The Binge Cases: Denise Didn't Come Home - Watching You | 6. Nique’s Girls
Episode Date: January 5, 2026The trial lays bare horrible truths. And for the first time in many years, Nique’s daughters come together to pick up the pieces. Binge all episodes of Watching You ad-free today by subscribing t...o The Binge. Visit The Binge Crimes on Apple Podcasts and hit ‘subscribe’ or visit GetTheBinge.com to get access. Join The Binge’s free newsletter – Patreon.com/TheBinge From serial killer nurses to psychic scammers – The Binge is your home for true crime stories that pull you in and never let go. The Binge – feed your true crime obsession. Watching You is brought to you by Sony Music Entertainment. Find out more about The Binge and other podcasts from Sony Music Entertainment at sonymusic.com/podcasts and follow us @sonypodcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hey, y'all.
Wanted to let you know, verbal abuse and.
domestic violence are a part of this story. It's a cautionary tale to listen to with caution.
When I first came across the story of Nikki Liley, an old and familiar feeling washed over me,
there's more to this story. Now on its face, that has never been enough for me to take on a case,
but this felt different. Not only were there missing pieces to the puzzle,
in the media reporting, there were missing pieces in the lives of these girls,
Nikki's girls.
And I'm not sure how I knew that, but I felt driven to bring closure for them.
When I called up Amy, she'll tell you that she politely told me to kick rocks.
You seem like a nice person, she said.
But no, we're not going to go through what we went through again when Matt went on trial.
Amanda and Rebecca were just kids.
in the murder trial of their dad.
They were on the other side of the aisle from their aunt and their own sister.
I was 100% my dad's innocent. He didn't do this.
Amanda, in the intervening years, had become Matt's unofficial counsel.
She was there to defend him with a carefully scripted and rehearsed set of answers.
Rebecca was also there to represent her dad in whatever way he saw fit.
I remember I was the last one to go.
I didn't look around at anybody
and I remember when the lawyer asked if I loved my dad
the blocking kicked in that I had been taught
and I remember saying yes
and then I remember like turning and looking at my dad
like it was like that was the director
like at this point I say this line and I look at my dad
and that's the moment that was created
While I was testifying, I'd be looking at him after I answered each question and, like, I'd feel good if he was smiling at me.
I was like, okay, that means I said what I should have said.
I remember there was one time, like, I answered something, and Lisa was tough.
She did not take it easy on us.
Lisa Jones, the assistant DA.
I can't remember what exactly I said, but I said something in a way that allowed Lisa to kind of be like, oh, but you said this earlier.
It caused me to trip up, and I remember looking over at my dad, he had this almost disappointed look, and I was like, oh, I fucked up.
I was like, okay, now how do I fix it?
And so then I'd say something horrible about how I hated Alex or I hated granddaddy or Nana for trying to take us away.
And then I'd look back over and he'd smile.
What they said or didn't say on that day was a blur.
I don't remember half of what I said.
and the only thing I do know is probably 90% of it wasn't true.
Amy was there for Amanda and Rebecca's testimony.
It was the first time she'd seen them in a long time.
It had been five years since we had laid eyes on them.
You know, they were young ladies.
That was stunning.
I was like, wow, who are these people?
We lost so much time.
I had like this five-year hole.
where I don't even know what their life was.
Amy said she avoided watching the YouTube videos the girls made,
the way she also avoided drinking Drano.
And on the stand, she was disgusted watching how the girls had been manipulated.
But she also knew that they were more than what Matt had coached them to say.
And on some level, too, Amanda knew what she was saying about Nikki's family wasn't quite right.
even she was in court saying it.
I think there was like a brief moment.
Like I looked at them.
I saw them.
And I was like, I'm about to absolutely trash these people on the stand.
I know that's what I'm going to have to say in order for my dad to be found not guilty.
Something began simmering inside of Amanda that day.
Rebecca, too.
This trial would be a moment of truth for everyone involved,
even if the truth was not what Matt wanted his daughters to believe.
Looking back now, that's probably where a lot of the doubt started to creep in
is seeing them again and having that feeling of,
I'm about to say these horrible things,
and I don't know if I actually believe them.
From Sony Music Entertainment, you're listening to watching you.
I'm Jonathan Hirsch.
Episode 6.
Nikki's Girls.
