Politicians, journalists, and TV personalities dominate the nearest audiences of The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge — not royals, not British institutions, and not entertainment figures in any conventional sense.
The shape here is broad: no single neighbor pulls far ahead of the rest, and scores span a relatively tight range from 0.89 down to roughly 0.81 across the top 10. Mitt Romney leads at 0.89, followed by PatriotTakes (0.87) and Justin Amash (0.86) — a politician, a political satire account, and another politician. Willie Geist (0.86) and Tom Brokaw (0.85) extend the pattern into TV personalities, while National Review (0.85) and David French (0.85) bring in news publishers and journalists. Tallying the top 10 by subcategory: four Politicians, two TV Personalities, two Journalists, one News Publisher, and one Humor/Satire account. No other Government Officials appear in the top 10 — the center entity's own subcategory is entirely absent from its nearest neighbors.
The cross-kind pattern is the defining feature. This is an audience shaped by American center-right political media consumption — skeptical of partisan extremes, drawn to institutional voices — rather than by any affinity for royalty or British public life. Mary Katharine Ham (0.84) and RealClearPolitics (0.84) reinforce that orientation, with Condoleezza Rice (0.84) closing out the top 10.
The broad shape with no standout neighbor suggests this audience is defined less by a single gravitational pull than by a consistent profile that happens to overlap heavily with American political media consumers.