Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
And welcome to Cinney Stumpo Toughest Nails on w b
Z News Radio. And I'm in the studio with who
Samantha and Who's in the studio coming through on whatever
this is called all this technology crap? Nelson, do you
have a last name? Oh? Okay, you know your name?
Speaker 2 (00:18):
Sounds like a car.
Speaker 3 (00:19):
It sounds like car. What kind of car?
Speaker 4 (00:22):
It can only it can only be three options though,
so Rose Royce, the Lamborghini ands the belly which one, well,
you don't get either.
Speaker 3 (00:27):
It can be like.
Speaker 1 (00:29):
Sounds it sounds like a car out of Nigeria, right,
you know what it kind.
Speaker 3 (00:34):
Of does, right, like a Pega.
Speaker 1 (00:36):
Yeahga coming out of Nigeria. Okay, listen, what are we
talking about right now?
Speaker 3 (00:44):
We're talking about chatter. We're talking about chatter social?
Speaker 1 (00:47):
What is chatter social? You know there's a whole country
out there that does not understand social audio. You do
understand that. I think there's a plane that flies around
Texas and maybe in Florida. Otherwise Boston and many other
states don't even know what social audio is. So you're
here to educate them.
Speaker 4 (01:07):
So one hund percent social audio, Well, we're we're creating
we're creating a platform that that we call social Audio
visual right, real time experiences with both audio and visual,
and essentially using that as a way to make social
networking more social. Right, I mean you think about like
(01:29):
your experiences on Instagram or Twitter. You know, you're liking
pictures or you're retweeting tweets. You're not necessarily getting to
connect with people. You're not necessarily getting to know people
understand people.
Speaker 1 (01:39):
So I can kind of break it down a little bit,
so when I want to debate somebody in politics or whatever,
we can go live together on a screen and actually
look at each other in the eyes and go at
it instead of looking like trolls going at it on
a Twitter feed or an Instagram right, Like, I get
to look you in the eyes. You get to look
me in the eyes, which is I think personally that's
(02:00):
the fun part. But before we get more into social audio,
explain to the listeners who you are, how this started,
who's the CEO, who's the founder? Bring us to light here?
Speaker 4 (02:12):
Well, you know Nelson Inpega, I'm twenty eight years old,
started off as a real estate investor about eight years ago,
what I was twenty I think.
Speaker 1 (02:24):
Your babyhead.
Speaker 3 (02:26):
I can't even Matthew platform four years ago called Clubhouse,
and this was a platform that essentially pushed the rise
of social audio.
Speaker 4 (02:38):
And on this platform, I ended up just falling in
love with the concept of using your voice to connect
with people, using your voice to market your product, right,
using your voice to be more social.
Speaker 3 (02:51):
Right.
Speaker 1 (02:51):
And you know, a few months in I couldn't well
you couldn't through COVID right because everybody was stranded. So
that was a perfect launch, perfect time for them, because
I don't know. I worked every day. We're essential, you
worked every day. But I still see social audio for me.
For me, if I don't want to run out or
(03:15):
I can't sleep at midnight, let's say and raise sound
asleep to do. He's off in neving. I can always
jump into a room and hang out with a bunch
of people. I might like them, I might not like them.
I might debate them im. It might be a great conversation.
It could be six women in a room together and
we have the most awesome conversation. It could be three
hundred people in a room together. It could be a
(03:35):
thousand people. It doesn't matter. It's like you're never alone.
If that makes any sense, Like, if you don't want
to be alone, you don't have to be a loone.
You can be with your kids, your husband and your wife,
blah blah blah, and sometimes you just need a break.
And I just find it's another way of Sometimes I
always say this, it's easier to talk to strangers than
(03:57):
talk to people that you know in your everyday life,
which is very weird.
Speaker 2 (04:02):
That's how therapist make money.
Speaker 1 (04:04):
Okay, well, then.
Speaker 3 (04:05):
She's absolutely correct though.
Speaker 4 (04:07):
It's like again, it's something new, it's something fresh, and
majority of people on a planet don't know about it, right.
I mean, just imagine how many people are listening to
us right now in their cars, right on a radio station. Well,
think of you being able to do that and being
able to pause, raise your hand and join this conversation
in real time as opposed to just listen.
Speaker 3 (04:30):
Right. Think about watching.
Speaker 4 (04:31):
Your favorite podcast like we all do on YouTube, or
watching our favorite streamers or just gamers or whatever, and
being able to again in real time interact with both
your voice and the option of going on camera.
Speaker 3 (04:47):
Right.
Speaker 4 (04:48):
It takes social experiences to the next level and allows
for true connection. Right, Like you think about like the
friends of my life right now, all my best friends
I met from social audio, Jonathan Jenny Stappo.
Speaker 3 (05:01):
I mean, the list goes on and on and on.
Speaker 4 (05:03):
Social audio, right, because again, we're able to use the
most authentic part of our selves as human beings, our voices,
to really get.
Speaker 3 (05:14):
To know one another.
