The top 10 neighbors for Black Lives Matter form a tightly compressed cluster — scores run from 0.98 down to 0.96 with no single dominant outlier — and the subcategory mix tells the clearest story: activists, politicians, journalists, and comedians, with almost no other activism organizations in the set.
Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition. The four nearest neighbors are all individual activists: DeRay Mckesson at 0.98, Color Of Change at 0.98 (the one other Activism organization in the top 10), Brittany Cunningham at 0.98, and Bree Newsome at 0.98. From there the cluster broadens quickly into adjacent subcategories: Colorlines (News Publishers, 0.97) is the first media outlet to appear, followed by W. Kamau Bell (Comedians, 0.97) and Samuel Sinyangwe (Activists, 0.97). Positions eight through ten bring in a politician — Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley at 0.97 — a second comedian, Jordan Peele at 0.97, and an author, Clint Smith at 0.96.
Tallying the top 10: five Activists (including Color Of Change as the lone fellow Activism org), two Comedians, one Politician, one News Publisher, and one Author. The cross-kind presence of comedians and a news outlet alongside the activist core signals that this audience doesn't stay within a single lane — it extends into politically engaged media and entertainment figures who share a comparable audience shape.
The flat distribution across the top 10 reflects an audience with a well-defined but multi-channel profile, anchored in activism and spreading into progressive politics and culturally engaged media.