Ken Klippenstein's top 10 neighbors span activism organizations, news publishers, comedians, authors, and fellow journalists — a mixed cluster with no single subcategory dominating and no standout gap between the highest and lowest scores (0.9874 to 0.9760).
The shape is flat: scores compress into a tight band, and the composition is the finding. Tallying the top 10 by subcategory: three are News Publishers (The Intercept, Vox, BuzzFeed), two are Non-Profits (Planned Parenthood at 0.9845, American Civil Liberties Union at 0.9769), one is Activism (Planned Parenthood Action at 0.9874), one is an Author (Jessica Valenti at 0.9799), one is a Comedian (Michelle Wolf at 0.9791), one is a Website (The A.V. Club at 0.9787), and one is a fellow Journalist (Astead Herndon at 0.9773). That makes Klippenstein a journalist whose nearest audiences are shaped more by civil society organizations and news media outlets than by other journalists — only one fellow journalist appears in the top 10. The presence of advocacy non-profits and an activism organization alongside entertainment-adjacent outlets like The A.V. Club and a comedian signals an audience that moves across civic, media-critical, and cultural content simultaneously.
The cross-kind composition here — activism, non-profit, news publishing, and comedy all registering above 0.97 — points to an audience defined less by a single content type than by a consistent orientation across several of them.