Rorschach: Murder at City Hall
Rorschach: Murder at City Hall

Episode 4: Niel’s Secret

25d ago22:536,291 words
0:000:00

Niel and his boyfriend live in a luxury highrise on the West Side of Manhattan called Riverbank. We look at a notorious crime that happened a few floors below Niel which may have inspired his own dark...

Transcript

EN

This is an eye-heart podcast.

Guaranteed Human. A win is a win. A win is a win.

I don't care what you're talking about.

Yep, that's me. Clifford Taylor the fourth. You might have seen the skits,

my basketball and college football journey,

or my career in sports media. Well, now I'm bringing all of that excitement to my brand new podcast, The Clifford Show. This is a place for raw, unfiltered conversations with athletes,

creators, and voices that not only deserve to be heard, but celebrated. So let's get to it. Listen to the Clifford Show on the eye-heart radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast.

And for more behind the scenes, follow @ Clifford and @ TikTok podcast and network on TikTok. In 2023, Bachelor Star Clayton Eckard was accused of fathering twins.

But the pregnancy appeared to be a hoax.

You doctor this particular test twice in selling stretch. I doctor the test once. It took an army of internet detectives to uncover a disturbing pattern. Two more men who'd been through the same thing.

Greg Olespi and I come around to you. My mind was blown. I'm Stephanie Young. This is Love Trapped. Laura, Scar still police.

As the season continues, Laura Owens finally faces consequences. Listen to Love Trapped podcast on the eye-heart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. When a group of women discover

they've all dated the same prolific con artist. They take matters into their own hands. I vowed I will be his last target. He is not going to get away with this. He's going to get what he deserves.

We always say that trust your girlfriends.

Listen to the girlfriends. Trust me, babe. On the eye-heart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. On the look-back at a podcast.

Next in 2009, that was big moment for me. 84's big to meet. I'm Sam Jack, and I'm Alex E. Grish. Each episode, we pick you here and pack what went down and try to make sense of how we survived it.

With our friends, federal comedians and favorite authors, like Mark Lamont Hill, on the 80s. If it was a wild year, it was a wild year.

I don't think there's a more important year for black people.

Listen to Look Back at it on the eye-heart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey, it was good job. You're listening to that learn the hard way on the eye-heart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.

This is what you're talking about. You're talking about the world's best friends. You're talking about the world's best friends. You're talking about the world's best friends. You're talking about the world's best friends.

You're talking about the world's best friends. You're talking about the world's best friends. You're talking about the world's best friends. You're talking about the world's best friends. You're talking about the world's best friends.

You're talking about the world's best friends. You're talking about the world's best friends. You're talking about the world's best friends. You're talking about the world's best friends. You're talking about the world's best friends.

You're talking about the world's best friends. You're talking about the world's best friends. In the mid-90s, Cliff Nast lived in a luxury building called Riverbank. Neil Aski was his roommate in apartment 11G. We had a constant constant up and down.

There was just pure chaos and drama. We'd bring people back all these people. Just all these crazy people in the house, crazy parties. It was just it was fun. But it just, like, nuts.

When they moved in, Cliff and Neil built a dividing wall to turn the apartment into a two-bedroom. But Neil's life was bleeding over into Cliff's space. He moved his partner in Mario without asking for my approval. And the apartment was under my name.

And there was friction because I didn't approve of Mario living there. We weren't speaking. And we had to bring our own toilet paper into the bathroom. But it was a little tense in the home. We were in the kitchen. And I said, "Could you move?"

Someone had to move.

I think it was a woman to move. You got to kill me.

So I knew after that there was a lot of issues. But I didn't think that Neil Aski would shoot someone or put a hammer in someone's head. What clearly you did? Shoot someone.

Or put a hammer in someone's head. The silver 40 caliber of handgun was recovered from this. Somebody tell me that. Was it a coincidence? It's a different who did it.

There were times when I thought that he was unstable. And there were times when I thought maybe he shouldn't carry a gun. He alleged he was the victim of flat nail. This is not just killing somebody because you want this seat. I'm Jamal Jordan, and this is Rashak.