An emotionally difficult task was ahead for the prosecutor, Lisa Jones.
This moment, the murder trial of Nikki Liley, was nearly five years in the making.
But to be successful, Lisa would have to confront Amanda and Rebecca
about their version of events,
which they faithfully relayed on behalf of Matt.
These girls were victims, too,
and the jury wouldn't take too kindly to a prosecutor
eviscerating them on the stand.
It was hard to watch them,
and I was very grateful for Lisa Jones in that moment,
and her approach to those girls.
She was so gentle with them,
because we all knew.
they were lying. Or at least Amanda was lying. Lisa caught her in a lie. She said that,
no, I made the videos myself. My dad didn't tell me what to say. My dad didn't tell me what to do.
And then Lisa played the phone call where he, from jail, was calling her and telling her
exactly what to say and exactly what to do. We all knew she was lying. But we knew why.
We weren't mad at her about it, and we knew these girls are just trying to survive this.
Many of the details the prosecutor laid out, Amy was hearing in full for the first time.
It starts with the mental abuse.
It starts with emotionally just crushing someone to the point where they don't have footing to be able to push back.
I had no idea
how much of it there was
in particular
there was the
recording they had where
you hear him
he says
God damn it God damn it
and you know
lower your voice and
that was
chilling
to me
and after that happened
after we listened to that
recording. And I get into the victim witness room. I remember I picked up one of the big throw pillows
from that couch. And I looked at Alex and I said, I am going to punch this pillow repeatedly
for a while. And then I did it. And I guess I was so livid. Oh, wow. I knew that they
fought a lot but I had no idea what she was living in like what what kind of hell she was going
through like you can hear because she's no longer talking at that point she and so he has done
something to silence her right then it was pretty clear he was physically assaulting her in some
kind of way when we got in that goddamn car you're fucking god damn
God damn it, God damn it, God damn it, God damn it, God damn it.
Fucking damn it!
Throw your voice!
I am not going to sit here and listen to this shit.
I knew about the fight they had had three years prior, you know, because she called me and told me.
And, yeah, Matt tried to say that it never happened and that she made it up.
Amy's talking about the time her sister called her and said Matt had put his hands around her throat.
But even with all that she already knew,
about the terrible situation
Nikki had with Matt,
hearing the audio of their fights
was almost too much for Amy to take.
It was all this salacious, awful audio.
It was not her.
It was not her normal self.
It was not the her that I
talked to.
It was not the her that I just called
and had conversations with and stuff.
It was this awful.
version of her where, not that she was being awful, but where she was being treated so
awfully. She was being so abused.
Alex was there, too, while Lisa Jones laid out the closing arguments.
There was, according to the prosecution, a longstanding history of abusive and controlling
behavior and signs of a cover-up. The smoking gun was, in a way, the absence of a smoking
gun. The deleted logs showed a willful act on Matt's behalf to remove the hours she went missing
from the cameras. Hours, the prosecution argued. He'd spent murdering his wife and disposing of her
body. Lisa Jones said Nikki had likely been drugged before she died. She was found face down in the
dirt, naked. The souls of her feet were clean, suggesting that she'd been moved to that location.
What I'm going to tell you is he murdered her in that house, Lisa said.
She noted he could have sat on her and she would have been unable to break free.
A 98-pound woman against a 250-pound man.
It would explain the absence of blunt force trauma or signs of strangulation,
her nakedness, the drugs in her system.
He silenced Nikki with the weight of his body.
and, in a way, the weight of his ego.
Matt's defense rested on Nikki's character.
They portrayed an unstable and crazy woman.
The testimony of Amanda and Rebecca corroborated their father's innocence.
This was not an open and shut case.
They finished closing arguments, and we asked his lawyer like,
happens next is okay well the jury's going to deliberate it might take a while go back to the
hotel shower eat I'll call you if anything comes back it might not be today like it might not be
until next week even like this sometimes juries can deliberate for weeks I'll call you if anything
happens so we went back to the hotel I'm sitting in bed and I'm watching the news and the news
says the jury came back he was found guilty
After three hours, the jury deliberated for three hours.
So you found out from the television?
I found out through the news.
On February 5th, 2016, the jury found Matt Liley guilty of malice murder and felony murder.
He was also convicted of unlawful eavesdropping and surveillance.
