Someone Knows Something - Someone Knows Something Introduces | Allison after NXIVM from Uncover
Episode Date: November 14, 2025You think you know the NXIVM story. The secretive self-help empire. The sex cult headlines. The downfall of its leader, Keith Raniere. But the most famous woman at the centre of the story has remained... largely silent. Allison after NXIVM from Uncover tells the story of Allison Mack: former Smallville actress, high-ranking NXIVM member, and convicted felon. With exclusive access following her release from prison, this series traces her astonishing path from Smallville fame to NXIVM’s inner circle — and her effort to rebuild a life in the wreckage. Through raw interviews and revealing conversations with those who knew her before, during, and after NXIVM, this season dives deep into the gray zones of influence, accountability, and redemption. More episodes can be found here: https://link.mgln.ai/AANxSKS
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This is a CBC podcast.
A famous actress, a sex cult, a reckoning.
You may think you know the nexium story,
the secretive self-help empire of the sex cult headlines,
the downfall of its leader, Keith Reneery.
But the most famous woman at the center of the story
has remained silent, until now.
Alison After Nexium tells the story of Alison Mack,
former Smallville actress, high-ranking Nexium member,
and convicted felon.
With exclusive access following her release from prison, this series traces Allison's astonishing path from Smallville fame to Nexium's inner circle and her effort to rebuild life in the wreckage.
I'm Natalie Robamed, and I'm an award-winning writer, producer, and the host of Allison After Nexium.
Through raw interviews and revealing conversations with those who knew her before, during, and after Nexium, this season dives deep into the gray zones of influence, accountability, and redemption.
Now, here's the first episode of Allison After Nexium.
Have a listen.
It's a warm, muggy day in New York City, in June 2021, the kind of summer day when the air feels oppressively heavy, as if it's about to smother you.
And for Alison Mack, the day could not get any heavier.
Alison is a famous actress, but she's famous for something else now,
for being prominent in one of the most devastating cults in contemporary history.
She spent 12 long years in that cult.
And now she's sitting in the back of a car that's driving towards a Brooklyn courthouse.
She's wearing a black dress that she's bought specifically for the court date.
her green eyes gaze ahead at what's to come.
The culture of my family is like we don't dwell on what bad things could happen.
We just believe that it's going to be okay.
And so all the while leading up to my sentence, it was like, it's going to be okay.
It's going to be okay.
It's going to work out.
It's going to be okay.
Allison is here because of her role in nexium, the infamous sex cult run by Keith Reneery.
Of all the people who've become,
come tangled up in nexium, she's the most famous of the bunch.
The media attention on this case, and Allison in particular, has been fierce.
My mom and my frontina rode in the car with me, with my attorneys.
And we got there, and we parked in a place that was not out in front
so that we could get a little bit of distance on the paparazzi before they came to us.
From the car, she sees the photographers waiting for her.
Everyone has covered this case.
It's international news, and a lot of the reporters are focused on Allison, the TV star.
She was on the CW for over a decade, on the popular show, Smallville.
She played Clark Kent's best friend.
Now she's fallen back to Earth.
She's tabloid chum.
She's a target.
Tina was on one side, my mom was on the other, and my attorneys were in front of us,
and my friend Tina was singing a song to me, like a hymn.
Tina is singing a nice choral song in her ear, trying to calm her down.
This is something Allison's friends have been doing to ground her for this day.
My friend Becca had sung me a song the day before.
They put her hand on my heart, and it was a song that was talking about how God is in the waiting.
God is in the moments when you are just waiting, you know.
But the songs are no use.
As soon as Allison gets out of the car, onto the sidewalk,
She's like a magnet
and the photographers are metal.
And then like the paparazzi
just like, you know who came around us
and they couldn't move.
They stick to her, bearing down,
moving as she moves,
pushing towards the courthouse
as one big mass.
Allison gets jostled.
Her hair swings forward.
I just put my head down
and was like trying to listen to Tina,
you know, and like feel my mom
and like my attorneys were like,
you guys have to let us move.
Eventually, they push through.
Allison enters the courtroom with her mom and older brother.
Inside, the judge sits behind a tall wooden bench.
He's got white hair and wears round, rimless glasses that mirror the roundness of his face.
He's here to sentence Allison for her crimes.