Speaker 4 (05:15):
Right, and yeah, I mean it's unlike anything I've ever
seen in the world. Right, and chatter is building on
top of that framework and adding it to the various
elements of social media that we're currently used to today, right, podcasting, gaming,
short form videos, right, just all those various elements that
were already used to Okay, so just throwing that social
(05:37):
audio compone, I still.
Speaker 1 (05:38):
Want to bring you back twenty eight years old. You decided.
I think I know how it went. The other app
we'll call it. We don't have to give them any
advertising the other app. Right, It's like when I'm on
I can't hold up this because I'm giving them a
free advertising. Anyways, with that being said, you learned how
to be a great, great moderator. Right. No one can
(06:00):
moderate the way you can. And I've been in a
ton of rooms. No one can liven up a crowd.
You can dismantle people, you bring them up, You're throwing
them all over the place like rag dolls, right, But
that's what makes it fun. So all of a sudden,
everybody's followers got removed. That was the start of it,
and you were like, We're like, well, well, what's going
on here. Everybody built up fifty sixty seventy thousand followers, boom,
(06:23):
all taken away. They changed their whole concept, and you said,
I'm going to go out, I'm going to do this,
I'm going to do this better than them. And that's
how it actually started.
Speaker 3 (06:33):
Right, absolutely, so absolutely.
Speaker 1 (06:36):
As a guy that's just not getting into the tech world,
the difference is you're a guy that's actually been using
this app close to five years now. You see everything.
You see what people like, you see what people don't like.
You have learned actually from the outside in instead of
learning from the inside out. Right, So that's what makes
(07:00):
you good at what you're building here, because you know
what people want and you know what people don't want. Weird, Absolutely,
he guys don't understand. They don't understand what the people
looking for you do. And I think that's going to
be the game changer here that you went from the
outside in and not the inside out as forming this company.
Speaker 3 (07:23):
Absolutely.
Speaker 4 (07:23):
And you know I can say the same thing for
everyone on our team as well, right, all of us,
all of us. I mean, think about it, our CTEO Herraine.
I mean, he's been a million Marathon community member for years, right,
he was among one.
Speaker 3 (07:38):
Of the first private beta testers on Chatter. Right. You
look at Kim Green, our marketing director.
Speaker 4 (07:43):
She's been a million Marathon member for a long time,
even through to when we migrated over to Twitter.
Speaker 3 (07:49):
You look at the whole team.
Speaker 4 (07:50):
You're talking about a team of individuals that are power
social audio users and have identified all the various flaws
in regards to how everyone.
Speaker 3 (08:00):
Else has done it.
Speaker 4 (08:01):
And we're coming at this from that user perspective, right,
that perspective of individuals that use an application every single
day and know everything there is to know about it, right,
And it's the first time it's ever been done right,
users coming together to build out a product the right
way for the masses. And Yeah, I think I think,
(08:23):
I think the history books.
Speaker 1 (08:24):
Are gonna all that thought, all that thought, We're gonna
go to break. Okay, you're listening to Cindy Stumbo Toughest
Nails on WBZ. We'll be right back and welcome back
to Cindy Stumbo tough his nails on WBZ and I'm
in the studio to night with Samantha and Nelson.
Speaker 2 (08:40):
Your actual child and your adopted child.
Speaker 1 (08:42):
Oh my god, I got like, come on man, I
got shy, I I got Freddy. I don't know. Listen
all I know, I'm a psychiatrist over there, but I
personally in the last close it will be four years November.
I've made a lot of great friends on there. I
really have like women that I talk to, guys I
talked to as friends. But there's Yvonne on there, There's
(09:05):
ann on there. I can I mean, there's so many
I can keep naming. Danielle oh yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
No like that. I'll call and talk to them as women.
Right that I would never have known Jonathan Daphney. I mean,
we've all got together in Florida, We've all socialized. I
mean it's a different experience, and the demographics of us
(09:29):
all age differently, and we just all grove together. This
is the crazy part. Right, You're twenty eight, You're younger
than Chad So, but you're hanging out with forty year olds,
fifty year olds, and sixty year olds. Right, So it's
just a different It's nothing like I've ever seen before.
I never thought that would exist. I never thought I'm
gonna go meet people in Florida that I don't know,
(09:53):
but I that they're on my Instagram or they're on
my you know, Twitter, or they're on my LinkedIn. Right, Well,
LinkedIn's little different because it's.
Speaker 2 (10:00):
But I've heard you say time and time again, how.
Speaker 1 (10:02):
Much you want to go into your microf you you
you here about your micro I.
Speaker 2 (10:06):
Have to see myself and do this. I've heard you
save time and time again. How much you learn from
this app?
Speaker 1 (10:11):
Thousand percent? You learn human nature. That's what I've learned, Right,
I'm not going to learn a lot about my business,
let's say, with real estate guys, right, but I learned
such more important things. I learn human nature. I learned
how to work around multiple personalities in a room. Nelson,
you're running rooms with thousands of people a million marathon.
(10:32):
Mean you know now you're going to learn how to
groove with people. And here's the big one. If you
don't know how to groove with people on social audio,
how are you going to do it in the real world.
