The ten nearest audiences to Women's March are split almost entirely between non-profits, journalists, and news media — with no other Activism-subcategory entity appearing in the top 10. The shape is flat: scores run from 0.9871 down to 0.9713, a band of less than two percentage points, meaning no single neighbor dominates.
Three non-profits anchor the set: American Civil Liberties Union at 0.99, Planned Parenthood at 0.98, and ProPublica at 0.97. Three journalists sit alongside them — Jamelle Bouie (0.98), Adam Serwer (0.98), and Wesley Lowery (0.97) — all carrying the Journalists subcategory. The remaining four positions go to news and commentary outlets: The Atlantic (0.98) and The Nation (0.97) as magazines, Vox (0.97) as a news publisher, and Frontline (0.97) as a TV show. The composition is civil-society organizations and political journalism, in roughly equal measure.
What the flat shape reveals is that Women's March draws an audience whose attention is distributed evenly across institutional non-profits and media-credentialed journalists — a profile defined less by any single gravitational neighbor than by a consistent orientation toward civic and press-accountability content.