Above the Law's top 10 neighbors are a mix of news publishers, magazines, and individual journalists — with no single dominant pull and scores compressed into a narrow band from 0.96 to 0.97.
The shape is flat: WSJ Law News leads at 0.97, followed closely by Health Affairs (0.97), Fast Company (0.97), The Wall Street Journal (0.97), and Gates Foundation (0.97). None of these separates meaningfully from the others. Tallying the top 10 by subcategory: four are News Publishers (WSJ Law News, The Wall Street Journal, Politico, The Wall Street Journal), three are Magazines (Health Affairs, Fast Company, Harvard Business Review), one is a Non-Profit (Gates Foundation), one is an Activist (Melinda French Gates), and one is a Journalist (Nate Silver). Notably, only one neighbor — eMarketer — shares Above the Law's own subcategory of Websites; the rest of the cluster is built from news publishers, magazines, and individual public figures. The legal-specific neighbors (WSJ Law News at 0.97, Politico at 0.97) sit alongside general business and policy outlets without any clear separation, suggesting the audience is shaped less by legal subject matter than by a broader professional-media consumption pattern.
The flat, compressed cluster points to an audience that moves fluidly across serious news, policy, and business media rather than clustering tightly around any single outlet type or topic.