I had like 15 people sitting behind me in my sentencing hearing to support me, you know.
I have 14 letters of recommendation from different people, professors from my college, my pastor, the church I was going to.
Allison herself had written two letters to the judge explaining her actions.
There was this rallying sense of like,
we're going to be able to convince the judge that she's not worthy of incarceration.
I mean, my therapist, I think, wrote a letter that said that.
She hopes that she will receive no time.
She's cooperated with prosecutors
and other defendants in the case have received probation.
But Allison's aren't the only letters.
Before the judge sentences her,
he must also hear victim impact statements.
Letters from people, Alison, has heard.
I was physically injured, and it's a scar that is very difficult to erase.
Allison criticized everything about me.
The quality of that abuse of power and trust will be with him.
I have never felt so vulnerable and exposed.
One victim is here to read her statement in person.
She gets up.
She's pretty, with long brown hair and almond brown eyes.
She starts reading her letter directly to Allison.
She's like, I hope you rot in a cell for a long time.
And while you're sitting at home and you're a comfortable house, putting on lipstick,
you have to know that you destroyed lives and you're a monster and very, like, very angry, you know.
Allison sits stone-faced in the courtroom, holding back tears.
I think that I was thinking, and I still was thinking about like, oh my God, my poor brother.
you know, behind me, like, having to hear this about his sister, you know?
Like, my poor mom, like, I'm so sorry, you guys, you know?
Just, like, it was more, like, but I can take it, like, you know?
But, like, fuck, you guys, like, I'm so sorry, you know?
So, I think that was hard.
Like, just, I don't see myself as innocent, you know, and they were.
Allison tries to keep it together.
She stands stock still, taking it in.
And after the victim statements, the judge reads his 10-page decision.
He pointed to the fact that I seemed callous and laughed at people's pain
and led people in negative directions and that that was not acceptable.
He said you capitalized on your celebrity.
Yeah.
Do you think that's fair?
I think that I capitalized on the things I had.
And so the success I had as an actor, I think I did capitalize on that.
Yeah.
And it was a power tool that I had to get people to do what I wanted.
He says you were an essential accomplice.
Do you think that's fair?
I think that I was very effective in moving Keith's vision forward.
And because of that effectiveness, the judge says Allison must serve three years in federal prison.
The former Smallville actress pleaded guilty to racketeering and racketeering
conspiracy charges, acknowledging she manipulated women into becoming sex slaves for Keith Reneerie,
nexium's leader.
Allison led women to be branded with Keith Reneer's initials on the flesh of their bodies.
She was a, quote, master, overseeing women who were her slaves.
She had sex with Keith Daly.
She had threesomes with another member who was also having sex with him.
She told women inside the cult that they would reach enlightenment if they did as she did.
and developed a relationship with Keith.
For this, she has been portrayed as a villain,
as the person who acted as a pimp for Keith.
To some, she appeared to have been a top lieutenant.
But who is Alison Mack really?
Is she a victim or someone who victimized others?
From Campside Media and Times,
CBC, this is Alison After Nexium from CBC's Uncover.
I'm Natalie Robamed.
This is episode one.
It started in Vancouver.
I'm driving down the freeway from my house in L.A.
to the satellite city of Long Beach, California.
It's the day after Christmas in Southern California, which means it's light jacket weather.
where I grew up back in Dubai with my British mom
I'd be lolling on the couch making leftover turkey sandwiches
but not on this day
because I'm on my way to interview Alison Mack
I'm feeling nervous
I've met Allison a few times
but this is our first full interview
and I'm worried
I still don't know whether I can fully trust her
the highway gives way to views of the sea
where oil rigs dot the horizon
Allison lives here, down by the shore of the Pacific Ocean.
I park and walk into the hotel where I've arranged to meet my producing partner on this project, Vanessa Gregoriatis.
Hello, good morning.
Here we are.
Vanessa has covered nexium for just under a decade.
We work together a lot, but we live on opposite coasts, so it's always nice to see each other in person.
I love that, very. Oh, thank you.
We're both kind of anxious.
chattering to fill the time.
We've been turned on to this story by Stephen Belber,
a playwright, director, and screenwriter.
Stephen has done a lot of projects about convicts,
and he thinks Allison has a story to tell.
So he brought us on board.
Vanessa also has some experience with Alison Mack.
