At 0.94, Mick Jagger is the strongest pull in Keith Richards' top 10 — but the second peak belongs not to another musician, and not to a fellow rock figure, but to a cluster of politicians, activists, and political commentators that dominates positions three through ten.
The shape here is genuinely two-peaked. The first peak is classic rock: Mick Jagger at 0.94 and Paul McCartney at 0.91 are the two highest-scoring neighbors, both Musicians and Bands, and Bruce Springsteen at 0.86 is the only other musician in the top 10. That's three Musicians and Bands total — a real cluster, but a narrow one. The second peak is where the top 10 diverges sharply from what the entity's own subcategory would predict. Noel Casler (Comedian, 0.87) and Phil Ehr (Politician, 0.87) sit immediately below McCartney, followed by Jeff Bridges (Actor, 0.85), David Weissman (Activist, 0.85), Holly Figueroa O'Reilly (Activist, 0.84), Amy McGrath (Politician, 0.84), and John Dean (Politician, 0.84). Tallying the top 10: three Musicians and Bands, three Politicians, two Activists, one Actor, and one Comedian — the political-activist cluster is the larger half of the neighbor set by count.
The two-peak structure reveals an audience that is simultaneously shaped by classic rock fandom and by a distinct political-commentary following, with the two neighborhoods sitting at nearly the same similarity level.