About two weeks before that terrible day at New York City Hall, Neil Aski was saying

That James Davis had some dirt on him.

Aski showed up at the home of a politically active person and in the district and near tears revealed that he couldn't run because James Davis had some personal information on him that would destroy his life. People had speculated that this compromising personal information

James Davis had on Neil was that he was gay.

But Eric Inquist to never bought that story.

Aski was already out of the closet. To people who interacted with him never thought anything other than that he was gay. It never made sense to Eric Inquist that James Davis would jeopardize a strong relationship with the gay community by outing a rival,

especially when he didn't stand much chance of winning.

So what was this damaging personal information about Neil Aski?

What was Neil's secret? A manual Xavier dated Neil's roommate Cliff Nass while they were living at Riverbank. I mean, the apartment was gorgeous. I remember being impressed to have all those amenities. A manual had grown up in an immigrant community in Bushwick, Brooklyn.

He left home when he was a team and supported himself by working as an underage sex marker on the Christopher Street Pears. This apartment in Riverbank with its door man, Conceir's Jim and Paul, this was not his world. He sensed that Neil might have felt like an outsider as well,

even if he was drawn to the life it represented. For a manual, Cliff could sometimes accentuate that tension. He just made a lot of uncomfortable jokes at our expense.

Like racial jokes, and I know that the bothered Neil a lot.

Neil didn't go in for the baggy 90s hip-hop look. He dressed preppy. Cliff often teased him about being very white for someone who was black. And Neil and the manual stood out at the clubs they all went to. The rock scene definitely catered to the fire island kind of crowd, like white muscle boys.

So it would definitely like a minority there. Emmanuel saw how hard Neil worked to fit in to close the white world. And he also sensed that Neil just wasn't comfortable with himself. I guess he was at odds with who he was, a black gay man living in New York. The thing about rock scene sound factory is that they were very fancy clubs,

and he had to know somebody to feel like you belonged. Filmmakers, Stephen Winter moved to New York City in the early 90s. Racial cultural differences were rigorously police by white gays back then. And casual racist jokes were a norm. And if you wanted to have white friends and you wanted to hang out in white queer spaces,

you would have to put up with that kind of stuff. You would have to jump through some cultural hoops in order to try to be accepted.

And I would argue that you would never actually really ever really be accepted.

Emmanuel had been dealing ecstasy in the clubs.

That's how he met a rival dealer named Angel Melendez.

And the story of Angel's violent death intersects with Neil ask you story in an unexpected way. Angel Melendez was a regular visitor at Riverbank. The apartment building were Cliff and Neil lived. And that was because the building was home to a notorious crowd. The club kids.

Without further ado, I would like you to meet some of the wildest freakiest characters that you have ever laid your eyes on. My style of the music, come on out kids, come on, here they come. These are the club kids. They live in a world of sexual disorientation. Drug and do states of Euphoria and glamour, a kind of glamour beyond belief.

I'm Alden Rivera, I have the club kids on the show. Introducing their riotous nightlife scene to the mainstream. Thousands of people came to their parties. Eclubs like the limelight and the tunnel. They were into outrageous costumes and lots and lots of drugs.

We were always, always dragging the after-hours back to Riverbank with us.

You know, before they have us falling out of cabs in the lobby, then people would go up on the roof and have sex. James St. James was one of the club kids and helped make them infamous at Riverbank. And I never realized how many boys did I take up there. Dear God and Heaven, there were cameras everywhere up there.

And the people with the front desk would just sit and watch us.

Then we'd see them later and they'd be laughing and we had no idea why they w...

But it was because I was up there doing whatever.

James and his friend Michael Allig, who was known as the King of the Club Kids,

both lived at Riverbank. And they knew Angel Melendez from their scene. He sold them their drugs. Angel wore big angel wings and a lot of sort of as an Emmy kind of lots of patent leather pants and harnesses and weather hats.

