The top 10 neighbors for Adam Schefter form a tightly compressed cluster of NFL media figures — journalists, TV personalities, and sports analysts — with scores ranging from 0.97 down to 0.93, a span narrow enough that no single neighbor stands out as a dominant pull.
The shape is flat. Ian Rapoport (0.97) and Chris Mortensen (0.97) sit at the top, followed closely by Rich Eisen (0.96) and Mike Greenberg (0.95) — all four classified as Journalists, the same subcategory as Schefter himself. The next tier includes Trey Wingo (0.95) and PFF (0.95), a TV Personality and a Sports brand respectively, and Dan Orlovsky (0.94), an Athlete. Rounding out the top 10 are Todd McShay (0.93, Journalist), Roger Goodell (0.93, Professionals), and Mike Tirico (0.93, TV Personality). The subcategory breakdown across the ten: four Journalists, three TV Personalities, one Athlete, one Sports brand, and one Professionals entry. The cluster is almost entirely same-ecosystem — NFL media infrastructure — with no crossover into entertainment, comedy, or general sports outside the football orbit in the top 10.
The flat shape here reflects an audience defined by a single, coherent media niche: people who follow NFL news and analysis closely enough that their attention patterns are nearly indistinguishable across the reporters, analysts, and personalities who cover the league.