She actually wrote a story about Nexium back in 2018,
a story in which Allison lied to her.
More on that later.
We don't know which Allison we're going to get today.
Will she tell the truth?
We don't have much time to wander.
Because right on the dot, at 9 a.m., Allison arrives.
Hi.
How are you?
Hello.
Allison has not spoken publicly since her incarceration.
She's never told her story in a magazine or a book or a documentary.
She's had lots of offers, but always said no, until now.
She wants to tell her story in podcast form because she loves podcasts.
and because she's no longer comfortable in front of cameras
like she used to be.
How are you guys in holiday here?
They were good.
I mean, I...
Kids with you are wearing.
Today, she's wearing a puffer vest,
blue plaid shirt,
black leopard print leggings,
Doc Martin boots, and thick socks.
Her hair is in a messy ponytail
with one of those curly hair ties
that don't tangle your hair at night.
She's smiling, her face beaming as she greets us.
She's confident.
She's turning it on.
And we're being maybe overly furrowing.
friendly too. Everyone seems nervous. She talks about her dogs.
And they start wrestling right underneath. I'm like, I'm so sorry. I really wanted this to be
focused and serious and now I'm proud of dogs. I have to say, she appears younger than her
43 years. Looking at her, you would never guess that she was fresh off years in prison and three
and a half years on house arrest. But that's how most scars are. You can't see them fully clothed.
I have so many questions I want to ask.
But as we settle in a hotel room, sitting opposite each other,
the quiet thrum of the street below,
I decide to start at the beginning, the beginning of her life.
So I was born in Europe, in northern Germany.
My dad was an opera singer.
He's retired now.
But he was singing in the opera houses over there.
And then we moved to Southern California.
My mom was from Southern California,
and I think was just like homesick for,
her parents for sunshine and beach.
Northern Germany doesn't really have a lot of that.
Allison moved back to Long Beach at two years old
and was raised in an artistic household
just a few miles from where we are now
with her musician dad and Montessori School mom teacher.
She had one older brother and later on, a much younger sister.
My brother is 16 months older than I am,
but my brother is very shy and introverted.
When I was born, my brother would push
me in front of him to talk
on our behalf, you know, like I was
very willing to be
center of attention and he was very willing
to let me be the center of attention.
For a young girl
who was willing to be the center of attention,
there were a lot of opportunities
in Hollywood, just an hour or so
away. Allison
got into acting. The first
commercial I did was a German chocolate commercial
and they wouldn't let me eat the chocolate.
I had to spit the chocolate out after every take
because they didn't want me to get sick.
And I remember being like, well, that's bunk.
Because I had to, you know, do multiple takes from multiple angles and things like that, yeah.
I can just picture Allison, four years old, putting the chocolate in her mouth, chewing,
wanting so badly to eat this delicious treat that every kid loves.
And then having someone ill cut and having to use all her willpower to spit it out over and over and over again.
But she did it.
And she was good at it.
I started going to acting class when I was five, and I didn't know how to read yet.
So a lot of my memorization was like auditory.
My mom would read it to me and I would repeat it back.
Allison liked performing, but it was more than that.
I was from birth, like, I want you to be happy with me all the time, you know?
And I think even before I started acting, I was like, what do you want me to do?
Okay, I'll do that.
Where do you want me to go?
Okay, I'll go there.
You know, like, I just was like, I was that kind of.
kind of constitution.
For Allison, this behavior carried on to set,
where she gained a reputation as a director's actor,
someone who would do whatever the director wanted
and help get the rest of the cast in line.
The whole value of me as a human being
was around being an actor and being a good actor,
and I was special at school because I was a good actor.
And then I also, like, conflated love with acting and being good, you know.
And her peers, the girls she should have been playing,
dress-up and making mud pies with,
they were competition.
Allison says she would walk into a room
and instantly take stock of everyone else,
placing herself in a hierarchy among them.
That's automatically what you do
when you walk into an audition room.
Like you look around at all the girls
that are in the audition and say,
oh, I know that girl because I tested with her
three years ago for that thing,
so I know she's good.
And so then there's this weird, like,
you're pitted against each other
and you're competing with each other constantly.
And the competition Alison experienced at those all day,
She felt it at home, too.