So it's a great it's a great learning experience to
come on, especially for the younger your generation that's a
little shy or whatever. If you can come on there
and start to talk to people, and whether it's debating
(10:54):
or whether it's a casual conversation, it starts to break
you out of your show, because if you can't do
on there, you can't do it in real life. That's
my feeling. So I think it's a really good stepping stool,
a stepping stone for younger people to get more comfortable
with public speaking.
Speaker 3 (11:10):
Too.
Speaker 2 (11:10):
I think it makes people speak.
Speaker 1 (11:13):
You got a peepee, you gotta do people, You're gonna
do pep. I think, Okay, what are we three?
Speaker 2 (11:17):
Naturally vulnerable and want to be vulnerable, whereas most people
in the real world don't like to be vulnerable like.
Speaker 1 (11:23):
That, So you think the app makes people a little
bit more vulnerable.
Speaker 2 (11:26):
Yeah, Like how many times you said, like, I've had
a bad day when I come on the app and
talk about.
Speaker 1 (11:30):
That, Yeah, absolutely, So it gives me my moment after
work an eighteen hour a day, come home, have dinner
with Ray, spend some time with Ray, and you know,
my time is like nine nine thirty to come on, right, But.
Speaker 2 (11:40):
It only takes you to say that for everybody else
that if they're feeling that, to say that.
Speaker 1 (11:44):
Too correct, So they're not alone, right, So everybody. Look,
that's how I see social audio is it's all walks
of life, right. We all come from different countries that
come on there. We all have different background of religion, race,
and you're going to end up with your own like
minded people. You're not going to you know, you have
(12:05):
a thing called an algorithm and you're in beta testing
right now. So take that from there. Let's talk about
the beta testing and the algorithm and explain to people
like if there's certain rooms you don't want to see,
you will not be seeing those rooms.
Speaker 4 (12:20):
No, absolutely, I mean it just everything Cindy said is
just factual, right, And I mean you usually think you
think about like the rise of the Internet, right before
before the Internet, where you going to network with people?
Speaker 3 (12:34):
Where are you going to meet people? Right? It's I
mean you don't have the Internet.
Speaker 4 (12:38):
Right, so you're limited to your immediate ecosystem.
Speaker 3 (12:42):
I think someone's got to go.
Speaker 4 (12:43):
You're you're limited to your immediate network of people that
you meet on a day to day or whatever the
case may be. The Internet broadens that horizon, right, chatter,
social audio, visual, I.
Speaker 3 (12:55):
Mean expands it significantly.
Speaker 4 (12:57):
And now it's like, you know, go into the bar
to talk to twenty people, but it's like, now you're
talking to twenty people in different parts of the world, right,
who have similar likes and interest with you. You're a
finance guy, is a finance person. I'm in Boston, this
one's in La that one's in.
Speaker 3 (13:12):
Dubai, blah blah blah.
Speaker 4 (13:14):
And these people meet, they meet in real life, they
do business with each other. I mean, I was just
looking on Donovan's Instagram the other day. Him and Adam
Elish are now boyfriend girlfriend. He lives in DC, she
lives in Toronto. They met on chatter. Now he was
in Toronto last weekend, right, Like this stuff is crazy again.
Real time authentic connections on the Internet can only be done.
Speaker 3 (13:38):
On social audio, point blank period. Right.
Speaker 4 (13:40):
You cannot connect with anybody by liking their photos. Those
two would not be boyfriend girlfriend by liking their photos
commenting Oh you look hot.
Speaker 3 (13:48):
But it just doesn't work like that, you know, So
it's no think.
Speaker 1 (13:52):
It's some creepy dude, that's saying you look cut right,
So that don't like that?
Speaker 3 (13:56):
Right?
Speaker 4 (13:57):
Well, on chatter, if the person's creepy, first of all,
they're gonna stay out creepy.
Speaker 3 (14:00):
Second of well, they can go on camera.
Speaker 1 (14:02):
And then they're gonna look creepy and then we'll figure
out you're creepy, and then you need to get a
camera because you're too creepy for us.
Speaker 4 (14:08):
Right, Like beta, So we started we started beta what
June first, we had about thirty days of private beta
with about one thousand users. We started public beta July eleventh,
so it's about twelve weeks right now, and we're over
thirty two thousand users already, right, and you know again and.
Speaker 1 (14:27):
Again how many okay, but how many waiting to get
in on the app right now? Well, we got thirty
two thousand active users, and how many are we holding
back from letting in right now that you're holding back?
Speaker 3 (14:40):
So thirty two thousand total users.
Speaker 4 (14:42):
Okay, about sixteen thousand in the app with invites, and
the rest of them are waiting to get an invite
to get into the app.
Speaker 1 (14:50):
And that's what's your reason for holding them back? Sorry,
what's the reason for not just letting the floodgates open
and let everybody in, because right now it's all by.
Speaker 4 (15:01):
Yeah, of course, because like we're startup, right, and we're
growing much faster than the average startup. Right, you need
to have funding and you need to have a large
team in order to be able to manage all of
these things and all these users. I mean you look
at Facebook and Instagram. These guys have like thousands of
people on their development team.
Speaker 3 (15:19):
Right.
