Keith Ellison's ten nearest neighbors span five distinct subcategories, with no single type dominating — a flat distribution that runs from civil rights non-profits to comedians to authors, with only one fellow politician in the set.
The shape is flat: scores range from 0.97 down to 0.95, a narrow band with no standout. The top position belongs to the Southern Poverty Law Center (0.97), a non-profit, followed by politician Stacey Abrams (0.96) and the American Civil Liberties Union (0.95), another non-profit. Civil rights and advocacy organizations — non-profits and activism groups — account for four of the ten neighbors, with Fair Fight (0.95) and the Women's March (0.95) rounding out that cluster. The remaining six slots go to comedians Leslie Jones (0.95) and Trevor Noah (0.95), authors Ibram X. Kendi (0.95) and Qasim Rashid (0.95), journalist Elie Mystal (0.95), and Abrams as the lone fellow politician. The cross-kind composition — advocacy organizations, comedians, and authors sitting alongside a single politician peer — defines the cluster more than any one neighbor does.
This audience shape reflects a constituency that overlaps heavily with civil rights non-profits and progressive media figures rather than clustering tightly around other elected officials.