The top 10 neighbors for Michael Harriot span journalists, activists, politicians, a non-profit, a comedian, an author, and a musician — a genuinely mixed cluster compressed into a narrow similarity band running from 0.97 to 0.98.
The shape is flat: no single neighbor dominates. Stacey Abrams leads at 0.98, followed closely by Nikole Hannah-Jones (0.98) and the Equal Justice Initiative (0.97). Three fellow journalists appear in the top 10 — Hannah-Jones, Van Jones (0.97), and Symone D. Sanders (0.97) — but they share the space with two activists (Brittany Cunningham at 0.97, Sherrilyn Ifill at 0.97), a politician, a non-profit, an author (Clint Smith, 0.97), and a musician (Dionne Warwick, 0.97). The presence of a non-profit and a musician at scores this close to the journalists and activists signals that the audience shape here is not defined by any single professional category. What holds the cluster together is not what these entities do, but the consistent audience composition they all attract — one that moves fluidly across journalism, civic activism, and political commentary without anchoring to any one of them.
The flat, tightly-packed structure of this neighbor set suggests an audience that follows a coherent ecosystem rather than a single type of voice.