So he had a little look and he was just cute as a button hard to get along with kind of. Michael Allig made it clear to James that he thought Angel was more than just hard to get along with. Michael and I were doing a club kid movie called Champo Horns. And we were on set and it was a scene between the two of us. And we decided we weren't going to do it until we got some cocaine.

And Angel said he would come to the set and deliver us our drugs.

And so we were sitting there waiting because you know how drug dealers always make you wait.

It's just their little power move and the crew is furious with us. And Michael turns to me and he says, "I really want to kill Angel." And I said, "Yeah, I know me too, God." And he said, "No, no, I really want to kill Angel."

And he kept saying, "You know what I think about the ways to do it?"

And I'm just, "I want to kill Angel." Clif asked his boyfriend and Manuel and Angel Melinda is new each other. But they had divided up the club scene and they had to be each other's way. He didn't like each other at all. He hated each other because we were sort of competition.

He had limelight, hit on the east village clubs.

And I was working for someone like sound factory in the rocks and whatever. But one night, Emmanuel's outside of his apartment building and he runs into Angel in the street. They stopped for a minute and talk. They could both feel how New York City's changing. The former federal prosecutor, Rudy Giuliani, is now mayor and he was hell bent on cleaning up the city.

The clubs were one of his main targets. D.E.A. agents, the undercover agents were infiltrating the club kid scene. You'd hear that so-and-so had gotten arrested. There was a little bit of a paranoia that was happening with everyone. That night on the street was the last time the manuals, A.V. or saw Angel Melinda's.

That's around the time that I realized I needed to stop doing what I was doing and change my life because I was going to end up dead or I was going to end up arrested. Right around this time, the winter of 1996. Club kid James St. James found himself in the street one night. Not far from Everbank.

He'd moved out. The Michael Allig was living just downstairs from Neil and Mario. I was out of my mind on K.E. and I was in a little too too and it's something very inappropriate

in the middle of time square in the middle of the snowstorm and I remember looking up and seeing

Riverbank and knowing that if I could get to Michael everything would be fine. Michael would have drugs and we would take care of me and everything would be good. So I made my way through the snowstorm in my high heels and too too and got to Riverbank. When I got up to his apartment, it was very weird. He was flat broke and he didn't have any money for anything at the time. He had this new TV and he had all this new furniture.

I really fancy French antiques. He sat me down and chopped out like eight lines of coke and eight lines of K and then he chopped out some lines of heroin from himself because he was a heroin addict at that point and he said we have to have a little talk. Michael Allig told his friend James St. James about the fight he'd had with Angel Melindez. The story has since become notorious. Maybe you've read James's book party

monster or seen the documentary or the movie where Michael Allig is played by McColle Colkan. Both made incidentally by the producers of RuPaul's Drag Race. It was Michael told it that night it was an argument that had gone too far. Sometimes the drugs are out of control and your emotions are running high and that it became a scuffle and he reached for anything to stop him and it was a hammer and he hit him on the head

Michael Allig had killed Angel Melindez with the hammer. Michael told him that a club kid named Freeze was also at the apartment at that night. The story just kept getting more and more gruesome as he was describing how they put the body

In a box and then continued to party and then they moved the body to the bath...

sealed up the bathroom and said that there were plumbing problems when friends came over and

they noticed the smell and finally they made a pact and one of them would have to chop the body

up and put the body into a box and then toss it into the river and Michael lost that bet and so Freeze went and bought him some cutlery from Macy's and then Michael went in and chopped the body up and then they dragged it by taxi to the river and then they tossed the body into the river and thinking that it would sink and of course the box floated off into the distance and they realized that probably their future was doomed because it was going to wash up sooner or later.

Oh, when is the win? Yep, that's me, Clevver Taylor the fourth. You might have seen the skits, the reactions, my journey from basketball to college football or my career in sports media. Well somewhere along the way, this platform became bigger than I ever imagined and now I'm

bringing all of that excitement to my brand new podcast The Clifford Show. This is a place for raw unfiltered conversations with some of your favorite athletes, creators and voices that not only deserve to be heard but celebrated. One week I'll take you behind the scenes of the biggest moments in sports and entertainment and the next we'll talk about life, mental health, purpose and even music. The Clifford Show isn't just the podcast, it's a space for honest conversations,

stories that don't always get told and for people who are chasing something bigger. So if you've

ever supported me or you're just chasing down a dream, this is right what you need to be.

