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  • Hey, it's Marie Forleo and you are watching MarieTV and/or listening to the Marie Forleo

  • Podcast.

  • So if you've ever had a great idea for a product or a service and you told it to people and

  • nobody got it, or if you ever felt like you were too young, too old, too fat, too something

  • to really make it in your industry, you are going to love today's interview.

  • I have the one and only Katie Sturino on, she is the founder of Megababe, which is an

  • incredible company that creates nontoxic products for things like thigh chafe and boob sweat

  • and butt pimples.

  • I really think you're going to enjoy this episode, so let's get into it.

  • Katie!

  • Oh my goodness.

  • Hi.

  • Thank you so much.

  • I've been wanting to have you on the show for so long as you know, because we talk about

  • it.

  • Same.

  • I know.

  • It's like now we're doing this and we're in different parts of the country.

  • We have so much to talk about today, but I want to dive in with your badass company,

  • Megababe.

  • Where did the idea for a Megababe come from?

  • Tell us the backstory.

  • I have had thigh chafe my entire life and I always thought I was kind of alone in it

  • because I didn't see anyone talking or hear anyone talking about it.

  • I didn't hear of any solutions that really made sense to me or appealed to me.

  • And then when I started my blog right around April, I would start to talk about chafe season.

  • I'm like, it's chafe season girls.

  • What are you going to do?

  • Are you doing short shorts?

  • Are you doing those lace band things?

  • What's your program?

  • Because I would try everything.

  • And then at the end of that summer I was like, why the F am I hyping other people's products

  • that I don't even care about and why is there nothing out there in the world that is really

  • just for a cute girl who's looking to walk to work without getting a thigh burn?

  • Yeah.

  • And how many years ago was that?

  • It will be three in June.

  • Wow.

  • So not that long ago.

  • No.

  • And when I was doing some background research, which we do for every interview, I read somewhere

  • that you shared, the only products on the market were like for guys and sweaty balls,

  • essentially.

  • Deez nuts for her.

  • Sure.

  • Yeah.

  • Yeah, it's true.

  • It feels like anything that was made for sweat or chafe is kind of awful marketing and you

  • don't really want to talk about it.

  • Right.

  • And so when you had the idea for the company, you've never run a company that's a product-based

  • company before, right?

  • So was there any part of your mindset or just the conversation even internally that was

  • like, can I do this?

  • I don't know how to do this.

  • How do I get started?

  • Walk us through what you were thinking.

  • I still feel that way.

  • I'm always looking to people who have done this before and I'm looking to them for the

  • answer.

  • Then I find time and time again, they don't have the answer.

  • So that's a thing that you just keep having to learn no matter...

  • As the stakes get higher, you're just like expecting someone to come in and tell you

  • how to do it.

  • Yeah, I was very concerned that I was starting up a... everyone kept calling it niche.

  • My least favorite term, niche.

  • They were like, it seems like I'm a niche product.

  • I don't think you're going to sell much of it.

  • I don't know how many people have that problem.

  • I've never heard of that problem.

  • These are the common things I heard when I was launching and I really had no idea if

  • they were right.

  • I mean, I thought just like scientifically, mathematically that they were wrong.

  • Yeah.

  • Because I didn't think I had a very unique problem.

  • But yeah, I really had no idea if this was going to be a thing or if it would just die

  • on the vine and we'd have 10,000 units of thigh rescue in my parent's garage, so...

  • So even creating more context, before you started this company, so you had your blog

  • and what was your main career or source of income at that point?

  • What were you doing for a living?

  • What I still do right now, which is I'm a style influencer.

  • So I work with brand partners and that's how I make my income currently.

  • I have a collection with StitchFix that's launching.

  • We're launching our third collection on June 2nd, so that's going to be really exciting

  • and yeah, brand partnerships are how I make my income.

  • I still don't take a salary from Megababe.

  • No one does because we're self-funded and we just... all of us are lucky enough to have

  • a secondary income, but it also means that our time is split.

  • Yes.

  • Yeah.

  • I want to talk about, first of all, I think the branding for Megababe is so genius, I

  • loved it from the moment I saw it.

  • I mean, I loved you from the moment that we met.

  • I love you.

  • I was like, we're meant to be friends.

  • But I want to talk about the writing and the positioning aspect of Megababe products.

  • You have products called Rosy Pits and Bust Dust and Le Tush Butt Mask and Thigh Rescue.

  • What's your process, if you have one, for naming things?

  • Do you do the copywriting or someone on your team?

  • Is it collective?

  • My best friend Kate is my...

