The top 10 neighbors for Post Politics are a tight mix of political journalists, news publishers, and politicians — with no single standout pulling away from the pack. Similarity scores run from 0.98 down to 0.97, a band so compressed it signals a coherent, specialized audience rather than a broad or divided one.
Journalists make up the plurality of the cluster: Mark Knoller (0.98), Ezra Klein (0.97), Dave Weigel (0.97), and Mike Allen (0.97) all rank in the top 10. Two fellow news publishers appear — Politico (0.98) and The Hill (0.98) — alongside two politicians, John Kerry (0.97) and David Axelrod (0.97). The remaining two slots go to POLITICO Magazine (0.97) and the Brookings Institute (0.97), a magazine and a research organization respectively. The cross-kind composition here — journalists and politicians sitting alongside news publishers — suggests the audience is defined less by attachment to a single outlet type and more by immersion in the Washington political information ecosystem as a whole.
The flat shape and narrow score range together describe an audience with a sharply focused profile: deeply embedded in political media, with little variation in what draws them in.