Matthew Miller's nearest ten neighbors span journalists, academics, politicians, and a government official — a tight cluster of political-commentary and legal-analysis voices, all compressed into a narrow similarity band between 0.98 and 0.99.
The shape is flat: no single neighbor pulls away from the pack. Daniel Goldman sits at the top (0.99), a government official, followed closely by journalist John Heilemann (0.99) and academics Neal Katyal (0.98) and Richard W. Painter (0.98). Politicians George Conway (0.98) and Michael McFaul (0.98) round out the cross-kind presence, alongside journalists Stephanie Ruhle (0.98), Jennifer Rubin (0.98), and Nicolle Wallace (0.98), with academic Laurence Tribe (0.98) completing the set. Four of the ten neighbors share Miller's own Journalists subcategory; the other six are academics, politicians, and a government official — a cross-kind composition that defines the cluster's character as much as the journalists within it do.
The overall picture is an audience that moves fluidly across political journalists, legal commentators, and government-adjacent figures, treating subcategory boundaries as largely irrelevant.