The top 10 neighbors for Chip Franklin span activism organizations, political TV shows, politicians, satirists, and authors — no single category dominates, and no other journalist appears in the top 10.
The shape is broad: scores run from 0.90 down to 0.84 with no sharp drop-off, and the neighbor set crosses subcategories freely. Really American (0.90, Activism) sits at the top, followed closely by Deadline White House (0.88, TV Shows) and Jon Cooper (0.88, Politicians). Palmer Report (0.86, Websites) and Tea Pain (0.86, Humor Memes and Satire) round out the top five. Tallying the full top 10: four are politicians or activists, two are TV shows or websites, one is an activism organization, one is a lifestyle influencer, one is an author, and one is a TV personality. The center entity's own subcategory — Journalists — has zero representatives in the top 10, meaning the audience composition here is defined almost entirely by political commentary, activism, and satire rather than by journalism peers. The one structural surprise is John Pavlovitz (0.84, Authors) appearing alongside overtly political accounts, suggesting the audience also overlaps with values-driven writing beyond the news cycle.
This broad, cross-subcategory pattern points to an audience organized around a political orientation rather than a professional media niche.