At 0.9564, The White House is the strongest pull in the top 10 — but the audience doesn't stop at official government accounts. It extends, nearly as strongly, into political commentary, activism, and satire, forming two distinct neighborhoods that this account bridges.
The shape is two-peak. One cluster is the inner executive circle: The White House (0.96), First Lady of the United States (0.95), and President of the United States (0.90) — all Government Officials or Government subcategories, the same kind as the center entity. The second cluster is harder to categorize by a single label: Dan Rather (0.92, Journalists), Democracy Docket (0.91, Activism), Glennon Doyle (0.91, Authors), Blaire Erskine (0.90, Comedians), Joe Kennedy III (0.90, Politicians), PatriotTakes (0.90, Humor Memes and Satire), and Justin Amash (0.89, Politicians). That second cluster spans journalists, activists, authors, comedians, and politicians — a politically engaged media-and-commentary orbit rather than a government one.
The two peaks are structurally distinct: same-kind government accounts at the top, cross-kind political media figures just below, with scores compressed tightly enough (0.90–0.95 vs. 0.89–0.92) that both neighborhoods are genuinely close. The audience shape here is one that follows official government output and the broader ecosystem of political commentary simultaneously.