MonmouthPoll's top 10 neighbors span journalists, politicians, non-profits, a blog, a magazine, an actor, and a humor account — with no single subcategory dominating and scores compressed into a narrow band from 0.92 to 0.91.
The shape is flat: the spread across the top 10 runs only from American Medical Association at 0.92 down to Room Rater at 0.91, a gap of less than one percentage point. Journalists make up the largest single subcategory — Jim Sciutto (0.92), Scott Simon (0.92), and Dr. emptywheel (0.91) — but they share the set with a government official (CDC Director, 0.92), two politicians (Tim Kaine, 0.92; Tammy Duckworth, 0.91), a non-profit (American Medical Association, 0.92), a blog (Schneier Blog, 0.92), a magazine (The Week, 0.92), an actor (Julia Louis-Dreyfus, 0.91), and a humor account (Room Rater, 0.91). MonmouthPoll's own subcategory — News Publishers — does not appear among the top 10 neighbors at all; the nearest fellow News Publisher sits outside this set. The cross-kind composition here is the defining feature: the audience that follows a polling organization overlaps almost equally with audiences for political journalists, elected officials, public health institutions, and civic-minded media of several formats.
The flat, mixed-subcategory structure suggests an audience defined less by attachment to any single media type or figure than by a consistent orientation toward public affairs across many channels.