George F. Will's top 10 neighbors span journalists, politicians, government officials, authors, and a news publisher — a mixed subcategory composition spread across a narrow similarity band, from Bill Kristol at 0.97 down to Michael Beschloss at 0.96. No single neighbor pulls away from the pack, and no single subcategory dominates cleanly.
Tallying the top 10: three are Politicians (Bill Kristol, 0.97; Michael McFaul, 0.96; George Conway, 0.96), three are Journalists (Jonah Goldberg, 0.97; Charlie Sykes, 0.96; Matthew Dowd, 0.95), two are Government Officials (Gen Michael Hayden, 0.97; Daniel Goldman, 0.96), one is an Author (Michael Beschloss, 0.96), and one is a News Publisher (National Review, 0.96). Will's own subcategory — Journalists — accounts for three of the ten neighbors, so the audience is not exclusively shaped by fellow journalists; politicians and government officials together match that count exactly.
The defining character of this cluster is not a single tribe but a consistent orientation: center-right and anti-Trump commentary voices, drawn from across institutional roles. The flat shape means no single neighbor is structurally dominant — the audience overlaps broadly and evenly across this particular corner of political media.