David Weissman's top 10 nearest neighbors span politicians, TV personalities, a website, a comedian, an actor, and a fellow activist — a mixed subcategory composition spread across a narrow similarity band from 0.94 down to 0.91, which is the defining feature of a flat shape: no single neighbor pulls away from the pack.
The top three — Jon Cooper (0.94), Palmer Report (0.93), and David Jolly (0.93) — sit within two hundredths of each other, and the remaining seven compress further into a tight cluster. Politicians are the most represented subcategory in the top 10, with Jon Cooper, David Jolly, and Phil Ehr all carrying that label. TV Personalities appear twice — Glenn Kirschner (0.92) and Jill Wine-Banks (0.91). The remaining slots go to a website (Palmer Report), a comedian (Noel Casler, 0.92), an actor (Rob Reiner, 0.92), a professional (Jeff Tiedrich, 0.91), and one other activist (Scott Dworkin, 0.91 — the only neighbor sharing Weissman's own subcategory in the top 10). The cross-kind composition — politicians and TV personalities dominating, with the center entity's own subcategory appearing just once — suggests the audience is shaped primarily by political media consumption rather than by activist identity alone.
The flat, compressed band across these ten neighbors points to an audience with consistent, undifferentiated overlap across a broad political-media ecosystem rather than a concentrated affinity for any single voice.