Eric Alper's ten nearest neighbors span ten different subcategories — authors, book publishers, magazines, comedians, activists, TV personalities, and more — with no single kind dominating the set. That breadth is the defining structural fact here: the scores run from 0.89 down to 0.88 within a tight band, and no neighbor pulls meaningfully ahead of the others.
The top of the list mixes publishing and media with political commentary. J. D. Landis leads at 0.89, the only author in the set. Daily Kos (0.89) and MoveOn (0.88) represent web-native activism. Publishers Weekly (0.88) and Algonquin Books (0.88) anchor a publishing thread. Rachel Maddow (0.89) is the sole fellow journalist in the top 10, while Keith Olbermann (0.88) and John Fugelsang (0.88) arrive as TV personality and comedian respectively. Chelsea Clinton (0.88) and Ben & Jerry's (0.88) round out a set that resists easy categorization by kind.
The flat shape and cross-kind composition together suggest an audience that doesn't cluster tightly around any single content type — it overlaps comparably with book culture, political media, and commentary-driven entertainment all at once.