Religion News Service's top 10 nearest neighbors span five distinct subcategories — websites, podcasts and radio, comedians, journalists, and government officials — with no single type dominating and scores compressed into a narrow band from 0.84 down to 0.81.
The shape is flat: CNN Religion leads at 0.84, but the drop to the next neighbor is small, and the remaining nine sit within four hundredths of a point of each other. Blaire Erskine, a comedian, comes in at 0.82 — the same tier as fact-checking site Snopes.com at 0.82 and trivia outlet Mental Floss at 0.82. Public radio is well represented: Morning Edition at 0.81 and 1A at 0.81 both appear, alongside NPR journalist Audie Cornish at 0.81. Amanda Gorman, an author, sits at 0.81, as do Jill Biden, a government official, and AP Sports, the only other News Publisher in the top 10, at 0.81. The mix — fact-checkers, public radio programs, a comedian, an author, a government official, and a wire-service sports feed — resists a single thematic label. What unites them is audience composition, not subject matter. No other News Publishers appear in the top 10 beyond AP Sports.
The flat, cross-kind structure suggests this audience is defined less by a specific content niche than by a consistent profile that cuts across public-interest media, civic figures, and general-knowledge sources.