The West Wing Weekly's top 10 neighbors span TV personalities, comedians, actors, journalists, websites, and a fellow podcast — with scores compressed into a narrow band from 0.95 down to 0.94, the defining feature of a flat shape.
Ken Jennings (0.95) sits at the top, a TV Personalities subcategory entry, followed immediately by Jon Stewart (0.95, Comedians) and Bradley Whitford (0.95, Actors). The spread across those three is less than two hundredths of a point. Mental Floss (0.95, Websites) and Dan Levy (0.95, Actors) continue the pattern, with Wait Wait Don't Tell Me (0.94, Podcasts and Radio) the only other podcast in the top 10. PolitiFact (0.94, Websites), March For Science (0.94, Activism), Chasten Buttigieg (0.94, Professionals), and The Onion (0.94, Websites) round out the set.
Tallying the subcategories: three Websites, two Actors, one TV Personality, one Comedian, one Podcasts and Radio, one Activism, and one Professionals. No single subcategory dominates. The center entity's own subcategory — Podcasts and Radio — appears only once in the top 10, in Wait Wait Don't Tell Me. The audience shape here is genuinely cross-kind: it overlaps most strongly with TV personalities, actors, comedians, and general-interest web properties rather than with other podcasts.
The flat, mixed composition of this neighbor set points to an audience that is not organized around a single content format or celebrity type, but around a consistent sensibility that cuts across media categories.