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December 14, 2024 41 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
For thirty five years, Cindy Stumpo has been a female
home builder with a passion for design, a mastery of detail,
and a commitment to her crack. With daughter Samantha Stumpo
by her side.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
I don't need my whole family on a date with me.

Speaker 3 (00:11):
That's a good note. It's godyn weird.

Speaker 1 (00:13):
See. Stumpo Development is the only second generation female construction
company in the country.

Speaker 4 (00:18):
You're crazy, You're a wacko, You're insanely I mean, it
just doesn't end together.

Speaker 1 (00:23):
Cindy and Samantha welcome guests to explore the world of construction,
real estate, development, design and more. Unpredictable.

Speaker 3 (00:30):
Every time I think I know what you want, you
switch it out. But that's what makes sure houses.

Speaker 1 (00:34):
All your deda discuss anything that happens between the roof
and the foundation. Nothing is off limits.

Speaker 3 (00:39):
You truly do care about everybody.

Speaker 1 (00:40):
She can yell and she can scream, but when you
get her alone, she's the best person on the planet.
Cindy Stumpo is tough as nails.

Speaker 5 (00:51):
And I'm Cindy Stumpo and Tanna's Nails on WBZ NewsRadio
Chat thirty and I'm here with.

Speaker 2 (00:56):
Who Yanpa, you are who line today?

Speaker 5 (00:59):
You're packed to blonde. Yes, my daughter has been a
blonde her whole life. She decides, like a year ago,
I'm going to be a brunette. I'm like, okay, yeah,
all right, comes back. Everybody tells me how beautifulest color is.
I go, they are lying. You are a blonde. You
are made to be a blonde.

Speaker 2 (01:14):
She stood up at my thirty seventh birthday party this
year and was like, all you people that say you
like a brunette, you're.

Speaker 5 (01:19):
Full tell the truth. Okay. Friends don't tell you the
truth unless they you're best friend, right, and then your
best friend will tell you the truth like you too.

Speaker 2 (01:27):
It's why I love you guys so much. I send
my mom your videos.

Speaker 5 (01:30):
Well, can we introduce them so people know who were
talking to You didn't know we.

Speaker 3 (01:33):
Were allowed to talk or not. We were teating like
can we talk? Can we not talk? Yes?

Speaker 5 (01:36):
So quietly good and we intro introduced them.

Speaker 3 (01:38):
Please you guys introduce yourself where I'm Cat.

Speaker 6 (01:40):
This is Nat and we have seven kids and I
mean you guys have a fairly epic bio of building
and like insanity, we do not do that. We play
on the Internet and in real life and have fun.

Speaker 7 (01:55):
Yeah, we have a podcast, and you know, we wrote
a couple of books and we go on tour. But
that conversation about the Burnette, it's so relatable to us
because every time we change something, all the dms.

Speaker 3 (02:07):
Are like, oh my gosh, it's so amazing. I love it.
I also went Burnette.

Speaker 7 (02:11):
And then deep down, we know people like to comment
on change, but in reality, your best friends and by
the way, your children will often.

Speaker 3 (02:19):
Tell you the truth.

Speaker 7 (02:20):
And our kids still look back on when I went
Burnett and go, oh, remember.

Speaker 3 (02:25):
When that looked like that, like it was the worst
thing ever.

Speaker 5 (02:29):
She didn't get it. I don't know. She had a
pretty mirror at that moment. I'm like, okay, whatever, Okay,
let's get back to you two, and we're off Samantha
Stumpo and her Brunette to bond. Here to Burnette. Guys.
All right, I started following you on Instagram, right, and
what I love most about you is you both keep
it real, right, You're a little edgy. You tell it
how it is, like, you know, we'll kind of say

(02:50):
this way, like that thing called a job, it is
a job, by the way, Okay, so like there are
things and you're working out there and you got seven
kids between you two, and then your husbands want you
to come home and be like what I just walked
off of the Victoria's Secrets runway like hello, Like hello,
all right. So that's the stuff that really I gra
you know, I grasped too, is when you guys are

(03:10):
in that car doing that thing right, and then you
do the funniest like okay, you have like two old
women doing something or too young whatever and you're and
you're catching, then you too try to do it. There's
so much great content out there that you guys put
here's my question, how do you keep coming up with
the content? And is it? I know a lot of
it's organic because it just kind of flows with you too.

(03:31):
But you have to sit here and say, Okay, what's
the next move for us? Like what's the next content?
Or it just comes daily because you both have seven
kids to amazing heusmens, it seems.

Speaker 6 (03:39):
Like for you on this point, don't you find that
teenagers are the most time consuming people on the planet?

Speaker 3 (03:46):
Like don't you find did you find that? Did you
find the teenagers? Like she thinks she's.

Speaker 2 (03:50):
Still raising us.

Speaker 5 (03:51):
What are you talking about?

Speaker 2 (03:52):
I'm thirty seven and he's thirty one.

Speaker 5 (03:53):
You think the job ends when they're eighteen? They go
to college so much more time before I don't. I
I am mind blowing.

Speaker 6 (04:01):
And when when they get thrown lives and they make
you run their lives with them, it is wow, It's
it's crazy, it's great. I mean, we can't even we
went away together for fun, like in the beginning of.

Speaker 3 (04:14):
September because we called it work.

Speaker 6 (04:15):
But it was the best thing we did because we
didn't have to think or talk about them.

Speaker 3 (04:19):
Now I feel like we want to do it every
single month.

Speaker 7 (04:21):
But as far as coming up of content, we think about,
like anybody sitting with their best friend, you're never ever
going to run.

Speaker 3 (04:27):
Out of things to talk about, like this is this.
This started as.

Speaker 7 (04:30):
A friendship since ninth grade. It became a business, but
it never stopped being a friendship. And with seven kids
and then two husbands and a friendship, like, there's just there's,
there's there's the content's.

Speaker 3 (04:41):
Never going to stop till death.

Speaker 5 (04:43):
Yeah, once they get older, what happens? What do you think,
like when they go off to college, it's even worse,
like it just gets worse and worse, and then they're
gonna what we didn't get easy.

Speaker 3 (04:53):
We're supposed to be looking forward to.

Speaker 5 (04:55):
No, no, no, there's no goldens coming ladies.

