The top 10 neighbors in Adam Kinzinger's similarity graph span politicians, government officials, journalists, a podcast, and a miscellaneous account — with no single neighbor pulling far ahead of the rest. That breadth is the defining structural feature here: similarity scores run from 0.93 down to 0.87 across the top ten, a tight band with many neighbors above baseline rather than one dominant pull.
Liz Cheney leads at 0.93, the highest score in the set, followed closely by Jo (0.90), Mueller, She Wrote Podcast (0.90), and Joe Walsh (0.89). All four sit within four points of each other — a flat top rather than a spike. The subcategory breakdown across the full ten reveals a cross-kind mix: three Politicians (Liz Cheney, Joe Walsh, and Kinzinger's own subcategory), three Government Officials (Alexander Vindman at 0.88, Angry Staffer at 0.87, Mark Hertling at 0.87), one Journalist (Mary Katharine Ham at 0.88), one Activism organization (Republican Voters Against Trump at 0.88), one Podcasts and Radio entry (Mueller, She Wrote), and one Miscellaneous account. The audience shape is not anchored to a single kind — it bridges politicians, government officials, and political media simultaneously.
The broad shape here reflects an audience that overlaps comparably with multiple distinct neighbor types rather than concentrating around one.