Politicians, government officials, and political commentators dominate John Pavlovitz's nearest audience neighbors — with no other author in the top 10 except Don Winslow at 0.86, the lone fellow author in the set.
The shape is broad: scores run from 0.94 down to 0.88 across the top 10, with no single neighbor pulling far ahead of the rest. Angry Staffer leads at 0.94, followed by Joe Walsh (0.92) and Jeff Tiedrich (0.91). MeidasTouch.com (0.91) is the only non-individual entity in the top five. Tallying the subcategories across all 10 neighbors: Politicians appear three times (Joe Walsh, Phil Ehr, and Jon Cooper — wait, Jon Cooper falls outside the top 10 in this set), Government Officials twice (Angry Staffer, Alexander S. Vindman), Professionals once (Jeff Tiedrich), Political Groups once (MeidasTouch.com), Comedians once (Noel Casler), TV Personalities once (Glenn Kirschner), TV Shows once (Deadline White House), and Authors once (Don Winslow). The cluster is overwhelmingly political in character — politicians, government officials, political media, and political commentary — rather than literary or religious, the two categories most associated with Pavlovitz's own subcategory.
The breadth of this political cluster, sustained at high similarity across all 10 neighbors, indicates an audience whose shape is defined by political engagement rather than by the author subcategory at the center.