Speaker 1 (04:57):
Sorry.

Speaker 5 (04:58):
Remember there's a saying once you have that baby, you
never have a good night's sleep for the rest of
your life. Have you figured that out by now? And
you have seven between both here.

Speaker 3 (05:07):
I'm sleeping pretty good right now, but I feel like
I take a sleeping pill.

Speaker 7 (05:14):
Not see you out in seconds, and you don't have
any time to think about all the things that you
might have done wrong that day or what's coming up tomorrow.

Speaker 3 (05:20):
Bedtime is like my sanctuary.

Speaker 5 (05:23):
It's like, I'm but do they go to bed?

Speaker 6 (05:26):
Why say to them, if you want me to come
to say good night, you go to bed because I'm
going to bed. So that's usually what gets them into
bed for the moment.

Speaker 7 (05:31):
For that I said, For like the ones they're going
out at night time, I feel like that's a dad
job to stay up late and wait for them and
like to see if they're like if they're drunk, or
if they're late, or if they're like, I'm like, I.

Speaker 3 (05:43):
Need to go to bed. I can't sit and wait,
I feel like that's a dad job.

Speaker 5 (05:46):
I agree, my dad did that job. It is a
dad job. It's okay, she hired, but I did it.

Speaker 2 (05:51):
She hired p i's to follow me and then they
bought me drinks. And I was like, good job.

Speaker 3 (05:57):
Why the PI? Why did you need one?

Speaker 5 (05:59):
Because for we were on TV number one and number
two I wanted to make sure she was safe and
number three, I'm justator. No, no, a security god like
a body god on her, not a.

Speaker 3 (06:09):
Pe bought her drinks?

Speaker 5 (06:11):
What an idiot. He was fired the next day.

Speaker 3 (06:13):
Fired the next day.

Speaker 5 (06:14):
He was fire the next day. I was hitting on
my daughter. Yeah, that wasn't a good move at all.

Speaker 3 (06:18):
Oh, my kay got fired. He thought you should never
hire a hot one.

Speaker 5 (06:22):
And then he wasn't really that hot. I don't know
when I started. He had he had a good looking mirror.
What do you want me to tell you?

Speaker 2 (06:26):
When I started driving? One time she was following me,
lost me, and my dad called her and goes, I
have her. You lost her.

Speaker 5 (06:32):
I'm following both follow you. Okay, this is a little
fast story. I'm following her because I think she's up
to no good. She's like sixteen and a half. I
just got separated like two years prior to that. So
my acceptance sees me leaving. He follows me because he
wants see if I'm going on a date, right, even
though we separated, So he's following me. I'm following her.
You couldn't make this up in a million years. I'm like,

(06:52):
he goes, you lost her? I go just he calls me,
you lost her? I go, will you? He goes, I'm
following you? Why are you following me? I want to
see if you're going on a date? Dude, was separated?
What if I do? I'm doing? But no, I'm not
going on a date. Well, you can pick her back
up because she's on this location. So I'm gonna follow
you as you follow her. It was, yeah, you can't
make this. You can't not.

Speaker 3 (07:11):
Will you on? Did you ever follow you and find
you on a date?

Speaker 5 (07:14):
I did. I didn't do that. I literally between my
career and my kids. Yeah, I wasn't running around. I
have the time to run around, and I.

Speaker 3 (07:22):
Really like the time now to run around.

Speaker 5 (07:24):
I can't I go back in time. So the man
I'm with now is the man that was through high school.

Speaker 3 (07:30):
Yeah, you've heard about that. Yeah, kidding me.

Speaker 7 (07:33):
We have heard of you in touch with the high
school manner. You just like pop up out of nowhere.

Speaker 5 (07:37):
No, no, not at all. Actually Zero came to a
couple cup of nails events at h G T with
but with a bunch of our old friends. I mean,
he hit TV and gets what happens? All your old
friends resurface and they're on your Facebook anyways, and they
you know, I mean, so yeah, that's how it happened.

Speaker 3 (07:52):
So is he great?

Speaker 2 (07:53):
He's the best.

Speaker 5 (07:55):
I think he was three years old than me. Do
I think it was?

Speaker 3 (07:59):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (07:59):
He was going just in high school? Gorgeous. Yeah, we do.

Speaker 6 (08:02):
When you move, when people when they grow up, out
of the house, do you you can take it back?

Speaker 3 (08:06):
You do day things like do day things happen? Like
do you know dayners? Noonurs?

Speaker 5 (08:11):
What is she saying?

Speaker 2 (08:11):
What does that mean?

Speaker 3 (08:13):
You don't know what a noonar is?

Speaker 5 (08:14):
They said, what's day quantication?

Speaker 2 (08:17):
She's a menopause. That doesn't happen.

Speaker 5 (08:19):
No, I'm a menopause. I don't care. Good luck. Wait,
what do you get.

Speaker 3 (08:22):
Confusing for us?

Speaker 7 (08:23):
Because we heard that, you know, when the kids get older,
you get a certain age all of a sudden, you're
going to be swinging up the raptors. And then half
the other people are telling us, now, the menopause is
going to make it all dry.

Speaker 3 (08:31):
You're not gonna be in the mood. Which one is it?

Speaker 5 (08:33):
Okay, you are going to buy thirty eight? How old
you girls?

Speaker 3 (08:37):
And it's like for forty some forty two?

Speaker 5 (08:39):
Oh yeah, you're in your prime right now. You're banging
it out. You're holing right now. Still yeah, yeah, what, yeah,
you should be. Okay, then Suddy's taking them way too much.

Speaker 3 (08:47):
You meant sorry, we didn't get that memo. Where's that memo?

Speaker 5 (08:50):
Okay, we got to find some a long time with
your husbands, because you should be in your prime right
now period. We should be absolutely yes, yes, So when
you hit metopause and then you're gonna be like, I'm
gonna kill you and I love you. You're an ass,
you're this, you're that. Oh, by the way, I love
all that. In about three minutes of a conversation, I
hate you, I love you. I'm gonna throw you off

(09:11):
the roof. Oh yeah, it's a it's fun. But wait,
maybe if we're gonna hold that thought for one minute,
because we gotta go to commercial break, and you're listen
to Cindy stump on Topes Nails on w BZ News
Radio ten thirty and be right.