At the sentencing, victim impact statements were given, and the judge came forward.
He sentenced Matt to life in prison without the possibility of parole for malice murder.
Then, on top of that, three five-year terms for each count of unlawful eavesdropping and surveillance.
Nikki's family cheered.
I remember seeing them cheering, and I remember sitting in the courthouse, and I was gutted.
And then it created even more of this dynamic that he had created,
of my hatred for them.
And I remember just, like, seething as I was sitting there,
like, how could they be so excited about this?
Matt's fate was clear.
But Amanda, Rebecca, and Alex,
that part was far from over.
Amanda, like her sister Rebecca,
struggled with the verdict.
A part of her still believed her dad was innocent,
until she saw herself on the stand
when Nikki's case was covered on national TV.
Pretty much what really flipped a switch for me
was when kind of 2020 and Dateline and all of those started happening.
I think it was the 2020 episode, but I was watching it,
and they were playing, like, the recordings of the jail phone calls with my dad
and me on the stand and like seeing how robotic I was and hearing my dad telling me to say this
on the jail call and then me saying it pretty much word for word on the stand.
During that time, I fully believed those were my words.
Like when I was testifying, I 100% believe that's the truth.
This is coming from my brain.
I came up with all of this.
But then seeing, like, the recording of it after, I was like, that's not me.
Like, that's my voice, but those aren't my words.
Like, it felt like I started coming out of this fog.
Doubt crept in.
Amanda still struggled to face the whole truth for a while.
It started out as, oh, maybe he's not 100% innocent.
Like, maybe something happened.
There was an accident.
And it got blown out of proportion.
Like, that's kind of where it started was he knows something.
He's not 100% innocent.
As soon as she started feeling this way, she told her grandfather, her guardian at the time.
Hey, I'm feeling this way.
Is there any information you have?
And as soon as I did that, that night there was a phone call with my dad.
Papa told him, like, hey, Amanda, is having doubts.
And it was like, nope, I'm disowned now.
I am now an enemy
Yeah
And then when you said
Hey I'm not really sure
It feels like there's more to the story
He was like
That's it, you're out
And is that
Maybe is that the point at which you realized
That you believed he did it
Was that what broke the spell
It took a while
Like I was still in that phase of
Okay he's not innocent
Like I don't know what happened
And it was one of those things of, like, wanting to find the information.
It was, like, middle of my junior year, I was a really rough year
because I wound up kind of in and out of the hospital
in the inpatient ward for suicide attempts
and kind of this feeling of, like, everything I've known as a lie.
I trashed my dead mom on YouTube and to the news.
I've trashed my mom to the world.
I've made her out to be crazy.
I've alienated myself from my mom's side of the family.
Now my dad, who I sacrificed my high school years for playing lawyer, hates me.
I have no one.
Eventually, I just had to get out of the house, and I wasn't sure how.
I started talking to the counselor at school.
I was like, hey, I can't live at home anymore.
My husband, now boyfriend at the time, we went to high school together and I pretty much moved in with him.
He and his family were a godsend that was able to kind of have a safe place to kind of process through everything I was feeling of, okay, he's not, he's definitely not innocent, but how much did he know something?
Did he actually do it?
There's been so many different thoughts that go through my head of what did happen, what could have happened, and it's just one of those things that also sucks because, unfortunately, the only person who truly knows what happened will never say what actually happened.
I don't even think there would even be a deathbed confession or anything.
I think he'll go to the grave that he's innocent.
Matt never spoke to his daughter again.
Never reached out.
That was it.
Amanda was left to unravel her own complex feelings about her dad,
the man who killed her mother.
She says she still can't see a red Ford expedition
and not have this irrational fear that it's him,
following her.
Not long after Amanda left, Rebecca came to a similar realization.
Between the phone calls and video calls and everything, he also had an email, and he would email us.
Yeah, he had like a little, like, iPad-type thing, and he would email me.
I don't remember what he did, but I remember I composed an email that was basically,
you can't treat me the way that you've been treating me.
How you've treated me is not a father.
You have not treated me and loved me as a daughter.
And I remember I closed it and I said,
I wanted a father and not a chess player.
And I never heard from my own.
And when I think on that moment more,
it's the typical, like, sociopath.
As soon as they no longer have that hold over someone,
you're done, you're gone, you're useless to me.