Speaker 4 (15:19):
We need to be able to scale to that point,
and we need to be able to control our growth
so we can focus on making a platform faster, making
a platform feel better, less bugs, less glitches, and then
when we get to a point where we feel comfortable
with the performance of the platform.
Speaker 3 (15:35):
Then we open it up to everybody else.
Speaker 4 (15:37):
As we raise funding, then we speed it up and
market and just you know, blow this thing up and
really bring bring bring it to the world's attention.
Speaker 3 (15:46):
For sure.
Speaker 1 (15:47):
Now if I remember, right, we we I don't mean me,
but we'll talk about we because you're in the studio
right now. You we're going to wait till after January
to launch it and then you on it. And you
were just playing with Grant cardon a few people, and
he said to you, listen, what are you hid this
from the world for? Bring it out? So you brought
(16:07):
out earlier than planned. And I got to be honest
for how fast you brought this out? From from the
time you started this to the time that you exposed
it to us in beta testing? You were how many
months into this?
Speaker 3 (16:22):
Oh my god, Jesus Christ. Maybe nine months?
Speaker 1 (16:26):
That's that was fast.
Speaker 3 (16:28):
Sorry, twelve month October.
Speaker 1 (16:30):
Is where do you go?
Speaker 4 (16:32):
Where do you go?
Speaker 1 (16:33):
Nelson?
Speaker 3 (16:33):
You're there right here.
Speaker 1 (16:35):
You just appeased. But we're in a studio where I
get a lot of finger movements, Like I'm supposed to
understand all the finger movements. Andrew again, when you do that?
Speaker 3 (16:44):
Yeah, I know, hilarious. I think Andrew Gime met with it.
Speaker 1 (16:48):
But what go ahead? You're good to go?
Speaker 3 (16:51):
Okay? Yeah, man, It's it's just it's just crazy.
Speaker 4 (16:54):
You know, this thing started off as a joke, you know,
literally start off as a joke.
Speaker 3 (16:58):
And A and A and a in a room.
Speaker 4 (17:00):
On another app right, and people on the stage. I
mean there was probably, like I don't know, a thousand
people in that room, and a bunch of people from
the community were like Nelson, why don't you just go
build a platform, Why don't you just go build a platform?
And we were all just laughing it off, and you
know that night I couldn't go to sleep, So thank.
Speaker 1 (17:17):
You, No you go, I'm sorry, I have one thousands
because you'll run my clock real fast and I go
back to break. Here's my So we're on Instagram live
right now. So Andrew's got everything going. I want people
on Instagram to understand they're on live right now, but
they could be on social. They could be in chatow
social and be literally talking right So when we're live
(17:41):
on saday nights in the studio and we're not pre taping,
they can join the conversation. I can leave the studio
and come right on and speak to them on chatter
and carry on my conversation one hundred percent.
Speaker 4 (17:54):
I mean, right now, there's like I don't know sixty
some people in a chatter room that can literally un
meet their mic right now and join this.
Speaker 1 (18:02):
And I want them to do that. We're gonna do that.
So we're gonna go for a break, and I'm on
the two seconds, give me, give me a second to
get out. You're listening to Cindy Stumpo Samantha Stumpo on
What Sammy.
Speaker 2 (18:11):
WBZ News Radio ten thirty.
Speaker 1 (18:13):
And we'll be right back and welcome to Cindy Stumpo
Toughest Nails on WBZ News Radio. And I'm in here.
I'm in the studio with your daughter and her name
is Sammy and we're talking to Nelson. Nelson, let's go
and ask and asked us a question? Asked? Asked? Asked?
(18:33):
I said, ask for a minute, I don't say act. Okay,
let's get that straight, I say, asked, Oh, no, ends
of the day. Okay. I've been hanging out with them
for too long. Okay, And asked a question. Funniest story
between you and I in the last four years.
Speaker 4 (18:49):
Wow, funny story. It had to be sometime that you
cussed me out to be No, it has.
Speaker 2 (18:55):
To be when you text her on a Sunday saying,
who are you cussing out today? Because it's not me.
Speaker 1 (19:00):
No, no, tuning up, that's always says, he says, what
gets up your ass on a Sunday morning?
Speaker 2 (19:05):
Can't say that word?
Speaker 1 (19:06):
Yes I can, and that you just tune up everybody like,
why are you coming after me? And what do I
say absolutely.
Speaker 4 (19:15):
She's just like Sundays are the days where I have
the most time because I'm busy during the week, so
Sundays that's when I can think of process and.
Speaker 3 (19:22):
Cuts you out. That's what she says. Ridiculous. I don't
get it, like it just doesn't make any sense.
Speaker 2 (19:27):
You know, you're not her child, and I deal with
that my whole life thirty seven years.
Speaker 1 (19:32):
So they all get it. So if you get it
really bad, then I kind of go easier with Samantha
and Chad. If they get it bad, I go easy
with you. Then I throw shar in the mix and
she gets it. Imagine going out the night before and
then waking up to that because I do it because
I love you guys, and I just want you all
to realize you're young and that you don't know as
(19:52):
much as me, and I just want you to be
really good human beings. That's what really comes down to.