Speaker 4 (09:23):
Back, sponsored by Floor and Decor, National Lumber and Village Bank.

Speaker 5 (09:33):
One Thing, And welcome back to Toupest Nails on w
b Z News Radio ten thirty. And I'm Cindy Stumpo
and I'm here with Samantha and who might you guess?
You guys, I'm not what do you think? Okay? So
we're gonna get a little bit into the bio of
you guys, okay, because we opened up really like we've

(09:56):
all been best friends for the last thirty years, right,
And and I respect you guys. I love you guys.
And you guys should have been around the days when
I was, you know, starting out as a working mom,
and you would have taken a lot of pressure off me, right,
you would have. But you went around and neither was
Facebook or YouTube or anything else. It was just me,
myself and I out there in my own little brain.

(10:16):
But seven kids, you guys became. You've been friends since
ninth grade. She knows I have a best friend since
fourth grade? Did this just all happen? Organically the cat
nat or nat and cat show whose name comes for us,
by the way, and then pay attention, why yeah, oh
you're c.

Speaker 3 (10:33):
Well alphabetically alphabetically got to go.

Speaker 5 (10:37):
In order, okay, And then this just grew into what's
something that you were doing at home, like to bring
I want my I want my listeners to hear how
just you normal really pretty girls, and you are very
You're both very beautiful. Okay, so let's go there.

Speaker 3 (10:51):
That's what our mom's saying. That's yeah, our moms are
very generous.

Speaker 5 (10:57):
With us if you if you with compliments.

Speaker 3 (11:00):
This was before influencing was a thing.

Speaker 6 (11:03):
Like we started before people were doing this as a living.
As people were doing this like as content creation, you know,
Facebook was just Facebook, and we started doing real time
events and with women and bringing them together, and then
it just kind of grew because everyone we were sort
of the only two stay at home moms at that time.
It was, you know, fifteen years ago, which feels like

(11:25):
or sixteen years ago feels like forever ago, when you
were supposed to really the expectation was to go to
work full time, be a full stay at home mom.
While you work full time, be banged but don't talk
about your kids, like make sure that they're perfect.

Speaker 3 (11:38):
Like it really Pinterest was.

Speaker 6 (11:39):
The the with the platform of what everyone was doing,
and we were the exact opposite of Pinterest moms. And
I think when we just started talking, people sort of
looked to us like, oh my gosh, they must know
because they stayed home. Meanwhile, we really didn't know anything.
But it was just people were desperate for our conversation.
And there was a time when you would go out
and you were not allowed to talk about your kids
because you were not interested if you talked about your kids.

Speaker 3 (12:01):
They were supposed to work.

Speaker 5 (12:02):
Like I'm that generation.

Speaker 3 (12:03):
Chet kids, but be a stay at home mom, Like
you have kids, so.

Speaker 7 (12:06):
You don't want to be that person who like goes
to the dinner party like all she ever does is
talk about her kids, Like oh god, but literally, I
can barely think about anything else. It's the only thing
on my mind. Now I'm supposed to come up with
something else to talk about.

Speaker 3 (12:17):
So they would whisper to us like is this normal?
You know?

Speaker 6 (12:20):
And I think there was this really weird thing about
where people felt like they were so failing every day
because Pintress was telling us we were doing it wrong,
and the TV, you know, people tried to put us
on TV and like make us like thing like Pinterest moms,
literally and we just kept failing. And then we're like,
literally screw it, like we can't be who were not,
and we just kind of began to push back.

Speaker 5 (12:41):
Okay, let me understand this. So I've seen it. I
can't say fifteen sixteen years ago. Look, I've been in
business for thirty eight years since I had Sammy and
my belly, right, and now you're aging me. Now'm maging
you two. With that being said, I was the bad
mommy back then, right, think about it, I was the
mom getting tortured. Would I'd be running to a baseball game,
softball game, basketball game, my son, whatever she was doing,

(13:03):
and here comes to bad mummy right with the beeper.
I know you probably don't know what a beeper is,
but we had beeper as we had next heels and
cell phones, three devices going at all times. And then
mothers would be sitting on the you know, those those benches,
and they look up at the bleachers and look up
at me like you know, and I'd be like this, yeah,
turn your head now right now, because not today, I'm

(13:25):
not in the mood. So somebody's going to get thrown
off the bleaches and they would just go yeah, and
they'd say, oh, I wonder how her kids are going
to turn out, right, she's always working, right, And now
it's all changed. Right now, the moms that want to
stay home and raise their kids, they like the bad mommies, right,
I what's changed in three decades. But I did not
see the change till about ten years ago where I've

(13:46):
seen women really going out there. I didn't see it
fifteen sixteen years ago. And definitely we did not much.

Speaker 3 (13:51):
Of my idea either.

Speaker 6 (13:52):
That's why we were like, this is not changing for it,
like this is not us. We're not represented anywhere, and
we were, we.

Speaker 5 (13:58):
Were, But isn't that sad because you want to be
home with your kids. You got seven kids and they
need your attention. And then yeah, it's.

Speaker 6 (14:06):
Really expensive, Like day care was very expensive and for
some of us that you actually it made more, you
paid more to go used to be that you would
have to really work enough money that it even made
sense to send them to daycare, because I mean some
of the daycares in the neighborhoods were like fourteen fifteen
hundred dollars a month, like just to eighteen hundred two thousand.

Speaker 3 (14:24):
If they were young, right, Yeah, though you had to
to cover your costs.

Speaker 6 (14:29):
It was ludicrous and you're like, I'm not making enough
money to cover what I'm setting there.

Speaker 3 (14:33):
I'm like, I'm barely making.

Speaker 6 (14:34):
Anything after taxes to get these kids into daycare and
then they're sick all the time so I'm home with them.
It really it's a really hard, a really hard thing
for a lot of people.

Speaker 3 (14:42):
So you know, the conversations just were.

Speaker 6 (14:44):
Really natural and organic, and I don't think you don't
set out Back then, there was no video capability on websites,
so there was no intention for us to become what
it was really just let's let's get together and talk
about things and then pot it all just grew very natural. Yeah.