And that was very much what it felt like.
It felt like I stood up to him, and I was done.
He was, you were never my daughter, I never loved you, you're done.
Meanwhile, the money Nikki had wanted to provide for her family in case of her death finally got paid out to her children, split between the three of them.
We didn't settle the life insurance for years after he was convicted, like it took a while.
I think it was 2020?
Yeah, it was a while.
Yeah, it was finally kind of paid out.
I bought my house.
They paid it out, and I used it to buy my house.
I think.
Hey, Sal.
Hank?
What's going on?
We haven't worked a case in years.
I just bought my car in Carvana, and it was so easy, too easy.
Think something's up?
You tell me.
They got thousands of options.
Found a great car and a great price.
And it got delivered the next day.
It sounds like.
Carvana just makes it easy to buy your car, Hank.
Yeah, you're right. Case closed.
Buy your car today.
On Carvana.
Delivery fees may apply.
It makes sense to me now why Amy didn't see the point in making a podcast about her sister's case.
The family had been through so much.
And to her mind, the defense had twisted a domestic abuse situation.
into a he-said, she-said dogfight.
And the media aided up.
So you're hearing domestic violence, Sarah?
Well, she is completely unstable.
I think she's completely crazy.
And I think that the 500,000...
I think she's completely dead.
Yeah.
She's completely dead, but before she died.
And I think that I think there's been a whole slew of incidents
where she's tried to stage...
some kind of domestic violence on herself and that and he's taping all this to protect himself i mean
why would you have 500 000 plus uh because you're a control freak because you're trying to
coercively control of your life but he's the one that's usually calm i mean you played one where
he isn't but often he's the calm one and she's the one that's out of control he knows he's
These so-called trial experts got it terribly wrong,
but there's something else I now better understand,
having reviewed over 25,000 files from this case.
What we see with Matt and Nikki is a frightening, cautionary tale.
To meet someone, to fall in love, to have a relationship.
It's about a connection, yes,
but anyone who's been in a serious relationship
will tell you it's also about sacrifice,
meeting in the middle for the sake of that love.
But where's the line?
When does sacrifice become abuse?
It's not always easy to see.
And with Nikki, she was already in too deep
when she started to fight back.
There's this three-hour recording I came across
and reporting this story that chills me to the bone.
I don't think I'll ever be the same after hearing it
because it reveals both Matt's cruelty towards Nikki,
his obsession with owning every part of her narrative,
and her continually sacrificing herself in service of their relationship.
The recording is called Nicky Life Confessions,
and in it, Matt interviews Nikki about,
her personal sexual history. Everything she's ever done with another man is laid out in this
conversation.
Tell me where you want me to tell us?
But I don't know about your childhood and high school and everything else that you feel I have to know.
High school was a lot of feeling, always feeling, never adequate, never having any confidence
in myself, being small, being little.
She talks about her sexual partners in college and in her 20s.
Yes, he's seen me naked.
Yes, we did some heavy-duty partying and some stupid shit.
Like, I tell you, I never slept with him, never wanted to.
You're being specific saying you never slept with him.
What did you do?
I didn't do anything other than strip poker.
He's stinging naked and a bunch of drug partying.
And throughout, Matt demands she be explicit, exhaustive.
Who were you flirting with, and who'd you guys say?
Uh, the only person I ever met was
And, you know about that?
And you haven't told me everything?
I haven't told you everything, okay?
I've met, I've floored with...
We talked on the phone a couple of times.
When I went out to California, I called him, told him I was coming.
We hooked up for dinner.
Matt?
saw Nikki as his property.
He had a right to know every sordid detail.
And Nikki is fighting throughout, to be understood,
to be loved by Matt.
That I have done the lion's share of things wrong in this relationship.
I am asking for some very simple things.
And the only thing I've asked for in this entire conversation is by innuendo,
I've asked for the opportunity to prove that I can be honest.
On top of that, I've asked for just simple comfort and the leeway and the latitude
to be who I am and be emotional just because I'm emotional.
Then there's the contract.
Nikki wrote a contract and gave it to her husband.
The contract gave him.
complete rights to her breast implants.
To Matt, it was a sign of her undying love.
So she wrote a contract voluntarily.
She handed me this, hand me this just for surgery.