My sister was born when I was nine and a half,
and that was complicated for me
because I was the little girl,
and I was the center of the universe in my family's home,
and then my sister was born, and I was like,
who is this?
You know, taking my spot,
and I was angry and jealous,
and I didn't know where to put those feelings,
and those feelings contradicted the perception
that I had in the world.
world where people always looked at me and were like, oh, she's such a nice girl, and she's so sweet.
And I was always like, the good girl in school and la, la, la. And then I had these, like, dark feelings
about my sister.
Competition with other women would come to haunt her. And Allison's time as a young actress
left her feeling older than she was. At the time, I didn't feel like I was 14. I didn't
feel like I was a kid. Before long, Allison moved to L.A.
I moved out of my parents' house when I was 16 because I got to.
a TV show with Chris Evans, actually, called The Opposite Sex.
Hey, Kate.
Okay, this isn't for class.
You're like reading for pleasure.
In it, Allison played a high school nerd named Kate.
Like most teen TV shows from the time, the nerd was also incredibly gorgeous.
So I, like, run these groups, and I leave the discussions.
It's just some people.
Some lawyers, some professors, a couple of writers.
Her on-screen character was precocious, and so was she.
She was only 16, had graduated.
graduated high school early and was living in L.A. without her parents.
She says that was intentional.
I really distanced myself from my family, my parents,
was kind of going through like individuation and having a hard time with my mom's dependence on me
and just but kind of angry and a teenager, you know, with too much money and freedom, you know.
But the show didn't lost.
We got canceled, which is what happens to most shows.
and my skin started to break out because I was a teenager
and I had makeup artist tell me I should go on acutane.
Accutane is a powerful prescription used to treat acne that can have side effects.
So I went on acutane, which we now know causes severe depression.
And I plummeted, like, I was so depressed.
My emotions were all messed up.
And I'm newly living on my own in L.A.
And I had gained weight and, like, it was just, I wasn't working.
By the time she turned 18, during this low period,
Alison encountered the man who would go on to become her first boyfriend,
a rocker she met at the famous L.A. bar, the Viper Room.
She'd actually been planning to leave L.A. and go study at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts in London,
a serious drama school.
But then she met the sky and got an audition for a show called Smallville.
Yeah, so I went in and read for them and David Nutter,
who was our director, who cast the show.
And I got the part.
Allison was cast as Chloe Sullivan, another nerdy girl next door.
I always got the smart girls.
And I think part of that was because of my weird fear of sexuality.
Like, I never felt comfortable or confident being like the ingenue girl.
So I always always sort of like the His Girl Friday, the smart, quirky, funny, quit sidekick.
The show was filmed in Vancouver.
So Allison upped and moved to Hollywood North.
And right away, it was a fantasy.
Going to set every day, doing what she loved to do, being young in a beautiful new city with a group of cool friends.
This was like 2000.
It was once Smallville premiered.
So we didn't have social media.
We were just so homey and continued to be that way throughout the whole process of the show.
Like none of us ever got caught in the fame bubble or very conscious of our fame.
Allison didn't understand she was famous.
And she also didn't understand money.
She was just 19 when the show.
show started airing. And I was making $40,000 a week out of the gate. I had a financial person
that took care of all my money, a business manager, and I didn't want to know about anything.
And so they didn't tell me about anything. She's got a dream job, a rock star boyfriend,
more money than she knows what to do with. But actually, not everything was quite as dreaming
with the boyfriend, who Allison does not want to identify. So I was living in Vancouver,
and he was living in L.A.
And he was spending money so fast.
Like he was spending so much of the money that I was making.
But it was like easier for me to just like give him a credit card and deal
than it was for me to stand up to him
because standing up to him would turn into like these big, violent name-calling horrible things.
I ask Allison if he hid her.
Not until the very end of the relationship.
but he hit himself you know and he would like cut his own face he would say like look at what
you're making me do and chop up his own face and um things like like horrible gnarly things
and um that was the first time that i got someone's initials burned into my body i got his
initial tattooed on my chest when i was 20 he had gotten a big a tattooed on his chest and then it was
like, if you loved me, you would get the same thing.
If you loved me, you would do this.
And so then to prove to him, you know, my love for him
to try and make it so that he didn't hurt himself again, you know.
I got tattooed on my chest.
And all the while I'm on Smallville, you know, so it's like, it was crazy.
