Garry Kasparov's top 10 neighbors are a mix of journalists, professionals, government officials, politicians, and authors — a cluster defined less by any single type than by a shared audience drawn to political commentary and public affairs. Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition; scores across the top 10 run from 0.97 to 0.98, a narrow band with no single standout.
Journalists make up five of the ten neighbors: David Frum (0.98), Jonathan Swan (0.98), Peter Baker (0.97), Susan Hennessey (0.97), and David Fahrenthold (0.97). Two neighbors are Professionals — Andy Slavitt (0.98) and Preet Bharara (0.98), the same subcategory as Kasparov himself. Ronald Klain (0.98) is a Government Official, Tim Miller (0.98) a Politician, and Thomas L. Friedman (0.97) an Author. No sports figures, entertainers, or chess-adjacent entities appear in the top 10 — the neighbor set is entirely oriented around political media and public-affairs commentary.
The flat shape reflects an audience that distributes evenly across this cluster, with no single neighbor pulling significantly ahead of the rest.