I, Dominique C. Liley, do hear about in Greece,
and allow my loving, devoted husband, Matt J. Liley,
to retain full and sole ownership of the breast implants that I'm receiving on April 15, 2008.
He has earned the right to have full ownership of the implants.
and in his discretion, request that they be removed,
which I would never do, and I told him that,
including but not limited to two,
if any marriage or separation's belief of infidelity
or any other reason he may deem.
John Richter remembered seeing this contract, too.
It's a piece of paper, and it says,
these implants belong to my husband, Matt,
and he has complete control.
If at some point he doesn't like,
if someone else is getting joy for my breast implants,
he can have him removed, and she signed it.
The end of the three-page contract read, quote,
By way of this letter slash contract,
I am giving full control and ownership of the memory gel implants
that I am receiving to my adoring husband to have and to do with as he pleases,
including demand their removal, should he see fit?
For any reason, he decides as appropriate and at any time.
I love you, Matt. You are my one only, and no man will.
ever stand in your place.
If you died tomorrow,
it would simply be a hole there forever,
and I would never want to feel it with anyone.
It would be a futile effort to try to,
to try, because no one else
would ever be able to be who you are
and make you feel the way you are.
I love you always, always forever.
The contract is in force and binding
as of April 15, 2008.
Can you imagine, and if he's not happy
with, if someone gives her,
If someone is caught looking at her or something, he's going to have him removed, and she's in his, like, he's in control.
But that's the level of, you know, craziness.
I know that I've made my fair share of mistakes, and I've done things wrong, and I've done beat things, and I've done things I should have done.
Since I left Athens, since I moved to Oklahoma, the only thing I have done is reach out and try to.
to do the best I could do
and reach out and help who I could help.
That's all I have done.
But I don't deserve this.
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You know, they say there are two ways in which we live and die.
The physical death, of course.
and we all know that Nikki is no longer with us,
but there is another way in which we do or don't survive.
It's in the memory of others.
What's something Amanda said to me.
They said the door is open, so...
Hello?
How are you?
Hey, what's up?
Hi.
On November 8th, just a few weeks before wrapping this series,
We met all three girls in Richmond, Virginia.
Amanda and Alex had driven up from Georgia the day before.
It had been five years since the three of them had been together.
Well, I called her short.
The first thing I did was I said I forgot how short you are.
I asked them about last night.
We also bought a bottle of wine,
and we were sitting on these couches and talking and everything,
and it was a lot of, I remember this,
Oh, do you remember this happened?
And oh, my God, you did this.
And then we jumped to like, oh, you have this health condition or like, we were all over the place.
It was very much when you see someone after a long time and then you're always worried about the building up and you're like, oh, what are we going to talk about?
Like, it's going to be awkward.
Her wedding was the last time I've seen them.
And so it did feel a lot like just jumping in.
We just, like, jumped in and hung out and talked.
They'd stayed up all night.
When we walked in, they were all squished up on a two-seater couch together,
where they had fallen asleep.
It's not like their Airbnb didn't have bedrooms.
They just couldn't bear to be apart.
They are all in therapy now.
Alex has kids of her own.
They're rebuilding their relationship,
but they are nowhere near as close as they'd like to be.
Their lives were each blown apart by what happened to their mother.
blown apart in different directions.
They're still tussling with some impossible issues
like, is it okay to have positive memories of Matt?
Something that I wrestle with when I do remember things
are can I still remember this good memory of my father
with the shadow that he killed my.
mother like am i allowed to enjoy this memory still there was a night yes oh yeah it was a night
let me answer that for you yes big sister's gonna drop in for that one yes you can um we so me
my husband went over to alex's house there was a lot of alcohol consumed for me i struggle
with those feelings all the time of like he did it he did this horrible
thing, but he's still my dad, and I still have good memories of him, and I, there is some
part of me that loves him in some way, whether that's the idea of him or, and then there's
Alex who, like, her version of it is like, he did this horrible thing, he did absolutely
horrible things to her and horrible things to her mom, and she never loved him, I don't
think.
For Alex, there was a kind of clarity from the start.
Amanda recognizes that now.
So, like, she doesn't want to trash-hawk my dad to me,
and I don't want to come across as defending my dad to her,
and so, like, it felt like there was always kind of that tension of,
we could never really talk about it with each other.