Like, when I'll never forget one time, I mean, it's so embarrassing
because, like, the crew, the casting crew of Smallville saw me just like,
I'm such a mess, you know?
But all the while trying to, like, keep it together, you know, like, be perfect on camera.
But I will never forget one time we were doing a scene.
I was doing a scene with Tom and they were setting up for my close-up.
Tom Welling, the actor who played Clark Kent.
And I walked away and I was on the phone.
She's taking a call from her boyfriend.
And he was just railing on me for something.
just calling me all kinds of names and saying all these horrible things about me to me.
And I was just like, okay, okay, you know, just like trying to calm him down and taking it.
And the AD was like, Allison, we're ready for you.
We're ready for you. We're ready for you. Allison. We're waiting for you.
I was like, okay, I have to go.
And I hung up the phone and I walked on to set.
And they said rolling, you know, as I was walking on to set.
And the director said action.
And I took a deep breath and I looked at Tom.
and I just lost it and I said my lines you know they mean like I was still able to like perform
the dialogue but like tears are streaming down my face and they said cut you know and the cameraman
looked around I mean he was like are you okay and I was like yeah I'm good I was like was like
was that too much emotion did you want me to do something less because that was too strong
and they were like yeah maybe it was a little too much for the scene and I was like okay cool
let's do it again I can I can pull it back you know and it was like I just
like, wrapped it into, like, what I was doing.
Because that's just what you do, you know?
And the embarrassing thing is, like, everybody knew that, like, I was in a fucked-up situation
and that it wasn't healthy and that I wasn't well and whatever.
But one of the people that was closest to me was, like, Allison, like, we love you
and you need to be with somebody that lifts you up.
And he said, and that's all I'm going to say, you know.
So it took three years for me to get out from under that one.
It would take her 12 years to get away from the next man
whose initials she got inscribed on her.
But before then, she would have hurt a lot more people than just herself.
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So while Allison was living in Vancouver,
she developed a really close friendship
with another cast member on Smallville, Kristen Krook.
Allison was Clark Kent's best friend
in this modern take on that very American story of Superman.
And Kristen played Clark Kent's love interest on the show.
That's the thing about Clark Kent.
He's not always there when you want him.
but he's always there when you need him.
Where Allison was the petite, perky blonde,
Kristen was almost model beautiful.
She's got these gorgeous light brown eyes and high, high cheekbones,
and she's actually from Vancouver herself.
But she and Allison started going far away from Vancouver together,
taking exotic trips around the world.
We went to Syria and Turkey together.
We went to Mongolia together.
We went to Paris, and we had so much fun.
And that became kind of like a thing.
Like we went to Paris multiple times together and just shopped and saw art and sat at the on the top of the pompidoo and had broset and like just like lived this kind of like dream thing.
And we both were at the point where we were 25.
We were in New York City together.
It was our break.
And we had rented an apartment in the same building in the West Village.
And we both were like, why do we both, why do we feel so unsatisfied?
Like we both had beautiful boyfriends and all the things.
and yet both of us were talking about this weird-on-wee that we felt
of like just like, what is that, you know?
And I was like, I feel like this odd emptiness
and it feels so wrong given the nature of my life, you know?
And she was like, yeah, me too.
And there were people in Vancouver in the actor's circle there
who'd gotten into what seemed like a life coaching course.
They wanted other local actors to join.
It sounded light and fun.
The name of the company giving the courses was nexium.
It's the science of joy.
It's the most amazing thing.
It's made everything so much better in my life.
You've got to do this.
You've got to do this.
Allison says Kristen took a nexium course
and came back and told her all about it.
It was like all she could talk about.
She was just like super excited about it.
You know, she had a coach and she was talking about Vanguard and Prefect,
which are the names that you called Keith and,
Nancy at the time.
But Kristen was like, there is an organization.
Keith's created, it's just for women,
and they're doing a weekend, and I think you should do it.
And I think you'd really like it.
And I was like, okay, well, if you think I should do it,
and I'll like it.
Like, okay, like, I'll do it.
That first weekend course took place in a hotel conference room in Vancouver.
I can picture it.
Gray walls, strangely geometric tiled carpets,
those long tablecloths that reach all the way to the floor.
The course was taught by Nancy Salsman, a formidable woman with short dark hair and a laser-sharp focus.
