Mia Farrow's nearest audiences are dominated by political journalists, politicians, and news media — not other actors. Across the top 10 neighbors, the scores compress into a narrow band from 0.97 down to 0.93, with no single entity pulling far ahead of the rest: the shape is flat.
Jerry Nadler (0.97) sits at the top, the only politician in the top 10, followed immediately by The Daily Beast (0.95) and Publishers Weekly (0.95). Kyle Griffin (0.94) and Brennan Center (0.94) round out the five closest. Tallying the full top 10 by subcategory: journalists account for four entries — Kyle Griffin, Jonathan Lemire, Sam Stein, and David Corn — alongside one politician, two news publishers, one magazine, one non-profit, and one comedian (Andy Borowitz, 0.94). The only other actor in the top 10 is absent entirely — Farrow's own subcategory does not appear among the ten neighbors at all.
The one genuine cross-kind surprise is Publishers Weekly (0.95) and Andy Borowitz (0.94) sitting alongside political journalists and a congressman; the audience that follows Farrow is shaped primarily by political news consumption, not by film or entertainment.
This cluster suggests an audience organized around political media engagement, with journalism and civic institutions as its defining gravitational pull.