The top 10 neighbors split into two distinct clusters: a tight weather-information group at the top, then a sharp pivot into conservative political media.
NOAA Satellites (0.90) and The Weather Channel (0.89) are the two peaks that define the shape. Jim Cantore (0.88) and Weather Underground (0.85) extend the first cluster — three Government entities and weather-adjacent media whose audiences overlap heavily with the National Weather Service's own. That first cluster is same-kind or near-kind: government agencies, a weather TV channel, a weather website, a weather TV personality. Then the data shifts. Fox News Politics (0.83) and NOAA (0.83) sit at nearly identical scores, and from position six onward the neighbors are almost entirely conservative political figures and outlets: GOP (0.83), Lindsey Graham (0.82), Bill Hemmer (0.82), and Kellyanne Conway (0.81). Among the top 10, only NOAA shares the center entity's Government subcategory; the rest are politicians, journalists, TV personalities, and news publishers. No other Government entity appears in the top 10 beyond those two.
The two-peak structure reveals an audience that is simultaneously drawn to authoritative weather information and to right-leaning political media — two neighborhoods that rarely appear together at this proximity.