Andrew Yang's top 10 neighbors span politicians, activists, comedians, journalists, and media brands — with no single subcategory dominating and scores compressed into a narrow band from 0.96 to 0.98.
The shape is flat: Justin Trudeau leads at 0.98, followed closely by Greta Thunberg at 0.97 and John Oliver at 0.97. Last Week Tonight (0.97) and Weijia Jiang (0.97) round out the top five. Tallying the subcategories across all ten: Politicians appears once (Trudeau), Activists once (Thunberg), Comedians once (Oliver), TV Shows once (Last Week Tonight), and Journalists twice (Jiang and Mehdi Hasan at 0.97). The remaining four — Malala Yousafzai (0.97, Activists), The Daily Show (0.96, TV Shows), Lin-Manuel Miranda (0.96, Musicians and Bands), and Atlas Obscura (0.96, Websites) — add further subcategory variety. No single kind controls the cluster. What the neighbors share is not a genre but a register: civic-minded, media-literate, and politically engaged, cutting across journalists, satirical TV, activists, and a musician known for politically resonant work.
Andrew Yang's own subcategory, Politicians, has only one representative in the top 10 (Trudeau), meaning the audience shape is defined far more by journalists, activists, and comedians than by fellow politicians.
This pattern suggests an audience that follows political discourse through media and advocacy channels as much as through politicians themselves.