Monica Lewinsky's top 10 nearest neighbors span comedians, political podcasts, data-journalism websites, fellow activists, and a satirical outlet — all compressed into a narrow similarity band between 0.98 and 0.99, with no single entity pulling clearly ahead of the rest.
The shape is flat. John Oliver leads at 0.99, but only by a thin margin over Jon Favreau (0.98) and Pod Save America (0.98). Three websites occupy the cluster — FiveThirtyEight (0.98), The Onion (0.98), and Merriam-Webster (0.98) — alongside two fellow activists, Charlotte Clymer (0.98) and Jennifer Gunter (0.98). Kevin M. Kruse (0.98) and Nate Silver (0.98) round out the set as an academic and a journalist, respectively. The subcategory mix — activists, comedians, political-media professionals, data sites, and satire — points to an audience oriented around politically engaged commentary rather than any single content format or identity category. The two activists in the top 10 confirm some same-kind overlap, but they are outnumbered by the surrounding media and commentary cluster.
The flat distribution across such varied subcategories suggests this audience is defined less by what Monica Lewinsky is than by the broader media ecosystem her followers also inhabit.