Across the top 10 nearest neighbors, every single entity belongs to the political sphere — politicians, government officials, political groups, and activism organizations — with not one other Magazine appearing in the set. Similarity here measures audience composition overlap on a 0–1 scale; a score of 0.93 means the two entities draw audiences that look nearly identical in shape.
The shape is broad: no single neighbor dominates, and scores descend gradually from MeidasTouch.com at 0.93 down to Republican Voters Against Trump at 0.88, with eight other neighbors clustered tightly between. The top three — MeidasTouch.com (0.93), Phil Ehr (0.92), and Angry Staffer (0.92) — set the tone: a political group, a politician, and a government official. Alexander S. Vindman (0.91) and Joe Walsh (0.90) extend the government-official and politician thread further. The one partial outlier by subcategory is Noel Casler (0.91), a comedian, and Deadline White House (0.89), a TV show — but both sit inside a neighbor set that is otherwise uniformly political in character. No journalists, no entertainment brands, and no other magazines appear in the top 10.
The broad shape with uniformly high scores across a politically concentrated neighbor set indicates an audience whose composition is tightly defined around political engagement rather than media consumption broadly.