The top 10 neighbors for Pod Save The People span activists, journalists, authors, comedians, and a fellow podcast — a cross-kind mix with no single subcategory dominating and scores compressed into a narrow band from 0.97 down to 0.94.
The shape is flat: Samuel Sinyangwe (0.97) leads, but only by a small margin over Clint Smith (0.96), Nikole Hannah-Jones (0.96), W. Kamau Bell (0.95), and NPR's Code Switch (0.95). Tallying the subcategories across all 10: journalists account for three neighbors — Hannah-Jones, Wesley Lowery (0.94), and Jamelle Bouie (0.94) — making them the single largest subcategory in the set. Activists appear twice (Sinyangwe and Brittany Cunningham, 0.95), authors twice (Clint Smith and Ibram X. Kendi, 0.95), and comedians once (W. Kamau Bell). NPR's Code Switch is the only other podcast in the top 10; Ayanna Pressley (0.94) is the lone politician. No brands, sports entities, or entertainment channels appear in the top 10.
The flat, cross-kind composition — journalists, activists, authors, and comedians all clustering within a three-point range — suggests an audience defined less by format or medium than by a consistent set of civic and cultural interests that cuts across entity types.