Judicial Watch's nearest audiences are a dense cluster of conservative journalists, politicians, and TV personalities — with no single neighbor pulling far ahead of the rest.
The shape is flat: the top 10 scores span only 0.93 to 0.96, a narrow band with no dominant anchor. Michelle Malkin leads at 0.96, followed closely by Ronna McDaniel (0.95) and Sebastian Gorka (0.95). Tammy Bruce (0.95) and Katrina Pierson (0.94) round out the top five. Tallying subcategories across the full top 10: four are Journalists (Malkin, Bruce, and two others), four are Politicians (McDaniel, Gorka, Pierson, Jay Sekulow), one is a TV Personality (Brian Kilmeade), and one is a Government Official (Dan Scavino). No other Political Groups — Judicial Watch's own subcategory — appear in the top 10, making this a cross-kind cluster entirely. The neighbors are individual media figures and political operatives, not peer organizations.
The broader pattern holds across the extended neighbor set: conservative-aligned journalists, TV personalities, politicians, and news publishers form a tightly interlocked audience neighborhood, with scores remaining elevated well into the 0.88–0.93 range for figures like Ann Coulter (0.94) and Breitbart News (0.92).
This flat, cross-kind shape indicates an audience defined less by organizational affiliation and more by a consistent media and political ecosystem — one where individual voices and broadcast channels carry the structural weight.