The ten nearest audiences to Equal Justice Initiative cluster around individual voices — journalists, authors, and activists — rather than peer organizations. Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition; scores across the top 10 run from 0.98 down to 0.95, a narrow band that reflects the flat shape of this neighborhood.
Journalists make up the largest single group: Michael Harriot (0.97), Nikole Hannah-Jones (0.97), and Abby D. Phillip (0.96) all sit near the top. Authors follow closely — Clint Smith (0.97) and Ibram X. Kendi (0.96) — alongside activists Brittany Cunningham (0.96) and Sherrilyn Ifill (0.95). Stacey Abrams (0.98), classified as a politician, sits at the very top of the set. The activism organization Fair Fight (0.97) rounds out the upper tier. Only one other non-profit appears in the top 10: the Southern Poverty Law Center at 0.96 — making individual public voices, not peer institutions, the defining character of this neighbor set.
The flat distribution across these ten suggests an audience that moves fluidly among journalists, authors, activists, and organizers rather than anchoring to any single type.