The top 10 neighbors span five distinct subcategories — Government, News Publishers, Technology, Magazines, and TV Shows — with no single kind dominating, which is the defining feature of a broad audience shape.
The nearest neighbor is the Department of State at 0.93, followed by the Justice Department at 0.90 and the US Labor Department at 0.89. Three of the top 10 share the U.S. Treasury's own Government subcategory, making same-kind overlap real but not overwhelming. The remaining seven neighbors are drawn from media: Twitter News (0.89), CNN Politics (0.89), CNN International (0.89), TIME (0.88), ABC News Politics (0.88), The Situation Room (0.88), and The Telegraph (0.88). Four of those seven are News Publishers; the remaining three are Technology, a TV Channel, and a TV Show. The scores compress into a narrow 0.88–0.93 band, with no single neighbor pulling far ahead of the rest — the structural signature of a broad shape.
What stands out is the media weight: the audience that follows a federal government agency also closely tracks political news infrastructure across broadcast, print, and digital. The Government neighbors confirm institutional overlap, but the News Publishers and TV Shows confirm that this audience is organized around political information consumption as much as around government itself.
The broad shape here reflects an audience defined by sustained, cross-platform engagement with political and policy news rather than loyalty to any single institution or outlet.