The top 10 neighbors for March For Our Lives span journalists, activists, politicians, comedians, and a TV show — a mixed cluster with no single subcategory dominating and scores compressed tightly between 0.97 and 0.97.
The shape is flat: the highest-scoring neighbor, David Hogg (0.98), sits only 0.013 above the tenth-place neighbor, Daniel Dale (0.97). That narrow band is the defining structural fact. Tallying the top 10 by subcategory: Journalists account for three entries — Steve Kornacki (0.98), Jake Tapper (0.97), and Daniel Dale (0.97). Activists account for two — David Hogg and Cameron Kasky (0.97). The remaining five slots go to a Comedian (Sarah Cooper, 0.98), an Activism organization (Everytown, 0.97), a Politician (Robert Reich, 0.97), a TV Show (The Late Show, 0.97), and a Government Official (Doug Emhoff, 0.97).
That cross-kind spread — journalists and late-night TV sitting alongside fellow activists and gun-safety organizations — indicates the audience is shaped less by a single community than by a broad, politically engaged media ecosystem. The two fellow Activism-subcategory entries in the top 10 are Everytown and, outside the top 10, the wider graph will show more; within these ten, the audience overlaps as strongly with cable news journalists as with peer advocacy organizations.
This flat, cross-kind pattern points to an audience that moves fluidly across political journalism, advocacy, and commentary rather than clustering tightly around any one type of account.