This is some archival video of Nancy explaining Naxiom's coursework.
Hello, I'm Nancy Salsman. Welcome to your first origins class.
Did you ever see the carnival game whack a mole?
There's this little mole and he pops up and he has this like little grassy hat on.
So you take the sledgehammer and you knock down this mole and you knock down this one, knock one down and a mull.
You knock one down and another one pops up and another one pops up.
And does this sound like your life?
Nancy's daughter, Lauren, was there too.
Lauren's got the same dark hair as her mother,
and eyebrows that have also been tweezed to a very fine point,
like a comma turned on its side.
I'm the head of the education division for the company.
I love the curriculum and I think I know better than anybody besides Keith and P.
All this stuff works at what to do with it.
Nancy's sermons focused on honesty,
a core tenet of nexium's teachings,
which emphasize each person
being radically honest with themselves
and taking accountability for their own actions.
We were learning about what's the purpose of mankind,
and we were learning about, like,
how does that relate to gender differences and relationships?
After Nancy's presentations,
they'd split into breakout groups to dig deeper.
It was empowering to Allison to spend a weekend
hanging out with women,
examining themselves and their role in society.
I liked the curriculum, like I liked what we were learning.
We were learning about honesty and what does it mean to be honest.
After the weekend in Vancouver ended, Allison says they went to Kristen Krook's house
with Nancy and some of the people from the course.
And Nancy did like an EM demo.
EM is like an exploration of meaning and it was like this like amazing therapeutic thing for people in Nexion.
It was like the panacea kind of a thing.
And you would bring an issue that you had to Nancy,
and then Nancy would have this conversation with you,
where she would explore the meaning that you made around this concept
or this problem that you have.
An EM is sort of a therapy session,
but it almost sounds like something out of Scientology.
It helps you destroy the problem almost instantly,
helps you go clear.
And then by the end of the conversation,
you would be better, and like you would feel different,
and everything would be better.
So we all watched this person get their EM.
And it was like, whoa, that seemed to really help that person.
So I was like, I want one of those.
I want an EM.
And Nancy said, you know what, we have an extra seat on our private plane.
Does anybody want to come back to Albany with us tonight and meet Keith?
Keith Reneery, the guy who everyone in Nexium was talking about constantly.
He didn't come to Vancouver, but everyone said that he was the guy who'd birthed all of Nexium himself.
They say he's the world's smartest and most ethical man.
He is the guru.
And I was like, well, I got nothing to do for the next couple of days.
I don't have to shoot anything until the end of next week.
Like, yeah, I want to go.
The private plane they were taking belonged to Claire Bronfman,
the mega-rich Seagram heir, an nexium devotee.
Her grandfather grew present-day Seagram into a giant conglomerate
from a distillery in Montreal in the 1920s.
On the tarmac, outside the jet, Allison walks up the steps and into paradise.
With my first time ever on a private plane, it's like what you see on TV.
Like it's, you know, there's like several chairs, you know, a pilot.
And he was like, do you want to watch the takeoff?
And like I sat up in the front with him as we took off.
I can imagine Allison looking out through the cockpit, seeing the horizon broaden before her.
Not only is she a successful actor with lots of money and,
the ability to travel wherever she wants.
Now she's literally seeing the world
in a new way, opening
her eyes and mind
to new possibilities.
I remember we didn't have to sit in the chair.
We could sit on the floor, which I was like,
what? I'm on the floor in the plane.
That's weird. Up here, in a private plane,
the rules didn't apply.
So Allison settles down, cross-legged,
with all the spiritual seekers
from Nexium, Nancy
Salzman, Lauren Salzman,
and Claire Bronfman.
These amazing, powerful women who seem to be so deep
and have all the answers for the ennui she'd been feeling.
They land in Albany, a small city in upstate New York,
nestled on the Hudson River.
From the airport, they pile into cars.
Nexium members, as a rule, drove BMWs
because Keith thought they were the best-made cars,
and Allison heads to Nancy's house
in the suburb of Clifton Park,
about 25 minutes from the city.
But pretty much,
As soon as they arrive, Nancy disappears.
And Allison is told to hang tight.
Someone would come get her so she can go to volleyball.
Yes. Volleyball.
And I was like, okay, cool.
