Brian Kilmeade's top 10 nearest neighbors form a tight, undifferentiated cluster — scores run from 0.97 down to 0.96 with no single dominant pull and no meaningful gap between them. That compression is the structural finding: this audience does not belong to one neighbor more than another; it belongs to a recognizable ecosystem.
Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition. Across the top 10, the subcategory mix is TV Personalities, Politicians, and Journalists, with one News Publisher rounding out the set. Kimberly Guilfoyle leads at 0.97, followed immediately by Lisa Boothe at 0.97 and Trey Gowdy at 0.97 — the three are nearly indistinguishable by score. Sebastian Gorka (0.97) and Michelle Malkin (0.97) continue the pattern. Further down, Ronna McDaniel (0.97), Jay Sekulow (0.96), Laura Ingraham (0.96), and Tammy Bruce (0.96) hold the same narrow band. Breitbart News (0.96) is the lone non-person entity in the top 10 — a News Publisher — and its score is essentially flush with the rest.
The subcategory split across the 10 is roughly four TV Personalities (Guilfoyle, Boothe, Ingraham, Bruce by subcategory), four Politicians (Gowdy, Gorka, McDaniel, Sekulow), one Journalist (Malkin), and one News Publisher (Breitbart). No single subcategory dominates; the audience shape is defined by the whole cluster rather than any one type within it.
The flat shape signals an audience that is deeply embedded in a specific media-and-politics ecosystem, with loyalty distributed evenly across its members rather than concentrated on any single figure.