At 0.94, Karl Rove and News Maker sit in a near-perfect tie at the top of Carly Fiorina's similarity graph — a politician and a news publisher, separated by just 0.002 — and that pairing defines the two-peak structure of this audience.
The top 10 breaks into a recognizable conservative political-media cluster, but the subcategory mix is more varied than a simple same-kind reading would suggest. Only two neighbors share Fiorina's own subcategory (Politicians): Karl Rove at 0.94 and Mitt Romney at 0.91. The larger share of the set is journalists and media: Mary Katharine Ham (0.93) and Kimberley Strassel (0.89) as Journalists, Megyn Kelly as a TV Personality (0.88). Rounding out the cluster are Ari Fleischer as a Government Official (0.93), Rasmussen Reports as a Research Organization (0.91), Heritage Foundation as a Political Group (0.90), and Alan Dershowitz as an Academic (0.89). The two peaks — one anchored by a fellow politician, the other by a news-publisher signal — suggest an audience that moves between political figures and political media rather than concentrating on either alone.
The shape points to an audience defined less by a single figure type than by a shared orbit around center-right political commentary and news consumption.