The top 10 neighbors for AP Stylebook span five distinct subcategories — News Publishers, Websites, Podcasts and Radio, Journalists, and Education — with no single type dominating and scores compressed into a narrow band from 0.97 to 0.95.
The shape is flat: AP Politics leads at 0.97, but the remaining nine neighbors sit within 0.02 of each other, offering no structural spike or secondary cluster. Merriam-Webster (0.96) and Audie Cornish (0.96) follow closely, then Serial (0.96), Poynter (0.96), Up First (0.95), PolitiFact (0.95), Adam Rippon (0.95), The National (0.95), and Sam Sanders (0.95). The mix is notably cross-kind: AP Stylebook is classified as a News Publisher, yet only two of the top 10 neighbors — AP Politics and The National — share that subcategory. The remaining eight are drawn from Websites, Podcasts and Radio, Journalists, Athletes, and Education. The presence of Adam Rippon (Athletes, 0.95) alongside Poynter (Education, 0.96) and Serial (Podcasts and Radio, 0.96) underscores that the audience shape here is not defined by news publishing alone.
The flat, cross-kind pattern suggests an audience that moves fluidly across public-radio programming, journalism-adjacent media, and language-focused reference content — a profile too diffuse to be captured by any single neighbor or subcategory.