Speaker 3 (19:58):
Cool.
Speaker 1 (19:58):
Absolutely care about raising good human beings, and Nelson falls
in that category. Okay, now that we're pass that, and yes,
that's our Sunday mornings more often than less, So go ahead,
keep going with you what you're talking about. So what
is your future for this company. And I know I've
asked you hold on. I know I'm asked you, come on, Elson,
if it's worth a couple of billion, never gonna sell.
(20:20):
And you keep telling me, no, I will, I will
not sell nothing, no, not, Well then you're not int
I'm not.
Speaker 4 (20:26):
I'm not gonna say like I'll let go of some stock.
Of course, you know, bring in some cash, but no,
I'm not gonna I'm not gonna sell.
Speaker 3 (20:33):
Like this is this is truly my passion.
Speaker 4 (20:35):
Like I can work on anything chatter related for hours
and hours.
Speaker 3 (20:40):
On end without going to bed.
Speaker 4 (20:42):
I mean, you've been on some calls and be like
two two three the boarding one morning you.
Speaker 1 (20:46):
Want to get on calls my phone and then I'll
be in a room, right and let's say go start
a room or go do this, so go do this.
And he's like, Mama, get out of that room now,
I need to talk to you, dude. I'm in the room.
I'm not leaving the room. Get so by the time
of the other room. Now it's one three in the
morning and he wants to have a three hour conversation
because he's going to stay up to talk to London.
Speaker 2 (21:06):
Where do you think he learned that from.
Speaker 3 (21:08):
By me the good question.
Speaker 1 (21:11):
I like that, Sammy. What do we say money doesn't sleep?
Speaker 4 (21:16):
No, but no, but seriously, I don't see myself selling
this company, and I.
Speaker 3 (21:22):
Truly believe in it. Never say never, no, I'm not
going to. I truly believe. I truly believe this will be.
Speaker 4 (21:31):
This will be the next evolution of social media, point
blank period. Connecting with people with your voice of course,
having all the video components that everyone's used to, and
bridging both of those things together. I think I think
that will that will change social media, point blank period.
And there's definitely a space for it, and we will
be the front runners of that space.
Speaker 1 (21:51):
And please let everybody know that you've been self funding
this from day one, and this is very expensive to sell.
Fun you OVC guys behind you right now, you have
no investors behind you right now, zero zero checks. So
you're twenty years old. It's a lot of mental stress.
You're working around the clock. Just had a baby, right
(22:16):
is there?
Speaker 3 (22:16):
Ever?
Speaker 1 (22:17):
And the greatest thing about Nelson is I say it
all the time, He's got a heart. And in life
that's all you need, buddy, is a heart. Right. I know,
when you get sense of I know, look at competitors,
gonna come at you, people are gonna hate on you.
Welcome to the real world of success. Period. But you
know what, what people don't understand and they'll never understand
(22:39):
the hard work, tenacity, the nights that you go to
sleep alone in your own head and you're thinking, you're
thinking you might have a wife next to you to
talk to, but you're still alone in your own brain.
And then one day you're gonna wake up and everything
I've told you, and for the last four years, it'll
resonate little by little by little, right, So just stay
with this saying that my father said to me when
(23:01):
I was twenty years old, exactly your age. Actually, come
to think of it, Cindy, when they stopped talking about you,
you're a nobody. So until then you're a somebody. So
you got to learn to take those hits, and we
got to learn to brush it off. Right. Sometimes our
personality is really hard. As you saw me on a
group text with that guy going after his jugular and
you came in and you were like, hey, hey, hey,
(23:23):
what's going on here? Right? It's usually any us that
comes in right behind me, right, So he handled it
really well, and I didn't handle it well at all.
So but that's just what it is. People that care
about your app, people that care about you are going
to stay supportive. People that jealous of you and unkind
let the algorithm drop them down to it. They need
to be dropped down, superiod. That's what's going to happen.
(23:46):
Good content, good content providers. People that are rocking it,
they're going to build their rooms, and people that aren't
are not going to build. So just touch upon that.
But I just want you to know you're twenty years old,
and sometimes it's hard to take the hit and sell
there twenty eight.
Speaker 4 (24:02):
No, absolutely absolutely, And you know, I mean this isn't
something that I've been used to like my whole life,
you know.
Speaker 3 (24:08):
I mean earlier when I was a kid. I mean
I was an introvert.
Speaker 4 (24:11):
I didn't become an extrovert till you know, I become
a content creator.
Speaker 1 (24:15):
I didn't know all yeah, on the.
Speaker 4 (24:17):
Other platform, I truly was. I was an introvert, you know,
and you know, get into my extrovert phase and creating
all this content with thousands and thousands of people, and
then and then you started getting the hits right, you know,
people saying things about you, people coming after you, people
discrediting you. You start seeing that side of things which
(24:38):
I never thought about before. And it's it's just a
learning process for me. Right, every time I go through
something like that, it it makes me tougher and the
next time I go through something similar, just you know,
not as effective as I was initially.
Speaker 1 (24:52):
But you know, if I had to give you, I'll
give you one to ten. From you being a ten
ultrasense of you're now a seven, we're going to get
you to a three. That's the god.
