The top 10 neighbors span politicians, journalists, news publishers, and a travel brand — no single subcategory dominates, and the scores compress into a narrow 0.05-point band from John Bolton at 0.89 down to WSJ Editorial Page at 0.84. That breadth, not any single standout, is the structural finding.
The shape is broad. Six of the ten neighbors are Politicians — John Bolton (0.89), Karl Rove (0.86), Mitt Romney (0.86), Cindy McCain (0.86), Jeff Flake (0.84), and Bill Kristol — placing Jeb Bush squarely within his own subcategory. The remaining four break into two News Publishers — National Review (0.87) and WSJ Editorial Page (0.84) — two Journalists — Kirsten Powers (0.85) and George F. Will (0.85) — and one outlier: Wheels Up (0.83), a Travel brand whose audience composition nonetheless aligns closely with this political cluster. The journalist and news-publisher neighbors are a consistent secondary layer, suggesting the audience tracks political commentary as much as political figures themselves.
The overall picture is an audience shaped by center-right political media consumption — politicians, opinion journalists, and institutional conservative publications — with no single neighbor pulling far ahead of the rest.