Veep is the strongest pull in Deb Haaland's top 10, scoring 0.93 — and it sits alongside Project Runway at 0.90 as a second, distinct peak in an otherwise dispersed neighbor set. These two TV shows form the two-peak structure: one a political satire, the other a fashion competition, both drawing audiences whose shape closely mirrors Haaland's own.
Beyond those two anchors, the top 10 spreads across a notably cross-kind mix. US Department of the Interior (0.90) is the only Government entity and the only neighbor sharing a directly adjacent institutional identity. Men's Journal (0.88) and ABC News (0.87) represent Magazines and News Publishers respectively, joined further down by Honest Tea (0.87, Beverages), The Leftovers (0.86, TV Shows), CBC News (0.86, News Publishers), The Atlantic Photo (0.85, News Publishers), and Indian Country Today (0.84, News Publishers). That last neighbor is the only one in the top 10 whose subcategory and subject matter align with Haaland's specific political identity. No other Politicians appear in the top 10 — the neighbor set is dominated by TV Shows (three entries) and News Publishers (three entries), with Magazines, Beverages, and Government rounding it out.
The two-peak shape, anchored by prestige television on one side and a government agency on the other, suggests an audience that bridges entertainment-oriented media consumption with civic and policy interest — without clustering tightly around political figures themselves.