Two distinct audience neighborhoods define Occupy Democrats' top 10: a political-media cluster at the high end and a Tampa Bay sports cluster in the middle — an unusual pairing for a political group.
The upper tier is anchored by Chip Franklin (0.76), a journalist, and Really American (0.75), an activism organization — the two neighbors whose audiences most closely resemble Occupy Democrats'. Valerie Bertinelli (0.73), a TV personality, rounds out this first cluster. Together, these three suggest an audience shaped by political engagement and media consumption. The second, structurally separate cluster is entirely Tampa Bay sports: the Tampa Bay Rays (0.70), Tampa Bay Buccaneers (0.69), and Tampa Bay Lightning (0.68) all land within a tight band, pointing to a concentrated regional sports following embedded in this audience. No other political group appears in the top 10 — the center entity's own subcategory is absent from all ten neighbors.
Filling out the set are PM Breaking News (0.68), a news publisher; Matthew VanDyke (0.68), an activist; Ricky Davila (0.67), a lifestyle figure; and Publix (0.66), a grocery brand — the last of which underscores how geographically concentrated this audience appears to be around the Tampa Bay market.
The two-peak structure reveals an audience that bridges political-media engagement and Tampa Bay regional identity, rather than clustering around other political organizations.