The top 10 neighbors compress into a band of just 0.0067 — from 0.9872 to 0.9939 — with no single entity pulling meaningfully ahead of the rest. That tight clustering is the defining structural feature of this audience's shape.
Within that band, the mix is notably cross-kind. Five Thirty Eight, a website, sits at the top at 0.9939, followed by four fellow journalists: Nate Cohn (0.9922), Dave Wasserman (0.9911), David Fahrenthold (0.9898), and Maggie Haberman (0.9885). But the remaining five positions go to entities outside the Journalists subcategory entirely: Room Rater, a humor and satire account (0.9910); Dan Pfeiffer, a politician (0.9906); Jon Favreau, a professional (0.9903); Axios, a news publisher (0.9885); and 538 Politics, a blog (0.9872). The audience shape is not simply "other journalists" — it spans political media brands, operatives, and at least one satirical account, all at near-identical similarity levels.
The flat shape here reflects an audience that is broadly shared across a specific political-media ecosystem rather than concentrated around any single peer.