Speaker 3 (25:02):
I agree with that. I agree with that. I'll say
I was at ten maybe two years ago, I was
a ten. Now I'm like a seven. I agree with that.
Speaker 1 (25:09):
Yeah, we got to get it down to the two.
But you know, we brought you up the other day
because we're talking about things parents say to their kids. Yeah,
to make them be hungry, you know, and have a
burning desire to be.
Speaker 2 (25:22):
Successful a little bit scary, right, And what is it, Sam,
to scare your kid a little bit?
Speaker 1 (25:27):
Scare your kid a little bit, you know, not not
beat them up. But so I asked it yesterday. So
Sam said to a friend of Oz, what made you
do this. He said, he's thirty and he's opening up
his eighth company right now is franchise. Sam said, what
made you be this successful a thirty years old? Blah
blah blah. He said, I don't know. My father's are
telling me he's going to break my fingers and run
(25:48):
me over.
Speaker 2 (25:49):
But the point was why did I have to break
my fingers first and then run me over?
Speaker 1 (25:53):
Well, he just run me over? Was he going to
break my fingers for? And then we said, well, we
have a friend that his parents chose to tell him,
if you don't get education Nigeria, you're gonna go work
at McDonald's, right and seem right. And I used to
tell Sammy, I'm dropping you off from Broadway Review and
you're gonna get a job at CVS. Okay, and it
really not such a great area, right, So.
Speaker 2 (26:14):
I'm gonna get you a job there, leave you there,
and you figure.
Speaker 1 (26:16):
Out how to get home, Yeah, exactly, okay, how to
get back home to you know, pretty Newton, Massachusetts over there?
Chesnut hind insight.
Speaker 2 (26:22):
I don't know why I believed her because she didn't
even let me like take the to your drive a
car without talking to her.
Speaker 1 (26:26):
Every which way, but you do believe so in your brain,
you're like, in Nigeria, I'm gonna get out here again
education and I'm not ever gonna work for McDonald's.
Speaker 2 (26:36):
Right.
Speaker 1 (26:36):
That was just that everybody's got a scary thought. We
should all put those things into our kids. We're gonna
do I don't know, we're gonna send you? What was
your plan? And then I asked, I asked, Nelson, what
are you gonna tell your kids one day, because I'm
bring them to Nigeria. What are you saying?
Speaker 3 (26:53):
They're gonna go see their great grandma she's still there.
Speaker 1 (26:55):
By the way, Yeah grandma, Oh no, your great Grandmather? Right, okay,
but your parents go back there and you say, what
send them to that j area? They have no ac
what else?
Speaker 4 (27:10):
Listen, it's it's it's it's it's a harder life. And
I feel like it makes you tougher, right, having that experience.
Speaker 3 (27:18):
Okay, right, go ahead.
Speaker 1 (27:21):
The way I'm going with this is that young kids
not kids kids, but you have an area for younger kids.
But when you stop bringing on eighteen nineteen year olds.
Christina is great, right, She's only now. She's been on
social media for four years. She's learned so much, so
much on there and she had a great mentor. But
(27:43):
we need younger people to come in and listen to
the older people to grab those values. That's what you did, Nelson,
in the last four or five years. You've been hanging
out with people older and wiser and listening. There in
lies the difference of most people. When you start on
the the app, we won't use the word you are
only twenty four years old. Period. Oh wow, you're twenty four.
(28:06):
But we're going to break call that thought. I'm Sidy
Stumping you. Listen Tough His Nails on WBZ News and
we'll be right back and welcome back to Cindy Stumpo
Toughest Nails on WBZ News Radio. And I'm Cindy, and
I'm Samantha and.
Speaker 3 (28:20):
I'm Nelson Pegger.
Speaker 1 (28:21):
Okay, take it from there. I get a fan that's
outside that they can let them and tell them to
let her tell let her in for a picture. Please.
Speaker 3 (28:28):
You have a fan outside your studio right now?
Speaker 1 (28:31):
Yeah, because she's related to somebody in the studio. Yeah,
this happens a lot. Don't want to tell you at awesome,
but she's a young girl so Andrew let her in
to grab a picture while you guys are talking, I'm
multitask here. Okay, go ahead. Do you want me asking
now the question or you want to take it from here, Nelson,
because every time you're in my studio, you feel like
it was the guy that walked by with blonde here
(28:53):
Andrew was a guy who went that way. He's got
a girl. They want to bring it? Go ahead, I'm
doing three things that once. Dude, I know men can't
do this, but women can. Go ahead.
Speaker 3 (29:04):
Is this the last scene?
Speaker 1 (29:05):
Yeah, you're you're in the last scene of your movie. Yeah,
we're in the last episode. Good.
Speaker 4 (29:10):
Yeah, I mean, guys, very simply listen man, Chatter Social,
I mean everything that we've we've talked about, right, and
if it's if there's anything that interests you, go check
it out right, go to the app store, go.
Speaker 3 (29:22):
To the play store.
Speaker 1 (29:23):
Let's explain that to people's Some people don't understand that.
