The Clinton Foundation's top 10 nearest neighbors are dominated by news publishers and journalists — a tight cluster of media entities with no single standout pulling away from the rest.
The shape is flat: scores run from 0.97 (Arianna Huffington) down to 0.96 (Gates Foundation), a span of just over one point. Within that band, six of the ten neighbors are News Publishers — The New York Times (0.97), HuffPost (0.97), Reuters (0.97), HuffPost Women (0.97), The Washington Post (0.97), and The Daily Beast (0.96). Two neighbors are Journalists: Arianna Huffington (0.97) and Christiane Amanpour (0.96). The remaining two are a Politician — John Kerry (0.97) — and one fellow Non-Profit, Gates Foundation (0.96).
The cross-kind finding is notable: the Clinton Foundation's own subcategory (Non-Profit) appears only once in the top 10, while news media entities — publishers and journalists combined — account for eight of the ten positions. The one politician in the set, John Kerry, fits the same civic-media orbit as the rest. The Gates Foundation is the lone structural peer.
This pattern points to an audience whose attention is organized around serious news consumption and policy journalism rather than the philanthropic sector broadly.