And they were like, but it's going to be like late, like middle of the night
because they start playing volleyball at midnight.
And I was like, that's weird.
And they were like, well, Keith is not on a regular person's schedule
and they like to have privacy when they play volleyball,
so that's why they play in the middle of the night.
So I was like, all right, okay.
Allison waits and waits.
And then, late at night,
as the sleep is threatening to push at the corners of Allison's eyes,
a woman arrives to pick her up.
She's in a BMW SUV, SUV,
and we go to the volleyball court,
and there's like a whole bunch of people there.
It's like a middle of the night
and there's like tons of people
and I was like, whoa, okay.
If you've seen HBO's The Vow,
you know the scene Alison's talking about.
Brightly lit volleyball courts,
the sound of sneakers squeaking on the floor,
dozens of shorts wearing nexium men,
vaulting volleyball's back and forth
while throngs of women watch from the sidelines.
And I go walking into the gym
and I just went and sat down
and I was like watching them play volleyball
and just kind of waiting
and they finished a set and Keith came over
and they introduced him to me.
Keith's short.
He's wearing a black t-shirt, shorts, knee pads,
and he's got his long hair pulled back in a ponytail
with a sweatband on top.
I wasn't expecting, like, some big studly.
Like, I didn't think, like, whoa, he's so hot.
Like, I thought he's an older, geeky dude.
He looked like somebody that my dad didn't opera with
when I was in Germany.
Like, he just looked like a normal white,
dude. And I mean, yes, he's a total geek with his headband and his glasses and his
volleyball thing, whatever. And he said, it's nice to meet you. Do you have a question for me?
And I was like, a question. And he said, yeah. I said, I didn't know I was supposed to prepare a
question. And he said, well, you didn't have to prepare a question, but some people like to ask
me questions. And I was like, oh, I don't have a question. I just thought I'd come and smile and
cheer you guys on and it would be okay.
And he went, oh, is that how you do life?
Is that how you do life, he says?
This is Allison's first time meeting Keith.
And now Allison, the successful young actress,
is already being put on her back foot.
She feels as though she's done something wrong,
which, for a people pleaseer like Alison,
throws her into a tailspin.
When he said, oh, is that how you do life?
I was like, I don't think so.
So I don't think I just stand on the sidelines and smile, but, like, maybe.
I don't know.
After this interaction, Allison's ride asks her if she wants to head out.
And I was like, okay, yeah, I mean, I'm getting kind of tired, so let's go.
So we get in the car to go home, and I said, nobody told me I had to prepare a question.
And she said, you didn't have to prepare a question.
And I said, but Keith asked me if I had a question, and I didn't know that he was going to ask me that.
And she was like, well, some people have questions for him.
And I was like, well, why?
And she was like, well, he's like the smartest man in the law.
world. So usually when people meet the smartest man in the world, they may have questions for him.
And I was like, so I can ask him anything? And she said, yeah, you can ask him anything. And I was
like, oh. And I thought, well, then I do have a question. And she was like, do you want to go back?
And I said, yeah. And so we turned around and we went back. And by this point, it was like three
o'clock in the morning. And I walk into the gym and I said, I thought of question. And he said,
oh, okay. And I sat down, and he made me wait until they finished the whole game.
On set, Allison's the talent. She's the person people wait for. But with Keith, it was the other way around.
So I waited for like probably an hour.
Eventually, Keith Danes to come talk to her again.
He came over and sat next to me, and the whole room came and sat down, like, around us. It was so bizarre.
And I was like, okay, this is weird.
But, like, I'm a performer.
And like, okay, like, sure.
You guys want to sit and watch us?
Like, sure.
And Mark was there with the camera filming us.
Mark Vesente, another prominent nexium member and filmmaker.
And I think somebody even said, like, we film everything Keith says,
because he's so brilliant, we don't want to miss anything.
And I was like, okay.
And he said, what's your question?
The question Allison has for Keith is,
what is art?
And he took me on this really wild exploration of art
and essentially at the end said like art itself is nothing
but what you make of art is everything.
So essentially art is a reflection of whoever you are
and whatever you are inside.
And no one had ever said anything like that to me.
Like no one had ever turned anything around.
I was so externally focused and my parents were so externally focused
that the idea that what I was seeing outside
that I thought was so beautiful
was a reflection of me inside.
was like,
like, blew my mind, you know.
