The two strongest pulls in The White House's top 10 are fellow government accounts — First Lady of the United States at 0.98 and President of the United States at 0.97 — but the cluster drops sharply after that, and the second neighborhood that forms is built almost entirely around soccer and sports media, not politics.
The shape is two-peak. The first peak is a tight government-official cluster: First Lady of the United States (0.98), President of the United States (0.97), and White House Press Secretary (0.96) are the three closest neighbors, all sharing the Government Officials subcategory. After that, similarity scores fall roughly ten points and the character of the neighbors shifts. The second neighborhood is dominated by sports journalists and soccer figures: Sarah Spain (0.87) and Mina Kimes (0.87) are both Journalists; Men in Blazers (0.86) and 1A (0.86) are Podcasts and Radio; Taylor Twellman (0.86) is an Athlete. Sports Business Journal (0.85) and Katie Nolan (0.85) round out the ten. No other Government subcategory entity appears in the top 10 beyond the first three. The soccer-and-sports-media cluster is not thematically related to the center entity — it reflects a shared audience composition, not subject matter overlap.
The two-peak structure reveals an audience that is simultaneously concentrated around executive-branch accounts and, at a secondary level, shaped by the same people who follow U.S. soccer coverage and sports journalism.