It did take two bottles of wine.
Yeah, that night, two bottles of wine kind of helped break through that wall.
But I was so intoxicated that I spilled wine all over my rug, my wall,
And then you poured baking soda all over it.
I thought that would clean the wine stains in my drunken state.
But we were like in like crying breakthrough.
So.
And here they were.
Amanda, Alex and Rebecca, together, keeping the memory of their mother alive, trying to.
I hope what comes out of this is closer relationships.
between the three of us.
I just hope that, like, we don't go through this
and then just settle back into...
It's not that we haven't kept in contact.
It's just, you know, life has lifed,
and I hope that in a way we find ways
because, to her point, there's so many good memories.
I can't even find them in the backest part of my brain,
and I know that they've got to be there.
Like, there's times that Amanda will be like,
do you remember when this and it'll be a good memory?
And I don't.
Like, I can't grab it.
I don't remember it.
I have no idea what she's talking about.
And it makes me really sad, and I know that they live there,
and I'm hoping there's ways that we can grab them back and find them.
There's still a lot to be rebuilt between these three women.
They know it.
It will take years.
There are so many difficult conversations yet to have.
So many memories to sift through.
But I had a strength.
feeling as we sat there,
something I can't say I've felt before or since.
And Alex told me she felt it too.
That we weren't alone.
That in some way that I can't quite explain.
Nikki was there,
with her girls who were together,
remembering their mother.
and safe, perhaps for the first time.
Not sure what to listen to next?
Check out My Fugitive Dad, a podcast I hosted for The Binge,
about the shocking true story behind Ohio's most infamous bank robbery.
It's a story with a surprising twist.
Inspired by his favorite movie, The Thomas Crown Affair,
19-year-old vault teller Ted Conrad, stole over a million dollars and was never apprehended.
Then over a century later, a man with a completely different name and life story confessed to the crime,
shortly before he passed.
Together with his daughter, Ashley Randall,
we try to make sense of it all,
how her dad got away with it
and why he chose to commit the crime
in the first place.
Here's a sneak peek.
Hey, Ashley.
Hi, Jonathan.
Tell me about your dad.
Well, my dad's name is Tom.
He's one of the most charming men you'll ever meet.
He's a car salesman,
a scratch golf.
You wanted Tom on your team because he's a ringer.
He was unreal.
The love of my mom's life and my best friend.
But Ashley's dad had a massive secret.
And he said, if I tell you, you have to promise you will not look into it.
I don't want you telling anybody.
A secret he kept for more than half a century, not just from his family.
And she looked at me like I'd hit her in the face with a brick.
But from the world.
Ted Conrad walked out of the bank he worked at.
He disappeared with a paper bag containing $215,000.
He'd evaded authorities for 52 years.
So where is Teddy Conrad today?
Who knows?
The Conrad trail is cold as marshals look to generate some kind of heat.
A father and son duo made catching him their life's mission.
Some people portrayed Conrad as a Robin Hood, and my dad called him nothing but a, you know, a thief.
This is the story about trying to make sense of a wonderful life based on a terrible lie.
My dad wasn't Tom Randall.
Right.
I mean, he was Ted Conrad.
He was a wanted fugitive, hiding in plain sight.
I'm Jonathan Hirsch. Join me and Ashley together as we tell the real story of her dad, Ohio's most infamous fugitive, for the first time. We'll not only reveal how he did it, but why?
From Neon Hum Media and Sony Music Entertainment, this is Smokescreen, my fugitive dad.
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Watching You is an original production of Sony Music Entertainment.
It's hosted and reported by me, Jonathan Hirsch.
Jason Hoke of Waveland Media is our lead producer and co-reported the series with me.
Catherine St. Louis is our story editor.
From Sony Music Entertainment, the executive producers are Catherine St. Louis and Jonathan Hirsch.
Sound design and mixing by Scott Somerville.
We use music from Epidemic Sound and APM.
Our fact-checker is Naomi Barr.
Our production managers are Tamika Balance Kalasni and Sammy Allison.
Our lawyer is Minakshi-Krishnan.
Special thanks to Steve Ackerman, Emily Rasek, Jamie Myers,
and the whole team at Sony Podcasts.
If you're enjoying the podcast, please rate and leave us a review.
Thank you so much for listening.
Thank you.
Thank you.