Listen to the Clifford Show on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast or wherever you get your podcast and for more behind the scenes follow @ Clifford and @ TikTok podcast network on TikTok. In 2023, former bachelor star Clayton Eckerd found himself at the center of a paternity scandal. The family court hearings that followed revealed glaring inconsistencies in her story. This began a year's long court battle to prove the truth.

"You knocked her this particular test twice in selling, correct?" I doctored the test once. It took an army of internet detectives to crack the case. "I wanted people to be able to see what their tax dollars were being used for. Some likes the greatest disinfectant." They would uncover a disturbing pattern. Two more men who'd been through the same thing. "Break a lesbian, I can imagine it." "My mind was blown. I'm Stephanie Young. This is

LoveTrap." "Bora, Scottsdale Police." As the season continues, Laura Owens finally faces consequences. "Ladies and gentlemen, breaking news at AmeriCorps County as Laura Owens has been indicted on fraud charges." "This isn't over until Justice has served in Arizona." Listen to LoveTrap podcast on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. There's two golden rules that any man should live by.

Rule one, never mess with a country girl. You place stupid games, you get stupid prizes.

And rule two, never mess with her friends either. We always say that trust your girlfriends. "I'm Anna Sinfield. And in this new season of the girlfriends." "Oh my god, this is the same man." A group of women discovered they've all dated the same prolific con artist. "I felt like I got hit by a truck. I thought how could this happen to me?" "The cops didn't seem to care. So they take matters into their own hands."

"I said, oh hell no. I vowed. I will be his last target. He's going to get what he deserves." Listen to the girlfriends. Trust me, babe. On the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.

"Do you remember when Diana Ross, double-tap little Kim's boobs at the VMAs?"

"Oh, what when Kanye said that George Bush didn't like black people?" "I know what you're thinking. What the hell does George Bush got to do a little Kim?" "Well, you can find out on the look-back at a podcast." "I'm Sam J. And I'm Alex English." "Each episode, we pick a hair, unpack what went down, and try to make sense of how he survived it."

"Including a recent episode with Mark Lamont Hill, waxing all about crack in the 80s." "To be clear, 84 is big to me, not just because of crack." "I'm down to talk about crack all day, but yeah, yeah, yeah." "No, I'm not. Put just so y'all know."

"I mean, at this point, Mark, this is the second episode where we've discussed crack."

"So I'm starting to see that there's a thru line." "We also have eggs on the table right now, so." "Are you fishing as sensitive?" "Yes. I don't think there's a more important year for black people."

"Really, yeah.

"Listen to look back at it on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts." "Welcome to my new podcast, Learn in the Hard Way with me, your host and your favorite therapist, your games." "And in recognition of mental health awareness month, I'm bringing over a decade of my own experience

in the mental health field, and conversations with so many incredible guests."

"I'm talking tripfunting, Ryan Clark." "Sometimes when we're in the pursuit of the thing, we get so wrapped up in the chase that we don't realize that we are in possession of the thing, and we're still chasing it, and we don't know when we're done enough." "Because people are scoreboard wide. Life becomes about wins and losses. Steve Burns,

Dustin Ross, because you find it important to be a good person while you hear on earth,

are you a good person because you're free?" "Because that's two different intentions, bro." "Absolutely."

"And that's two different levels of trust. I want you to just really be a good person."

"Join me, key against is we have real conversations about healing, growth, follow-up, pressure, and purpose on my new podcast, learn the hard way." "Oper your free, I heart radio app, search, learn the hard way, and listen to them." "Yeah, I'll use it to like this place called Pepejalo." "It's through your restaurant over here, and I went here with Neil Bogtino."

"Right here, Neil like Bogtino." "One of our producers went with Cliff Nass to Riverbank, and in Uber on the way there,

they talked about the murder of Angel Melindez."

