The top 10 neighbors for NOH8 Campaign span five distinct subcategories — news publishers, magazines, comedians, non-profits, and political groups — with no single type dominating and scores compressed into a narrow band from 0.95 down to 0.91.
The shape is flat: HuffPost Queer Voices leads at 0.95, followed closely by The Advocate at 0.94 and Margaret Cho at 0.94. None of these pull away from the pack; the gap between first and tenth is less than five points. That compression means no single neighbor defines the audience — the shape is a blend.
Subcategory composition tells the clearest story. Four of the top 10 are marketing channels (two magazines, one news publisher, one TV show), three are organizations (two non-profits in GLAAD at 0.92 and Human Rights Campaign — wait, HRC does not appear in the top 10; confirming: GLAAD at 0.92 is the only non-profit in the top 10 alongside no second non-profit in positions 1–10). Tallying precisely: HuffPost Queer Voices (News Publisher), The Advocate (Magazine), Margaret Cho (Comedian), GLAAD (Non-Profit), The Young Turks (TV Show), Out Magazine (Magazine), Laverne Cox (Actor), Cenk Uygur (Journalist), BuzzFeed LGBTQ (Website), Justice Democrats (Political Group). That is: two magazines, one news publisher, one TV show, one website, one comedian, one actor, one journalist, one non-profit, one political group — a genuinely mixed set. NOH8 Campaign's own subcategory is Activism; no other Activism entity appears in the top 10.
The cross-kind breadth here — media channels, entertainers, and advocacy organizations all registering near-identical similarity scores — points to an audience that moves fluidly across progressive media, LGBTQ+ publishing, and left-leaning political content rather than clustering tightly around any one of them.