The top 10 neighbors for Trevor Noah span politicians, non-profits, journalists, comedians, and a TV show — with no single entity pulling far ahead of the rest. That compressed spread is the defining structural feature here.
The shape is flat: scores run from 0.99 (Kamala Harris) down to 0.96 (W. Kamau Bell) across the full top 10, a range of less than three points. Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition; the tight band means no single neighbor dominates. The top five alone cross three subcategories: Politicians (Kamala Harris, 0.99; Hillary Clinton, 0.97), Non-Profit (ACLU, 0.97), TV Shows (The Daily Show, 0.97), and Professionals (Meena Harris, 0.97).
Trevor Noah's own subcategory — Comedians — accounts for two of the top 10: Leslie Jones at 0.96 and W. Kamau Bell at 0.96. The remaining eight positions belong to Politicians (four entries), a Non-Profit, a TV show, a Professional, and a second Non-Profit. That means the audience shape is defined less by comedy adjacency than by a dense cluster of progressive political figures and civic organizations, with fellow comedians present but not dominant.
The flat distribution across subcategories points to an audience that is broadly engaged across political, civic, and media content — not one anchored to a single kind of entity.