Allison starts to cry.
This is what she's been searching for, meaning.
And now she's found it, here in Albany,
in an amazing group that so many of her friends are a part of,
run by a principled man called Keith Reneery.
It's a lot for her to take in, overwhelming even.
And I felt like discombobulated and disoriented
about what he was saying to me.
It almost felt like the ground was like shift.
It was bizarre experience.
And he said, are you okay?
And I was like, yeah, yeah, I'm okay.
I'm just feeling a little disoriented.
That was a lot.
Allison seems so earnest, so desperate to please.
She reminds me of all the musical theater girls in high school
who I found performative.
And her question, to me, a snobby Ivy League grad,
seems like a sort of elementary one,
philosophy of art 101.
But it's easier to laugh at someone
than wonder where they're coming from.
That's part of what I'm trying to do here.
Push past my gut reactions
to understand how and why
Allison got sucked into nexium
and what drove her to do the things she did.
Because it didn't happen overnight.
Twelve years is a long time.
Allison would leave Vancouver
and leave L.A. and move to Albany.
She would become one of Keith's top students.
All of these threads of her childhood,
people-pleasing, wanting desperately to be liked by authority figures,
competing with other women, would start weaving together,
pushing her to become the best nexium pupil,
the best workshop leader,
the best cult member,
a person capable of doing horrible things.
And one of those awful things was being,
being part of the group of women who helped dozens of other women get a body modification
under questionable circumstances.
In many ways, it was an eerie echo of what had happened to Alison so many years earlier
when she had that initial of a boyfriend tattooed on herself.
In a quiet house, one woman lays on a massage table.
The lights are off.
the smell of singed human flesh is in the air.
These women are getting the initials of Allison's, you could say, boyfriend, Keith Reneery, inscribed on them.
But she's not telling them that.
And what they're getting is not a tattoo, of course.
It's something much, much worse.
A brand burned into the delicate skin above the hip bone with a cauterizing iron.
the fine point of the searing hot pen comes in contact with flesh it sizzles this woman is one of her slaves someone alison has made an oath to help and protect but she hasn't protected them she's been telling some of them to seduce keith sexually alison doesn't want to talk about this part of the story and especially not the branding i can feel it it bothers her that she's a social
with this horrific, graphic mark of the cult.
But she's so associated with it,
some of these women would come to believe
the brand actually contained Allison's initials.
It wasn't true, but it was a rumor that would catch on like wildfire.
And now Allison must talk about it.
She must take responsibility.
People think the sorority was
kind of like your hunting ground or so.
I have at least one polyamorous partner that is in the sorority.
He's flirting with somebody younger, prettier, more famous, more popular, you know, whatever
than you.
And you start to realize you aged out before you were even 30.
He said, in order for me to help you with that, we're going to have to be physically intimate.
I'm nervous about putting every asset that we have on the line when I'm not sure that
her allegiance is to us and not
Keith. I go into his suite and I lock it down. And I'm like, get the fuck out of here, like, go out the window. And all I can think of is just protect Keith.
How do you feel about having been involved in, like, bringing sexual trauma to other people?
I mean, I don't even know how to answer that question.
You've been listening to Uncover, Alison Offer,
from CBC and Campside Media.
It's hosted by me, Natalie Robomed.
Our executive producers are myself and Vanessa Gregoriatis at Campside and Stephen Belper.
Our senior producer is Lily Houston Smith, and our associate producer is Emma Siminoff.
Sound design, mix, and engineering by Mark McCadham and E. Wynne Lytramuan.
Thank you to Colin Campbell.
At CBC, our story editor is Derek John, and our senior producer is Kate Evans.
Our coordinating producer is Emily Cannell.
Our executive producers are Cecil Fernandez and Chris Oak.
Tonya Springer is the senior manager.
Arif Narani is the director.
If you enjoyed Alison After Nexium,
please rate and review the show wherever you get your podcasts.
Thanks for listening.
That was the first episode from the brand new season of Uncover,
Alison After Nexium.
If you like what you heard,
episode two is waiting for you right now. Just search for uncover wherever you get your podcast.
And be sure to follow the feed so you don't miss an episode.
For more CBC podcasts, go to cbc.ca.ca slash podcasts.