"That did a cart in that building. Someone was kills and they chapped them up and put them in garbage bag and burned them down." "The Uber driver couldn't help but cut in." "Oh, it was like, wow, the pipe here, look. I'm serious. I'm serious." "It's just ironic that we lived in the same building."

" Cliff says that it's ironic, but it's more than it's uncanny." "What Neil would do just a few months later, just a few floors above, with the same weapon, seems too similar to be a coincidence." Back in the '90s, this was not the most safe neighborhood. This used to be a club called Big City Diner over here. They used to be a Tranny club over here.

"This is the building over here on the left." By 1996, when Angel Melindez was beaten to death with the hammer, Cliff Nass had moved out of the apartment he shared with Neil ask you at Riverbank. But they stayed friends. In close saw how Neil's relationship with his boyfriend, Mario,

was taking a turn for the worse. I think there was just a little jealousy and I think things just

got amped up and out of control. Angel Melindez was killed in March. The story spread through the club scene and the floors of Riverbank and into the New York tablets. Then late one night in December, Cliff gets a call from Neil. He was in Bellevue. He was chained to the bed and he said he hit Mario over the head with a hammer

and a wine bottle. Neil had hit Mario over and over and chased him bleeding out of Riverbank. But Cliff didn't know all the details yet. I didn't realize how serious it was. He hit him over and they had literally with a you know, he didn't disclose that. I heard from Mario that he was jealous of something that happened and he lost it and he attacked him.

Neil's friend, he knew you're a son of me. Also got a call that night. I do recall receiving a phone call from Neil in the middle of the night that he needs me to come and bail him out of jail. They were charging him with assault because I apparently was chasing Mario with a hammer. After the shooting at City Hall, NBC News reported on Neil's attack. In the broadcast, an anonymous neighbor at Riverbank talked about seeing Mario that night.

He was covered in blood coming from his head and he was stark naked, not a child, not a blanket. It was freezing so we all ran outside to see and he was lying on the sidewalk with the cops and covered in a blanket with tons of blood and then they took him away in an ambulance. I picked him up from the jail. You could see he was exhausted. He was depleted. I took him home and he did mention to me that Mario did tell him that he was

having a fair with a friend and that Mario was basically living a double life where he was

Being a male prostitute and that he contracted HIV which he believed was from...

jealousy, rage and fear, fear that his boyfriend gave him HIV at a time when thousands of

gay men were still dying every year from AIDS. And yet, to hitting a year of show me, Neil was surprisingly calm in the face of his diagnosis. He wasn't devastated. I didn't see him associated as a death sentence but rather that he is contracted HIV and that he's going to deal with it. But that may have been what Neil wanted his friend to believe. In the diverse, but largely segregated gay club world, HIV and AIDS were heartly rare.

Some people with tone down their hard partying life trying to take care of themselves and the

people they love. For others, it had the opposite effect. The only way I can describe it is

dancing on the lip of a volcano. Your friends are disappearing. Your friends are being diagnosed. You didn't know whether you were going to be around six months or a year from now. So you might as well go out and have as much fun as you can now. So it's the best of times. It's the worst of times one minute you have a champagne glass in your hand. The other you have a razor blade in your hand. Neil asked you to find a life for himself in the early 90s when he came out, started going to clubs

in Fire Island and beating interesting influential people. He was young in the world seemed to have nothing but possibility. But as the decade were on, things shifted. Crewdarker. He had HIV and a violent secret. This is a place for raw, unfiltered conversations with some of your favorite athletes, creators and voices that not only deserve to be heard, but celebrated. One week I'll take

you behind the scenes of the biggest moments in sports and entertainment and the next we'll talk about life, mental health, purpose and even music. The Clifford Show isn't just the podcast.

