Weather accounts dominate the top of NOAA Satellites' neighbor set, but the audience shape extends well beyond them into conservative political media — a cross-kind pattern that defines this entity's broad profile.
Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition. National Weather Service is the strongest neighbor at 0.90, followed by National Hurricane Center at 0.81, The Weather Channel at 0.80, NOAA at 0.79, and Weather Underground at 0.78. These five form a tight weather-information cluster — two Government organizations, one TV Channel, and one Website — that represents the intuitive core of the audience shape.
What the shape flag "broad" signals is that the overlap doesn't stop there. Positions six through ten shift entirely into political territory: Ron DeSantis at 0.76, Marco Rubio at 0.75, a second National Hurricane Center handle (subcategory: Tools and Resources) at 0.75, Jim Cantore at 0.74, and Mike Seidel at 0.73. The two TV Personalities — Cantore and Seidel — are weather-adjacent, but DeSantis and Rubio are Politicians, pointing to a second audience neighborhood that has nothing to do with meteorology. No other Government organizations appear in the top 10 beyond the weather cluster, and the political neighbors are concentrated in Florida-connected figures, though the data does not explain why — only that the audience shapes align.
The top 10 as a whole reveal an audience that is simultaneously weather-focused and politically engaged, with no single neighbor dominating enough to collapse the shape into a spike.