The top 10 neighbors for Cameron Kasky form a tightly compressed cluster — scores run from 0.98 down to 0.96, a span of less than two points — with no single dominant neighbor pulling away from the rest. That narrow band is the defining structural fact here.
The shape is flat, and the subcategory mix tells the story. Tallying the top 10: five are Journalists (Steve Kornacki, Jake Tapper, Katy Tur, David Fahrenthold, Julie K. Brown), two are fellow Activists (David Hogg at 0.98 and Sarah Chadwick at 0.97), one is an Activism organization (March For Our Lives at 0.97), one is a Politician (Robert Reich at 0.97), and one is a TV Show (The Late Show at 0.97). Journalists are the plurality, not activists — the audience that follows Cameron Kasky overlaps most broadly with audiences for political reporters and news personalities, with activist and movement accounts as a secondary cluster. The presence of March For Our Lives and David Hogg confirms that the activist core is present, but it does not dominate the neighbor set numerically.
The flat shape, combined with the journalist-heavy composition, indicates an audience that is deeply embedded in political news consumption rather than organized around a single figure or cause.