It's a space for honest conversations, stories that don't always get told and for people who are

chasing something bigger. So, if you've ever supported me or you're just chasing down a dream,

this is right what you need to be. Listen to the Clifford Show on the iHeart Radio app,

Apple Podcast or wherever you get your podcast and for more behind the scenes, follow @Cliford and @Tiktok Podcast Network on TikTok. In 2023, former Bachelor Star Clayton Eckard found himself at the center of a paternity scandal. The family court hearings that followed revealed glaring inconsistencies in her story. This began a years-long court battle to prove the truth. "You doctor this particular test twice in selling,

correct?" "I doctor the test once. It took an army of internet detectives to crack the case. I wanted people to be able to see what their tax dollars were being used for. Some likes the greatest disinfectant." They would uncover a disturbing pattern. Two more men who'd been through

the same thing. "Break a recipe and I'll mention it." "My mind was blown. I'm Stephanie Young.

This is Love Trap." "Bora, Scottsdale Police." "As the season continues, Laura Owens finally faces consequences." "Ladies and gentlemen, breaking news at a Maricopa County as Laura Owens has been indicted on fraud charges." "This isn't over until justice has served in Arizona." "Listen to Love Trap podcast on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts." "There's two golden rules that any man should

live by. Rule one never mess with a country girl. He plays stupid games, you get stupid prizes.

And rule two never mess with her friends either. We always say that trust your girlfriends. I'm Anison Field. And in this new season of the girlfriends." "Oh my God, this is the same man." A group of women discovered they're all dated the same prolific con artist. "I felt like I got hit by a truck. I thought how could this happen to me?" "The cops didn't seem to care. So they take matters into their own hands."

"I said, oh hell no. I vowed I will be his last target. He's going to get what he deserves." "Listen to the girlfriends." "Trust me, babe." "On the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts." "Do you remember when Diana Ross, double-tap little Kims Booms at the VMAs?"

"Oh ho ho and Kyle Hay said the George Bush didn't like black people.

What the hell does George Bush got to do a little Kim? Well you can find out on the lookback at

a podcast. I'm Sam J. And I'm Alex English. Each episode we pick a here, a pack what went down, and try to make sense of how we survived it. "Including a recent episode with Marc Lamont Hill, waxing all about crack in the eggs. To be clear, 84 is big to me not just because of crack. I'm down to talk about crack all day, but yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, no, I'm put just so y'all know. "I mean at this point Marc, this is the second episode where we've discussed crack.

So I'm starting to see that there's a throughline. We also have eggs on the table right now, so

you're finishing a sentiment. Yes, I don't think there's a more important year for black people. Really,

yeah, for me it's one of the most important years for black people in American history.

"Listen to look back at it on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts." "Welcome to my new podcast, learn in the hard way with me, your host and your favorite therapist, your games." And in recognition of mental health awareness month, I'm bringing over a decade of my own experience in the mental health field and conversations with so many incredible guests. I'm talking trip fattening, Ryan Clark. Sometimes when

we're in the pursuit of the thing, we get so wrapped up in the chase that we don't realize that we are in possession of the thing. And we're still chasing it and we don't know when we've done enough.

Because people with scoreboard are why. Life becomes about wins and losses. Steve Burns,

Dustin Ross, because you find it important to be a good person while you hear earth, are you a good person because you're free? Because that's two different intentions, bro. Absolutely. And that's two different levels of trust. I want you to just really be a good person. "Join me, care games, as we have real conversations about healing, growth, fatherhood, pressure and purpose on my new podcast, learn in the hard way.

Open your free, out-heart radio app, search, learn in the hard way and listen to that." "What would keep someone who was so driven to be in office, to be in that race?" I mean, he was manic about it. "Why wouldn't he file?" "Nob order, Eric inquist." "Why won't he do everything possible to file?" It would have had to have been something

extremely important for him not to file. And the only thing that really meets that criteria

was this domestic violence arrest in 1996. I asked you hit his boyfriend with the hammer, and the boyfriend ran into the street naked to try to get away. I mean, this was a horrific attack, and it didn't really end there because the boyfriend then got orders of protection, more than once, to keep asking you away from him. Neil asks you as charged with felony assault. He took a plea deal with the understanding