Speaker 7 (15:00):
I didn't set out and say, Okay, we're going to
start a business and this is what we're gonna do.
It was something that we really thought was missing out
there for not only ourselves, but all of our friends
and other moms and everyone was just like, I want
some sort of a connection.

Speaker 3 (15:11):
I want a place where we can talk openly.

Speaker 7 (15:13):
Not judge each other understand that, like, different moms have
different styles of parenting and they don't all have to
be the same, but it doesn't mean we can't still
be friends.

Speaker 3 (15:20):
And so it's sort of like just one thing led
to another.

Speaker 5 (15:23):
And then you do these events and I've watched it
on Instagram, like you get a crowd going like I've
never seen, right, and then you have mail dancers. I know,
I see the male dances come out. So just so
my audience can understand that, can visualize. And by the way,
you should be following them on Instagram and you will

(15:44):
see exactly the content they put out. And your Instagram
is I follow you on Instagram, not Facebook or all
the other side.

Speaker 3 (15:51):
It's all at cat now Cat.

Speaker 5 (15:54):
And you just bring it up and it comes right
up and you got you Literally, if you're a normal
mind did person and you got an edge to you,
you're gonna absolutely love and enjoy their content. If you're
stuffy up the behind, then don't be watching it because
you'll never groove because you won't you won't understand it.
You gotta be you know, I love people that act

(16:16):
that stuffy like up the behind right. Meanwhile, they're the worst.
They're the ones out there doing everything they're in the
freak shows that whatever a p Daddy's getting charge for now,
I don't know. The ones that never looked the type
right although type. And then the ones that look like
all four of us right here, we look like, okay,
we might bang this one, that one, this one that,
but we know we don't. So it's like, look, at

(16:36):
the end of the day, they put out great content.
And for me, because I use the word respect very
similar to tell you like when I say I respect
somebody in business, or respect somebody as a friend, or
respect somebody as a human being, that's a massive compliment
coming from me because I don't throw that around too often. Right.
So I'm watching your stuff even though I'm past that

(16:56):
stage of my life. I just want other people that
my daughter's age and your age is to watch it
because it's real. Because I get the mothers that go
like this in Boston, Massachusetts, because we're you know, with
the highest IQ in the country. Remember in Massachusetts. Oh,
my kid's going Harvard, and my kid's going Northeast and
my kid's going to Gale. My kid's going This is

(17:18):
the conversation every party in the springtime okay, Oh yeah,
my kids got accepted to this and my kid who
gives your rats ass? I don't care. Okay, is your
kid murdering anybody? No? Oh that's a good thing. Is
your kid not is functioning mentally good? Oh that's a
good thing. No one kids about that. Everybody just cares
about Oh sinny, my daughter, my son got from my

(17:40):
generation to my clients generation. Now we go we go
to parties because my client's kids gone to Penn and Yale. Right,
So I don't know, you guys, just keep it real.
You have seven kids, not all going to end up
to be college. Maybe maybe someone can go off. Some
are they're going to get in the trades. Who knows
what they're going to do. Find the way. And that's
the stuff that you can real. And I can't deal

(18:01):
with the stuffy stuff. I couldn't deal with it when
I had small kids. I can't deal with it now.

Speaker 6 (18:05):
But tell people have to see you at a dinner
party with stuffie people.

Speaker 3 (18:08):
That would be a great time.

Speaker 5 (18:10):
I make it on stuffy real fast, real fast. Yeah.
I can't do stuffanie at all. Just look up Brookline, Newton, Massachusetts.
It's all stuffy. But I want you stop flipping that
at a minute and eighteen seconds in my face. Not you.
I'm gonna write hook you and you're gonna fly in
to break. Yes. So he's these thoughts. I tell him

(18:31):
give me twenty seconds. I don't know what.

Speaker 2 (18:32):
It doesn't fair Warning about to get my periods. So
she feels all my symptoms.

Speaker 5 (18:36):
Oh god, well that's a problem all the time. So
Sam and I spend so much time together as you
two do that I get her symptoms. So the doctor said,
you too have to separate out more. You have to
get away from each other.

Speaker 3 (18:50):
I'm like, how's that going.

Speaker 5 (18:52):
It doesn't work.

Speaker 2 (18:53):
It doesn't work. So like, No, yesterday I got a
text from the god that drives around. He's like, she
is on one today. I go to fair Warning getting
my period. Can't do any thing?

Speaker 3 (19:01):
Why the guy that drives the guy that drives her?

Speaker 5 (19:03):
You too?

Speaker 2 (19:04):
You?

Speaker 5 (19:05):
Yes, so you too should actually probably be on the
same cycle, but maybe not.

Speaker 3 (19:09):
We usually are. But she likes to go rogue all
the time. You get it now the right you probably well,
she liked.

Speaker 2 (19:14):
It at the beginning of men a buzz because then
you would, but now you don't.

Speaker 5 (19:18):
No, Now stay away from me. I don't need your
your craziness because then you're craziness passed off to me.
But let's go back. So you do these events, and
how do I know? Because I follow you? How many
women are you packing in on these events? Now you
have to hold that thought because now you're going to
go to break hold on guys, I'm city stopping you.
Listen to Top of Nails on WBZ News Radio ten

(19:39):
thirty and'll be right.

Speaker 4 (19:39):
Back sponsored by Pellow Windows of Boston, Next Day Molding
and Kennedy Carpet.

Speaker 5 (19:54):
And welcome back to Tops of Nails on WBZ News
Radio ten thirty. And I'm here with Sammy and we're
here with girls. Okay, there we go. I want to
know a lot of it is following you on social
media is one thing, But these events you do, you
have like how many women show up to this about it's.

Speaker 3 (20:15):
An average of about a thousand.

Speaker 7 (20:18):
Like when we went, our biggest one I think around
was like Lynn Lynn City of Sin.

Speaker 5 (20:23):
My god, you came to Boston. I was in Florida. Yeah,
and I was gonna come to that one. Yes you
did that Christmas?

Speaker 3 (20:30):
Yeah you went. That was funny. That was almost street
thousand or something.

Speaker 5 (20:34):
I like, listen to me. No, next time you come
to Boston, you ain't doing an event in Lynn, Okay,
I will set you up somewhere else.

Speaker 3 (20:41):
Well, we did the Wilburg in May.

