The top 10 neighbors for Edward Snowden span actors, comedians, journalists, activists, politicians, a lifestyle figure, and a website — no single subcategory dominates, and the scores compress into a narrow band from 0.97 to 0.96.
The shape is flat: Kumail Nanjiani leads at 0.97, followed closely by Atlas Obscura at 0.97, Kelly Oxford at 0.96, Greta Thunberg at 0.96, and BuzzFeed at 0.96. None of these pulls away from the pack. Snowden's own subcategory — Activists — appears once in the top 10, in Greta Thunberg; the remaining nine positions are held by an actor, a lifestyle figure, a website, a news publisher, two politicians (Justin Trudeau at 0.96, Andrew Yang at 0.96), a journalist (Ken Klippenstein at 0.96), and two comedians (Billy Eichner at 0.96, Marc Maron at 0.96). The subcategory mix — comedians, politicians, journalists, and a media brand alongside the single fellow activist — points to an audience that is politically engaged and culturally omnivorous rather than organized around any one type of figure.
The flat distribution across such a varied neighbor set suggests this audience's shape is defined less by a specific niche than by a consistent orientation that cuts across entertainment, media, and civic life.