that his case would be sealed so that no one could discover what had happened. But it wasn't sealed. Neil asks you did have a secret. One that he thought could destroy his political ambitions and ruin his life. And it was there for the finding if you just knew it would look. James Davis as a former cop would probably have run a check on every candidate running against him, including ask you, and discovered this and probably let ask you know

that he knew. Now, does that mean that he said, "If you run against me, I'm going to tell the

world about your arrest. Doesn't necessarily mean that?" But I think there was probably an

understanding that if ask you had been on the ballot, that this would have come out. So I think that was the decision he was wrestling with, whether to file his petitions to get on the ballot or not. Because if he didn't file his secret would have probably remain a secret. And if he did file, it was going to come out and could be devastating. On July 23, 2003, Jamesy Davis brought his political opponent Neil asks you with him to city hall.

Everyone who met them that day, the various council members who James and Neil encountered under way to the chamber felt something was very off about James Davis's guest. The James himself, he was not concerned. He told multiple people that he and Neil were all good. Why ever would he think that? That's next time. On Rorschach. Rorschach murder at city hall is a production of

eye-hard podcasts in partnership with best case studios. It's based on death in the chamber by Brent Kats. It's written in his executive produced by Brent Kats in Adam Pinkus,

Produced by Charlotte Morley, and co-produced by me, Jamal Jordan,

edited in mixed by Max Michael Miller. Original music was composed by Tune Day at Appin Bay

and Wilder's Hubby. Our Kyvel producer is the bell to evolve, consulting producer,

Amir Lumis. Development production assistance from David Michael, our Kyvel content provided by Spectrum News, New York 1. Additional material by the Harald over-air show. Our eye-hard team is Ali Perry, Carl Cheadle, and Anna Stumpf. Follow-in rate, Rorschach, wherever you get your podcasts. Yep, that's me, Clifford Taylor IV. You might have seen the skits,

my basketball and college football journey, or my career in sports media.

Well now, I'm bringing all of that excitement to my brand new podcast, The Clifford Show. This is a place for raw, unfiltered conversations with athletes, creators, and voices

that not only deserve to be heard, but celebrated. So let's get to it.

Listen to the Clifford Show on the eye-hard radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast. And for more behind-the-scenes, follow @ Clifford and @ TikTok podcast network on TikTok. In 2023, Bachelor Star Clayton Eckard was accused of fathering twins, but the pregnancy appeared to be a hoax. "You doctor this particular test twice in selling, correct?"

I doctor the test once. It took an army of internet detectives to uncover a disturbing pattern. Two more men who'd been through the same thing. "Break a less-be-end, I could manage anything." "My mind was blown. I'm Stephanie Young. This is LoveTrap." "Lora, scusty up a leash."

As the season continues, Laura Owens finally faces consequences. Listen to LoveTrap podcast on the eye-hard radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. "When a group of women discover they've all dated the same prolific con artist. They take matters into their own hands. I vowed. I will be his last target." "He is not going to get away with this. He's going to get what he deserves."

"We always say that trust your girlfriend's."

"Listen to the girl friends. Trust me babe. On the eye-hard radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast." "On the look-back at a podcast." "Next in 2009, that was a big moment for me. A 84's big tweet." "I'm Sandra." "And I'm Alex E. Grish." Each episode we pick a year, unpack what went down,

and try to make sense of how we survived it. With our friends, fellow comedians and favorite artists, like Mark Lamont Hill on the 80's. "They get a lot of wild, I mean, they get wild." "I don't think there's a more important year for black people." "Listen to look back at it on the eye-hard radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts." "Hey, it was good job. You're listening to an unlearned, the hard way with your favorite therapist or host,

care games." This space is about black men's experiences, having honest conversations that it's really not safe to have anywhere, but you're having them with a licensed professional who knows what he's doing, how many men carry a suit or armament. It's similar to the world that you

not to be played with, and just because you have the capability that does not mean that you need to.

"Listen to learn the hard way on the eye-hard radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast." This is an iHeart Podcast. Guaranteed human.

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