At 0.87, the National Cowboy Museum is the single strongest pull in James Breakwell's top 10 — and at 0.86, Gov. Gary Johnson is nearly as close, forming a genuine two-peak structure where neither neighbor dominates alone. These two sit in different subcategories — Education and Politicians, respectively — and that divergence signals an audience that bridges two distinct neighborhoods rather than clustering tightly around one.
The remaining eight neighbors spread across a wide mix of subcategories with no single kind dominating. History In Pictures (0.85) and Kid President (0.85) represent Fact Quote and Lyric Accounts and Motivational content; John Krasinski (0.85) and Eric Stonestreet (0.80) are Actors; Team USA (0.84) and NBC Olympics (0.81) are Sports Teams and Sports Leagues. Calvin and Hobbes (0.81) lands in Humor Memes and Satire, and Ryen Russillo (0.80) is a TV Personality. No other Author appears anywhere in the top 10 — Breakwell's own subcategory is entirely absent from the neighbor set. The audience shape is defined not by other writers but by a cross-kind mix of civic, inspirational, sports, and broadly wholesome entertainment figures.
That combination — a politician and a museum as the two anchors, with actors, Olympians, and humor accounts filling the rest — points to an audience whose shared trait is tone and sensibility rather than any single content category.