The top 10 neighbors for Writer's Digest span blogs, book publishers, entertainment platforms, activism organizations, journalists, and TV shows — with no single entity pulling far ahead of the rest. Scores run from 0.90 down to 0.87, a narrow band that defines the flat shape.
Winning Writers leads at 0.90, the only blog in the top 10. Below it, the mix is genuinely cross-kind: The Good Men Project (0.89, magazine) and Publishers Weekly (0.87, magazine) are the two other magazines in the set, meaning Writer's Digest shares its own subcategory with just two of its ten nearest neighbors. The remaining seven come from elsewhere — Algonquin Books (0.89) and Little, Brown and Co (0.87) represent book publishers; Goodreads (0.88) is an entertainment platform; MoveOn (0.88) is an activism organization; Jacob Dean (0.88) and Krystal Ball (0.88) are journalists; and All In with Chris Hayes (0.88) is a TV show. The book-publishing cluster — two publishers plus Goodreads and Audible adjacent in the broader graph — is the most coherent thread, but the presence of political media and journalism neighbors at nearly identical scores signals that the audience shape is not defined by publishing alone.
The flat distribution across subcategories suggests an audience that is broadly engaged across literary, civic, and media channels rather than concentrated in any single content niche.