Tim Young's top 10 neighbors span journalists, politicians, news publishers, activists, TV personalities, and a humor-memes account — a cross-kind mix with no fellow comedians anywhere in the set. Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition; a score near 0.95 indicates near-identical audience shape, not thematic overlap.
The scores compress into a tight band: Dan Bongino leads at 0.96, followed by Jim Jordan at 0.95, Newsmax at 0.95, Dinesh D'Souza at 0.95, and Scott Presler and One America News both at 0.95. Charlie Kirk (0.95), The Leo Terrell (0.95), Mark R. Levin (0.95), and Catturd (0.95) round out the ten. The range from first to tenth is less than 0.008 — a genuinely flat distribution with no standout anchor.
The cluster's character is conservative political media: two news publishers, two activists, a journalist, a politician, a podcast/radio host, and a TV personality, with a humor-memes account as the sole outlier from that pattern. No other comedian appears in the top 10. The cross-kind finding is the structural story here — an entity classified as a comedian whose nearest audiences are drawn almost entirely from political commentary and news media.
This shape suggests Tim Young's audience is defined less by comedy as a format and more by the political media ecosystem it inhabits.