Speaker 5 (20:43):
Okay, that was better.

Speaker 7 (20:44):
But the thing with Lynn is that the theater is
so big and then so so so many people can come.

Speaker 3 (20:49):
So that's why we did it. But Massachusetts is a
huge there are big fans of ours. They always happen.
I'm married.

Speaker 5 (20:55):
That's well that kids wear no. No, because you're pulling
that household. That's not exactly what you're pulling. You're not
pulling from my area, but you're pulling from the north
shore of Boston, which is pebd, Revere, Saugusto, that area,
and you pull from the south shore. I know who
you're targeting on and is like I know, like Newton

(21:16):
Brookline women probably the least amount if they look through addresses.

Speaker 3 (21:21):
Should we come to you? Where do you? Where do
you live?

Speaker 5 (21:23):
I live in Brookline and my office is in Newton,
but I grew up on the north Shore, so that
makes sense. You married a mask guy from where on
what part of mass us is Amherst? Amherst so that
he kind of grew up in the year. Yeah, they
tip cows over there, like that wasn't like boss, that's
like for fun, say hey, honey, there was.

Speaker 7 (21:43):
An apple orchard in his backyard. I've ever been to
like a small town people lived before. It was the
first time I saw it, and like I'm coming from downtown.
I was like, oh my gosh, Like what do you
guys do here?

Speaker 5 (21:55):
Yeah? Nothing, nothing, tip cows. Okay. So that's like that's
going away out, that's going way up.

Speaker 7 (22:01):
But Brookline is fancy, isn't that. Tom Brady had a
place in Brookline. My sister in law lived there when
I first met my husband.

Speaker 5 (22:08):
Yeah, Tom and I you know, we had a lot
to do with that build out and NDA signed. But
Tom was about an eighth of a mile Craft is
very nice. So yeah, Brookline, Brooklyn. Yeah, Cindy's fancy. Let's
send I'm a builder.

Speaker 3 (22:22):
Guys, Cindy is fancy.

Speaker 5 (22:24):
Yeah, we won't talk about that. I'm as down to
earth as they get. There's an old thing. You can
take the girl out of the north Shore. You never
take the north Shore or out of the girl. So
those girls that are showing up to your events is
just healthy minded girls. Is that woman? If that makes
no sense, well, I mean when they come to our shows.

Speaker 7 (22:40):
Our shows are basically designed because the two of us,
we've been moms for a while, and you know, there
was all these we remember, like like the holidays, would
time everyone was invited to parties. We'd see on Instagram
rooms got cocked up, party's going this, and we're like,
we're not invaded to anything.

Speaker 3 (22:51):
When do we get to go to a party.

Speaker 7 (22:53):
And we're like, you know, we're gonna throw our own
party and we're gonna do all the things that we
would do at our party. We will have dj we'll
have dancing, we'll have laughing, we'll do live pod guests,
we'll have strippers, will have audience participation.

Speaker 3 (23:03):
It'll just be like the best like party ever and
we'll just do it like a show. And people can
buy tickets, so everyone's invited.

Speaker 7 (23:10):
So even if you're not invited anywhere else, you're always
invite our party.

Speaker 5 (23:12):
So basically, it's no education, it's no courses, it's no nothing.
It's just come have a good time and meet each other.

Speaker 3 (23:21):
Well, would we have to teach anybody?

Speaker 5 (23:23):
Now you're dation.

Speaker 6 (23:27):
It's like you're not alone. It's we're funny, Like we're funny.

Speaker 5 (23:30):
I like, know you guys are funny.

Speaker 2 (23:31):
You're very funny.

Speaker 6 (23:32):
We're funny, and then you have fun and you know
what we have. We're like hosts. We're like hosts. We're
like non bsing hosts who let you let we you know,
some of them start up uptight and by the end
they're all wow, wild yeah, And we're in our ideas
not to like just be it all be about us.

Speaker 7 (23:49):
You want to host everyone in the Every single person
in the theater feels like they're it's their show too.

Speaker 5 (23:55):
Now do you have you more favorite places that you
like to go to that you can you push back?
Like you said you like coming to Massachusetts? How'd he
get lucky? But still, how did you get lucky enough
to marry a mass boy? Real fast?

Speaker 3 (24:06):
Did he get lucky enough to marry a Canadian?

Speaker 7 (24:09):
I just met him at a bar one night in
Montreal and I was like, oh you kind of you
kind of seemed like I could marry you. So then
we did long distance until he got a job transfer
and moved to Toronto.

Speaker 5 (24:21):
Got it, so he came to Montreal to go. We
had a super sex, like.

Speaker 3 (24:25):
Yeah, acting that's what it was, like. I think he
never was.

Speaker 5 (24:27):
All Boston guys last guys usually go to Montreal to
go to I think it was called super sex. Yeah
it's still around.

Speaker 3 (24:33):
Right, you went for super sex and he got nat.

Speaker 5 (24:40):
Like that.

Speaker 7 (24:41):
I wasn't working at super sex at the time. Just
to clear it up, not that I would judge if
anything feel around.

Speaker 1 (24:46):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (24:47):
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (24:48):
We looked it up super sex someb be google and
see if it's still around. It was. Let me tell
you something I was in there for. I think right
out of high school, a bunch of us went. I
never saw more beautiful woman in my life.

Speaker 3 (24:58):
So yeah, Montreal.

Speaker 7 (24:59):
Yeah, because I so the drinking age is eighteen, so
you can get right out of high there.

Speaker 3 (25:04):
We should go on a field trip to super sex.

Speaker 6 (25:06):
Guys, if it's still around, were permanently closed, permanently close.

Speaker 5 (25:11):
It's the you know what? It was the greatest thing.
When I had Samantha, I said to I said to
my husband, we're going there because I need to get
back into shape, right like, because once you have that baby,
you go what happened to my body? Where is that?
You know? You think it's coming back in a month.
I was twenty three gone. So you have the words, yes,
thousand percent, I go, let's go. We're going to a
strip strain. I'm gonna get right back into shape, guys.

(25:32):
One night there and I'm like, okay, that's all I need. Okay,
I'm getting back to the way I used to look.

Speaker 3 (25:38):
So an inspiration from the super Sex.

