The top 10 neighbors of PBS NewsHour Arts span five distinct subcategories — non-profits, actors, politicians, news publishers, podcasts, magazines, websites, and book publishers — with no single type dominating and scores compressed into a narrow band from 0.90 down to 0.88. That tight spread, with no standout neighbor pulling away from the pack, defines the flat shape here.
The highest-scoring neighbor is Clinton Foundation at 0.90, a non-profit organization — not a news outlet or arts publication. Jane Fonda (0.89, actor) and Hakeem Jeffries (0.89, politician) follow immediately, before the cluster settles into more expected territory: BBC Breaking News (0.88, news publisher), Democracy Now! (0.88, podcast/radio), The Nation (0.88, magazine), AFAR Media (0.88, website), W. W. Norton & Company (0.88, book publisher), Artnet (0.88, website), and Digg (0.88, website).
Tallying the subcategories across all 10: websites (3), news publishers (1), magazines (1), podcasts and radio (1), book publishers (1), non-profits (1), actors (1), politicians (1). No single subcategory accounts for more than three of the ten slots, and the center entity's own subcategory — TV Shows — appears zero times in the top 10. The mix of civic organizations, international news, literary publishing, and arts media points to an audience defined less by format than by a consistent orientation toward culture, public affairs, and serious editorial content.
The flat shape here reflects an audience with genuinely broad institutional range — one that moves fluidly across news, arts, advocacy, and publishing without clustering tightly around any single media type.