Phil Ehr's ten nearest neighbors span six subcategories — politicians, government officials, professionals, authors, comedians, and a political group — with scores compressed tightly between 0.94 and 0.96, the hallmark of a flat shape. Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition; the narrow band means no single neighbor dominates.
Three of the ten share Ehr's own subcategory as politicians: David Jolly (0.94), John Dean (0.94), and Kim Mangone (0.94). Three more come from government officials: Alexander S. Vindman (0.95), Angry Staffer (0.95), and Barb McQuade (0.94). The remaining four are more varied: Dr. Dena Grayson (0.95) as a professional, Don Winslow (0.96) as an author, MeidasTouch.com (0.95) as a political group, and — the most structurally distinct entry — Noel Casler (0.96) as a comedian, who sits at the top of the set despite sharing none of Ehr's subcategory. The presence of a comedian and an author at the highest similarity scores, ahead of all three fellow politicians, is the clearest signal in the data.
The overall picture is an audience shaped primarily by anti-establishment political commentary across multiple formats and roles, with no single neighbor type commanding the cluster.