Speaker 5 (25:40):
However, you have to do it right, whatever it takes.
That's my edge to whatever it takes.

Speaker 3 (25:44):
Hilarious.

Speaker 5 (25:46):
So the tour that you cut coming up here, is
that the United States that you come in.

Speaker 3 (25:50):
That you yeah, it's all the United States. It will
all be all over.

Speaker 6 (25:53):
We start in Texas, We're going to California, Chicago, Milwaukee.

Speaker 5 (25:57):
You slow down so my guests can hear this. Please,
you talk fast than Samantha and I. I just want you
guys to know that you talk as fast as well.

Speaker 3 (26:07):
Can you talk as fast as you do?

Speaker 7 (26:09):
Oh yeah, it's really hard if either of us interrupt
each other, We've missed like a whole conversation, she repeated slowly.

Speaker 2 (26:18):
The guests could hear.

Speaker 5 (26:19):
I want my listeners to hear.

Speaker 6 (26:20):
Okay, we're going to will Walkee California, Texas. We're going
to We'll do one show in TORONTOIC.

Speaker 7 (26:31):
It's hard to remember, so we say go to katannatt
dot ca A and then you can click on live
tour shows and see if we're coming anywhere near.

Speaker 3 (26:38):
But we always say it's even better if we're.

Speaker 7 (26:40):
Not in your city or anywhere near, so that you
and your girls are like, let's take a weekend and
let's get away, like stay in a hotel, not have
to go home that night, not have to take care
of babies or kids or husbands, and to actually make
a girl's trip of it. And people sometimes do it
annually and they just they come every single year because we.

Speaker 3 (26:57):
Do annual ones. And it's like it's better outside your
own city. I mean, if it's local, I understand, I
ever can get away. We're going to Kalamazoo. Oh kalama Zoo.
I just wanted to say, where is hold on?

Speaker 1 (27:07):
Hold on?

Speaker 5 (27:07):
Where's Kalamazoo?

Speaker 3 (27:08):
Michigan in Michigan, Oh Michigan, am I who lives there?

Speaker 6 (27:12):
We're going to Milwaukee, Indianapolis, Chicago, and then California, California.

Speaker 5 (27:18):
I didn't hear I didn't hear mass On there.

Speaker 3 (27:21):
No, we said it in May, so you know that
we gotta we can't. We don't want to. We don't
want to. We don't bother everybody. You know, we can
only come as much as we can come.

Speaker 5 (27:30):
Literally, So I'm not going to put you on the spot,
but i am.

Speaker 3 (27:34):
Yeah, go ahead.

Speaker 5 (27:35):
What's your fit? You've traveled now a lot in America, right,
You've been to a lot of states here. Where do
you where's your fan base? Because everybody is a fan
base that they like to be in. Even when I
was on TV, there was certain areas.

Speaker 3 (27:49):
Said it often.

Speaker 7 (27:53):
I don't know the East East and then the East
Coast Canada too, Like those people are wild.

Speaker 6 (27:59):
I would say, like people in and around like an
hour plane ride to an hour or two hour plane
ride from Canada from Toronto.

Speaker 5 (28:06):
M got it? Now? Do you notice it's the same
type of personalities of women or all all walks.

Speaker 3 (28:14):
All walk It's really unexpected.

Speaker 7 (28:16):
Like sometimes we'll see some people and they're like we'll
see them at like the hotel the next morning and
they've got they've like come to our show.

Speaker 3 (28:23):
And I'm like, I would never have thought that, like
they would be fans of.

Speaker 7 (28:26):
Us because maybe they just seem like so proper or
so fancy or so this and that, and I'm like,
you two came to our show.

Speaker 3 (28:32):
We have grandmothers who come. Literally we have everyone. We
have a husbands and wives who come. We have surrogates.

Speaker 6 (28:37):
Like there was a same sex couple with their surrogate
who came.

Speaker 3 (28:40):
There were like the young guys in.

Speaker 7 (28:42):
Their twenties with those like cool mustaches that show up.

Speaker 3 (28:47):
Everybody comes. It's because you know what, it's like a.

Speaker 6 (28:50):
Night out versus uh, you a lot of comedy shows
you have to go and sit for an hour and listen.
Ours is like an interactive experience where you get to
go and have Like we're trying to inspire fun and enjoy,
not just us talking at you.

Speaker 3 (29:04):
We're not trying to make you laugh.

Speaker 6 (29:05):
We're trying to bring a room together on relatability, on humor,
on understanding and fun, you know, and just women being
there together in one room is something kind of magical
when you're all sharing the same sort of vibe of
life can be hard. We're all going through something, but
there is still time for fun.

Speaker 7 (29:21):
We all have, yes, and that's what we all want
to We just want to make sure everybody has fun,
and the two of us do not like sitting for
an hour just listening to somebody else, so we may
we imagine that everyone feels the same way, So we like,
you could sit and do nothing the whole time, or
you could definitely participate in like the show.

Speaker 5 (29:35):
So let me ask you you something. We all became
verified years ago, right, this is before you could buy
that blue check mark, right, and kind of verified people
started following back in the day. Verified people just kind
of happened that way. And I think that's how I
found you, guys. I think that's how it happened. Did
you just run the clock on me? I hate it?
Oh gee a second, A break hold on? This is
city Stunt and listen to the Toughest Nails on WBZ

(29:57):
News Radio ten thirty and.

Speaker 4 (29:58):
We'll be right fashtball, don't you by new Brook Realty Group, Boston,
would Smaller Insurance World Auto Body and Tasca Drive Auto Body.

Speaker 3 (30:08):
Feeling down to make.

Speaker 5 (30:17):
Whis sounds around and welcome back to the Toughest Nails
on WVZ News Radio ten thirty. And I'm Cindy and
I'm here with Samantha and catinat we're wowie, what were
just talking about. I'm having a metapause moment. I'll get podcasts. Okay,
So I started following you blue check mark. That's kind
of how it happened back in the day. And I've

(30:38):
watched you guys just grow and grow and grow on
social media, right, And I said, okay, I got to
get them on my show because I have to meet them.
I have to see them. I want to talk to them.
And I probably could have called you on the phone
said hey, this is the city STUMPO give me a call, watship.
But that's not how it went down. But did you
ever think did your husbands ever think that you would
have turned whatever idea that you had into becoming just

(31:02):
two girls on the internet whatever to them becoming verified.
And I'm sure when you got that blue check mark,
you're all excited, going, wow, Okay, now we're influencers. Now
you're content creators. And are you making money?