How do they get in?
Speaker 4 (29:29):
Okay, so you're gonna need an invite, Okay, but fear not.
All you need to do download Chatter Social from the
app or the play store and just message us on
Twitter or Instagram if you need an invite and you
don't have one, I'm gonna give Cindy a bunch of
invites to give out.
Speaker 3 (29:48):
Maybe I'm in.
Speaker 1 (29:48):
Thirty okay, I'm in thirty two states, right, you understand that.
Can't there be a thing in there called Cindy.
Speaker 3 (29:55):
Called Ross Ross Ross Fross will hoo come up?
Speaker 1 (29:58):
Oh that producers, I don't know two hundred chows out
of here. It's gonna be easier, like I'm friends with Cindy,
heard you on the radio. Bah blah boah. There's gonna
be something. And by the way, you need to know
where your people coming in from. Did you come from Google?
Did you come from this? Did you come from that?
You come from Twitter? You should actually know we're new
(30:21):
people coming in from So you need to set that
up somehow.
Speaker 4 (30:24):
No, absolutely, but yeah, guys, yeah, you can download it
any of the stores and to get an invite. If
you don't know anyone that's in the app, just messages
on Instagram and Google at chatter underscore us and somebody
will be able to get you an invite. But if
you want to jump on there now and have conversations
with me and a bunch of other people like Cindy
(30:45):
on a daily basis.
Speaker 1 (30:46):
Yeah, nightly, I'm nightly. I'm not doing.
Speaker 3 (30:51):
Nightly, that's true.
Speaker 1 (30:53):
I'm too busy running three hundred guys during the day.
Go ahead.
Speaker 4 (30:56):
But then it depends, right, because you know you have
that room that you like to visit every night, you
know that.
Speaker 3 (31:00):
Debate the news, you know, Jonathan bing and stuff.
Speaker 1 (31:03):
So I have my favorite rooms. We all have our
favorite rooms.
Speaker 4 (31:05):
I do.
Speaker 1 (31:06):
I like to debate Jonathan because I like to like
really go at him high and he goes like. But again,
at the end of the day, we are friends. And
then I like my Freddie room and I like my
Porscha Bell's room. I like my rooms. There's certain rooms
I go to. I love Chad, So there's rooms that
I will go to that I know I'm comfortable and
I like the people in them. And again that's figuring
(31:28):
out where you have like minded people with you, right,
So when you have that like Ramona's room, I used
to love her on the other app, right, I don't
see Ramona doing as much, so she's like in the
middle of like transferring over from the other app to
this app. But yeah, when you're with like minded people
that you like, I know your generation calls it mindset.
(31:52):
What's those two words? I really hate? Manifest Oh yeah,
let mefest I'm manifesting right now. I'm twenty two years old. Again,
I'm younger than Nelson. It happened.
Speaker 2 (32:00):
It's kind of like what's networking does, but you've done
it on a larger scale, right, So you all genuinely
care about each other and want to help each other.
Speaker 1 (32:08):
Definitely, there's a lot of us that actually really do
care about each other. Like like yesterday, I'm telling Sammy
you need to send five hundred dollars to Reel. She's oh,
I tried, okay, And then Ann's texting me her information
and sam can't find it. And Ian is in the
whole Harry Kine nightmare over there, right, so she needs donations.
(32:31):
But that's what happens. You get to know people on
there and you want to help them. She's stuck, she's stranded,
she's trying to get out. Ian's sending me the information.
Sammy's yelling a scream, and I can't find this person. Well,
what do you want me to do? She goes by
real real what I don't.
Speaker 2 (32:47):
Know screen recorded, I typed it every which way.
Speaker 1 (32:50):
And then Ian's sending me messages. Okay, Samana's gonna shoot
both of us, right, Like, you can't make this stuff up.
But the bottom line is, Nelson, how many people on
the other app do you think you, all of us
throughout the year gave away in money to help people.
Everybody gets that.
Speaker 4 (33:07):
By the way, I can't remember I could talk about
the biggest one.
Speaker 3 (33:11):
The biggest one we ever did. This was a lady,
Shanquilla Robinson. I believe, a young lady.
Speaker 4 (33:18):
She got killed in Mexico and we all happen to
be in a room where were running our daily, our
nightly show, and I think somebody came up on a
stage and brought it up or something, and in that
room live. I mean, we literally all contributed to the
GoFundMe and I think at thirty minutes we raised over
one hundred and fifty thousand dollars. And I think that
was the day that Cindy came in. I made you
(33:38):
put in like what eight thousand.
Speaker 1 (33:40):
And I got the phone call in Florida, Hey, need
you get in this room. I'm like, I'm get in
this room. Okay. Jump in the room. Cost me eight
thousand dollars to jump into a room, right can make it?
Speaker 4 (33:50):
Yeah, because it's like, I mean that that right there,
that night, that night showed me the power of this space.
Speaker 3 (33:58):
Right, I mean, imagine that thousand people the world, that
was all over the world. But that was the biggest together.
Speaker 1 (34:06):
Okay, but that might have been the biggest and one
sum lump sum. But how many seven nights before Christmas?
