The top 10 nearest neighbors split into two distinct neighborhoods: a tight cluster of federal government agencies, then a second band of political journalists and news programming.
The shape is two-peak. The first peak is anchored by FEMA (0.88), Homeland Security (0.87), National Security Agency (0.87), and CIA (0.87) — all Government subcategory entities, scoring within a narrow 0.01-point range of each other. Justice Department (0.84) and Department of State (0.82) extend this federal cluster before scores drop noticeably. That gap — roughly six points — marks the boundary between the two peaks.
The second peak is composed entirely of media and political commentary figures: Anderson Cooper 360° (0.79), The Recount (0.79), Piers Morgan (0.78), and Brianna Keilar (0.78). Their subcategories — TV Shows, Websites, TV Personalities, Journalists — share no overlap with the first cluster's Government subcategory. No other Government entities appear between positions 7 and 10 in the top 10.
The pattern suggests FBI's audience is not shaped by a single kind of following. It bridges people who track the federal security apparatus directly and people who consume political news coverage — two distinct audience compositions that nonetheless converge on the same entity.