Speaker 3 (31:17):
Yeah?

Speaker 5 (31:19):
So now your husbands can't keep it on anything anymore, right,
that's right.

Speaker 7 (31:22):
I don't think that our husbands or us even knew
it was a thing when it all.

Speaker 3 (31:26):
Started to happen.

Speaker 7 (31:27):
It just kind of, you know, it's like all of
us were surprised by it at the same time.

Speaker 3 (31:31):
Like, aren't you surprised?

Speaker 6 (31:32):
Like, I don't you know, you don't really think about
it because at the same time you're living your life
as with everybody you know.

Speaker 3 (31:38):
It's like we're just I don't nothing has changed.

Speaker 6 (31:41):
Yeah, I think we're just thankful to we get to
hang out together every day. That sounds so cheesy, but
I think when you just have perspective on your life,
you're like, you know, everything you get to do is fun.

Speaker 3 (31:50):
When it's not fun, you stop doing it.

Speaker 5 (31:52):
And I think that's what that's when it's a job.
When you don't enjoy what you're doing anymore, that's called
a job. When you love what you're doing, it's not
a job. I agree with that one thousand percent. So
I'll be working till the day I die. But with
that being said, my question is this one next. When
you two have an argument, how fast you both get
over it? We all argue, Really, who's the easy going

(32:14):
on and who's got the punky attitude?

Speaker 2 (32:16):
More well, I wonder what I wonder what your signs are.

Speaker 3 (32:19):
I'm Taurus, I'm.

Speaker 5 (32:22):
Stop. So the Pisces is a more caring, loving, empathetic one.
Well yeah, okay, yeah, so the Pisces over there is
the little cry baby over there, right, and you come
in like the bowl like whatever. Okay, she's more sensitive
than you are. Now I understand why the friendship works.
But you know how to but you know how to

(32:43):
balance each other out. So that's a good thing. What
happens even.

Speaker 3 (32:45):
More employ then she's happy.

Speaker 5 (32:48):
Yeah, she likes to spend money, but that doesn't make
you happy that you like but you like you like,
you like your feet on your ground. You like Pisces
like it needs a solid foundation at all times. I
have a question what happens when you have your kids
arguing and then you guys got to step in as moms.
The kids have to hide because seven kids between both

(33:08):
of you guys, you both have daughters, right, they're friends.

Speaker 6 (33:12):
You know when kids argue in themselves, you know life
is so fast and busy.

Speaker 3 (33:18):
There isn't right now.

Speaker 6 (33:19):
They're in phases where you know, they all like to
know each other at different times, and everyone goes through
an annoying phase at a different time. My daughter was
a camp counselor for like sixteen kids this summer and
She's kind of like, I get it now because the
favorites changed throughout the day because it was depending on
who was in what mood. And I'm like, now you
know what it's like to be a mom because you
all change in terms of how we are, Like, you know,

(33:41):
who we're having to parent more, who we get to
connect with more. So I think that our kids are
They all line up really nicely, and no one really
they don't fight because they're so close that it's a
weird relationship where they just they really get each other.

Speaker 3 (33:56):
It's like they grew up together. Yeah, and there's no
surprise by so.

Speaker 5 (34:00):
What does it come home to, say, Mom, she's acting
like a creep? Well, mom, or head's game.

Speaker 3 (34:05):
No, no.

Speaker 7 (34:05):
And they also, luckily not none of the seven are
in this we're born in the same year, so none
of them are in the same grade.

Speaker 3 (34:12):
And none of them at the same school and that
same grade, and.

Speaker 7 (34:14):
None of them really share the same none of them
share the same friend groups. They all have friends outside
and then they come together for this other grind.

Speaker 5 (34:22):
Okay, how many girls? How many boys? Between you two?

Speaker 3 (34:25):
We have three girls and four boys.

Speaker 5 (34:27):
Okay, so the four boys, they're easy they don't get
caught up in the way. They just go live there.
So it's three girls. Who's got the two and who's
got the one?

Speaker 6 (34:35):
Well, I've got the two, but my little our youngest
is like not just turn nine. So we have the baby,
and then it's all the boys and then the two
older girls who are nine months apart.

Speaker 3 (34:45):
Okay, So that's why.

Speaker 6 (34:46):
We really do have a unique like situation in terms
of everyone kind of coexists because we don't have competition.

Speaker 3 (34:53):
Or like jealousy. No one's in the same sport.

Speaker 6 (34:56):
Our oldest and our baby dance together at the same
dance studio. Like, we have a lot of different like connections,
but no one's like you know what I mean close.

Speaker 3 (35:06):
Everybody's baby sister, and Chloe is and she runs everyone.
She runs the world. Chloe the baby runs the world.

Speaker 2 (35:12):
Do you guys have your own family chats and then
one together, Like.

Speaker 6 (35:16):
So we have our daughters and us, and then we
have one with the boys, and then we have one
with their husbands, and then we have one with my husband.

Speaker 3 (35:23):
We have one with her husband.

Speaker 5 (35:25):
That's when you're cheering each other apart to your husband,
the other husband. Get your wife under control, I'm going
to kill I'm gonna kick her butt.

Speaker 6 (35:31):
No, no, no, they're just usually silent sed memes. And
then sometimes Natalie and Mark have a group chat. I
have a group I have a conversation. A text her
with her husband.

Speaker 5 (35:39):
Yeah, we have a lot that goes.

Speaker 3 (35:40):
I had to text them the other day.

Speaker 6 (35:42):
I'm like, what what do I need from Costco? Because
he goes to Costco, not her.

Speaker 3 (35:45):
So he sent me.

Speaker 6 (35:46):
I literally he sent me all the screenshots of what
I needed from cost Could you get those bers?

Speaker 2 (35:50):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (35:50):
I did. He's like, oh, you need this, this is good.
Try this. So I was like thanks, and literally we.

Speaker 5 (35:56):
We really see, we really do see the things I needed.
But that's it. There's the Pisces. She's the one that's empathetic.
She's the one that cares. She's going the extra mile
all the times. It is. And by the way, I
watch everything with you guys. You look phenomenal. You're working out,
You guys look great.

