenth, Al Gore (0.96). That narrow band means no single entity dominates — the audience is defined by a consistent type rather than a gravitational pull toward one figure. Subcategory composition tells the story clearly: among the top 10, journalists account for three slots — Rachel Maddow (0.98), Anderson Cooper (0.97), and Chris Hayes (0.96) — politicians account for two — Nancy Pelosi (0.97) and Al Gore (0.96) — and news publishers fill two more — HuffPost (0.97) and The Nation (0.96). A government official (Chuck Schumer, 0.97), a website (Daily Kos, 0.96), and a TV personality (Bill Maher, 0.98) round out the set. Moore's own subcategory — Directors — has no representative in the top 10; the audience shape is built entirely around political media and political figures, not filmmakers.
The flat, tightly-banded structure suggests an audience defined less by interest in a particular kind of creator and more by a coherent political-media orientation that spans formats and roles.