Twelve nights before Christmas we gave away money this that
I mean, it's been hundreds of thousand dollars and no
one even recognized that. No one even took on the
other app said hey, thank you. The families did, but
(34:26):
the people that own that app, they never once thanked
you for that, which to me is insane. Okay. Most
people that raise one hundred and fifty thousand for something
they want public you know, oh the newspapers to pick
it up. We just did it. To do it. No,
you got like little credit for that, but you did it.
You weren't even looking for the credit. Most people that
(34:47):
donate they want the limelight after they donate or do
something like that. And again, we've helped a lot of
people after we could confirm that they needed the help.
We did this those years Nelson doing this. I think
you're why can't I remember better than you? That's a problem.
Speaker 3 (35:06):
It's a lot of mean come on, it's a lot
of nights. Yeah, it's a lot of memories.
Speaker 1 (35:09):
There's a lot of last minute gofunding accounts, a lot.
Ask Jonathan, he'll remember he can remember everything.
Speaker 3 (35:15):
Absolutely, absolutely.
Speaker 1 (35:17):
Again, the power of social audio, the power because if
we didn't hear real's voice and real time and should
just be another whatever, but then real time talking face
to face, you get to know people. Now you've got
that empathy to want to help people, right, and everybody
(35:39):
falls on some type of hard times, and there'll always
be the givers out there and they'll always be the takers.
You're never gonna stop. And there are people that even
people if you remember that night, they were giving five
dollars ten dollars right because they could give what they
could afford to give. Period, doesn't make my eight thousand
any different than somebody gives ten dollars. They're giving what
(36:00):
they can give, and that's what makes it great. Had
some really great communities, by.
Speaker 4 (36:05):
The way, again, it's fostering authentic connections, right, and the
only way you could do that is with the most
authentic tool each of us, as human beings possess our voices.
Speaker 3 (36:20):
Right, that's literally the most authentic tool we have, you know.
Speaker 4 (36:23):
And yeah, just so many amazing things have happened, and
so many more amazing things will happen in the future
as we continue to grow this platform, Chatter Social, so
many many, many more memories will be made, will be created,
and so many more friendships, so many more relationships.
Speaker 3 (36:39):
Right, and yeah, I'm here.
Speaker 1 (36:40):
For Itsly I heard like a couple weeks ago, I
think I heard it from Freddy. He said Sammy came
into an astrology room with something and she woke it up,
like she was like, did you enjoy that room, Sammy?
Of course, because you like astrology? Right Chat, he should
be absolutely doing golf room on Chatter Absolutely on thousand
(37:02):
percent kid's amateur pro. There's no one on there doing
anything with golf. And Sammy hur likes her, you know,
real estate obviously that she does, but her hobby is astrology,
so people love that, you know. And she's like, I
go to sleep at nine o'clock, I gotta wake up.
I gotta be at hot yoga at four o'clock in
the morning. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, she's so sent it.
Speaker 3 (37:24):
Way okay, So that's why she doesn't join us at night.
She goes to sleep at nine o'clock.
Speaker 2 (37:29):
Because if I, if I miss my will to fall asleep,
then my heart's racing and I'm like, it's like another
exercise for me, and then I can't sleep.
Speaker 1 (37:35):
Because she runs her life off that loop. Whoop, whoop,
there it goes, whoop, there it goes. Anything else you
want to tell us in twenty seconds before we go
for break that you love the.
Speaker 4 (37:47):
Ladies, gentlemen, download Chatter social app store place Doors.
Speaker 1 (37:51):
We're supposed to save that for the last fifty seconds.
Speaker 3 (37:54):
I thought you said it was fifty seconds. Is fifty seconds?
Speaker 1 (37:57):
No, no, no, now you just now you just ate
your time. I'm not gonna go for break. We'll be back.
You listening to City Stumpo and Samantha Stempo on WBZ News.
We'll be right back, And this is Cindy Stumpo Toughest Nails.
I like to thank Nelson Pega for coming on the show. Nelson,
you got forty seconds and leave me five seconds to
get out.
Speaker 4 (38:15):
No, yes, go ahead, that's what First of all, that
song was my pick and I'm sure you guys know
it's a banger.
Speaker 1 (38:22):
Okay, so it's a bang bang into it.
Speaker 3 (38:24):
Go to the app song today, Go ahead, Gallo Chatter
social asap.
Speaker 4 (38:30):
Get an invite either tag me Cindy Chatter messages on
Instagram and Twitter.
Speaker 3 (38:36):
We'll be able to get you an invite.
Speaker 4 (38:38):
Yeah, jump jump on chatter, especially if you're going to
meet and connect and hang out with people like us.
Speaker 3 (38:45):
On a daily, nightly, weekly, whatever basis.
Speaker 4 (38:48):
Right, it's a brand new experience and yeah, I'm pretty
sure you guys will be amazed.
Speaker 3 (38:52):
With what you find.
Speaker 1 (38:53):
I love you, I love you, I love you too,
my Sam May I know everybody have a great, safe
weekend and we'll see you next week. This is Cindy
Stumpo Toughest Nails on WBZ News ten thirty