Speaker 3 (36:15):
You got your end.

Speaker 5 (36:17):
I know, but it doesn't but you got over it all.
You're all past the baby way. You've all moved on.
It's all good that you're both beautiful, beautiful, beautiful ladies
and you should be really really proud of yourselves.

Speaker 2 (36:28):
You guys come from a families that have a lot
of brothers and sisters too. Is that why you had
so many kids?

Speaker 3 (36:33):
Yeah, blended families. We were our parents have been worse forever.

Speaker 5 (36:40):
Oh my god, that's such a terrible thing nowadays, right
they were divorced, My god, stab yourselves in the eyes.
You should have all this trauma in your lives and
be able to do nothing with it, right because all the.

Speaker 7 (36:52):
Yea, honestly, we're we actually think that we're not giving
enough trauma to our kids because we feel like we're
so resilient because of what we went through.

Speaker 5 (36:58):
Yeah. Yeah, different generational. They're never gonna learn what you've
had the way you guys grow. But it's okay. They're
just like the kind of I call them the alien generation.
Whatever I tell you. Actually, your kids in the generation
that are gonna be workers. Watch it's my kids of
the generation between like twenty seven and thirty nine, excluding
Samantha that kind of lost all the like the little
last zombies all the I don't know what's up with them.

(37:21):
But my big question here is this, how many eye
rolling does your husbands do to you guys on a
daily basis.

Speaker 7 (37:28):
I don't think we get through like a sentence without
them like eye rolling.

Speaker 3 (37:33):
They just think the way we do life.

Speaker 7 (37:34):
They couldn't imagine how how could you get through? Why
would you do it that way? They just they're like, oh,
you guys are You're not reasonable, you're not responsible, you're
not organized, you're not consistent. Wiles, you say you have
toxic positivity, like that, anything is possible.

Speaker 5 (37:53):
Yeah, gee, I noticed again I can read people pretty well.
I get that gift of being a cancer. I don't
have cancer being the cancer sign. They seem a little
more conservative than you.

Speaker 3 (38:05):
Guys.

Speaker 5 (38:07):
You married a cancer, absolute you got a good one.

Speaker 3 (38:12):
The moreanserve.

Speaker 5 (38:14):
He's never going anywhere. Yeah, but he's dependable, responsible and reliable. Correct.

Speaker 3 (38:23):
There you go.

Speaker 5 (38:25):
Yep, And that's how I show love. And I really like.

Speaker 6 (38:28):
They're not buying race cars, you know what I mean
they did. They're buying to fit everyone in sell it.

Speaker 3 (38:34):
Get a race car.

Speaker 5 (38:35):
So you're pices and he's a cancer. Yeah, so you're
both out the sensitive.

Speaker 3 (38:41):
That's a great point. I didn't think of that. I
just think of myself. But okay, yeah, just think of myself.

Speaker 5 (38:47):
But you put yourself first before him anyway, so it
doesn't matter. But he needs a lot of attention to
so just remember that. So do you guys, I.

Speaker 3 (38:54):
Feel like we're having a Yeah, you are over here?

Speaker 2 (38:59):
Has one is his sign?

Speaker 3 (39:02):
She doesn't know what's his birthday.

Speaker 5 (39:04):
She wouldn't know.

Speaker 3 (39:05):
She wasn't twenty seventh.

Speaker 2 (39:06):
He's a pisces. That's why she gets along so well
with him.

Speaker 3 (39:11):
Oh he's a different pisces. He's an American pisces.

Speaker 5 (39:19):
No, but do you see the difference in personality? She
I told you she's the one that's going to go
do for every brain. The other one's going I'm doing
for myself. I'll see you guys.

Speaker 2 (39:27):
She probably doesn't realize it's happening, but being a tourist,
she's going to make it her idea in order for
her to do it.

Speaker 5 (39:33):
I don't know about that. Is that what you do?

Speaker 3 (39:36):
I love this? Will you guys give us a recap
of like what we.

Speaker 5 (39:39):
Are so we can read it all day long. It's
it's it's a it's a cursy. Get a blessing.

Speaker 2 (39:42):
Trust me, we are her fiance. My stepdad didn't believe
us about this, So now he like asked all his clients,
and because he asked them their sign, now he knows
how to talk to them in business because of this.

Speaker 3 (39:54):
What's your science?

Speaker 2 (39:55):
I'm an aries fire And.

Speaker 3 (39:57):
What's your brother's God?

Speaker 5 (40:00):
He's a Gemini black and white all the way, no gray.

Speaker 3 (40:03):
Yeah, and our father all the time.

Speaker 5 (40:05):
Do you know? Just know it internally, don't never read it,
don't read signs, and just know it. Don't even go there.
I'm like the most EmPATH you ever hear. Em path.
Welcome to Cindy Stumble's brain. All right, all day, I
thought we were going to break. I'm Sidney Stumble. And
listen to Tennis Nails on w BZ News Radio and
we'll be right back specially and welcome back to te

(40:37):
Us Nails on WBZ News Radio. And I'm here with
Samantha and I'm Cindy. Why not to keep saying I'm Cindy.
People know if the seven years on you, glad, ladies,
how do people find you, how they reach you, how
they fall you? Let's go bang it up.

Speaker 3 (40:50):
All right, cat not everywhere.

Speaker 6 (40:52):
We have a podcast, we have an Instagram account, We're
on tour Live, we have two books. We do really
the Instagram, things on YouTube. I mean literally just come well,
we're your best.

Speaker 7 (41:01):
Friend everything at uh at kati dot com, oh dot
c A N Kong com par ticket.

Speaker 5 (41:08):
You sure, you guys got that right? You want you
want to just try it one more second? You sure
you got it right? You got it? Ready?

Speaker 3 (41:13):
Got it? We got it thing our cat at c.

Speaker 5 (41:14):
A T A N D n A t Okay, got it. Ladies,
thank you for coming into the studio. I appreciate it.
Have a good one. I will talk to you offline
and everybody have a great, safe weekend. This is Cindy
Stumpo Samantha Stumpo to have his nails on WBZ and we
will see you next weekend.
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