  • So it's my sister and my best friend Kate, and we are the founders of Megababe, and neither

  • of them have thigh chafe, by the way.

  • It was just like, I was like, "Guys, I'm going to make a stick," and they were like, "Okay,

  • we're with you."

  • But it's basically Kate and I'll get on the phone and we start to spitball ideas and right

  • now we're naming a product for the fall and we're kind of stuck on it.

  • So that's what we do.

  • We go back and forth and then we have a small group of people, just friends that we'll send

  • names to and we're like A or B and they'll let us know.

  • I mean, that's how it is.

  • Yeah.

  • No, I think naming is so fun and I think that, for me, because I'm into copywriting, I love

  • teaching people about writing and also just the power of using the right words to describe

  • something.

  • You can have a product that's amazing and if it's positioned in one way it feels kind

  • of boring.

  • Yes.

  • And then you do something else and all of a sudden people are like, "That's fun and

  • it's effective and I want that.

  • How do I go get that?"

  • So I think you guys do a brilliant job of that.

  • Thanks a lot.

  • You're welcome.

  • So, okay, three years in, Megababe.

  • I know you also just launched this not too long ago.

  • Hand sanitizer.

  • For those listening on the podcast, I'm holding up one of Katie's newest products, which she,

  • thank you by the way, you were so kind to send me.

  • Josh and I went on a bike ride yesterday.

  • We had to get something from the hardware store and he's like, "I'm taking this Megababe

  • hand sanitizer."

  • I'm like, "Yes you are."

  • Yes, you are.

  • Yeah.

  • When did the idea for this new product come?

  • My sister had a baby about a year ago and she's like a psychotic new mom.

  • Look, I'm holding my microphone like I want my microphone to be on a stand like your microphone.

  • It just keeps inching up like this.

  • You're adorable.

  • It's almost like a little ice cream cone, too.

  • You're like, "Oh, hi."

  • No, I'm like, okay, I'll just keep it here.

  • My sister had a baby about a year ago and she was using Purell and her hands were just

  • cracked, and I was like, "This is awful.

  • Have you looked at yourself recently?"

  • We need to make something better.

  • And then we found through the research when we started developing it that most inexpensive

  • hand sanitizer is full of fillers and chemicals and all the things.

  • So I was like, we can do better.

  • We can have a better hand sanitizer experience.

  • I'm a big hand sanitizer fan.

  • I always carry a little bottle in my bag.

  • And so we went with plant-based alcohol.

  • We took out all the fillers and we put in oil that made sure that your hands won't crack.

  • And isn't that interesting how far back...

  • We launched in January.

  • Yeah.

  • Oh my goodness.

  • And we launched in January and then all hell broke loose.

  • Yeah.

  • And has it been selling out?

  • Have you been able to keep it in stock?

  • Yes, not easily.

  • My sister basically is like a bulldog and she is taking on everyone from big hand sanitizer

  • companies that need components to every small brand who's trying to capitalize on what's

  • going on by launching a hand sanitizer now.

  • So we have been fighting for raw ingredients.

  • Fighting for bottles, caps, pumps, everything.

  • And we have been able to stay in stock.

  • We were out of stock for two weeks.

  • Wow.

  • And now we've been back in stock and we should have enough inventory to...

  • I think other people will start launching hand sanitizer soon, but we're selling it.

  • In Target it sells out like anytime it goes live, it sells out right away.

  • Ulta, it's still in stock on Ulta, which is good.

  • But yeah, it's been tough.

  • And it's also been really interesting because it's kind of, the whole world is derailed

  • right now, but it's derailed our...

  • We were laser focused heading into... this is our third summer, chafe, this is our thing.

  • We're going to have a breakout summer, we're going to spend some money on marketing for

  • the first time, and then it just completely derailed.

  • And now we've been really grateful for the hand sanitizer.

  • Incredible.

  • Yeah.

  • So for anyone listening right now, and I want to get to size inclusivity and the amazing

  • stuff that you do in a little bit, but I want to stay in the business and the product-based

  • business for just a second.

  • If anyone's listening or watching right now and they're like, I have an idea for a product,

  • what do you wish that you knew three years back when you first started Megababe?

  • Is there anything that you would tell someone who's just at the beginning of their journey?

  • This is going to sound negative, but it's not meant to be negative.

  • It's just reality.

  • It's just that every step of the way I expect someone to save us.

  • Meaning, I thought, you know what?

  • It's like we got to keep pushing so hard on D to C as soon as we into a big retailer,

  • which we did like a couple months after we launched, we were in every single Ulta across

  • the country and I thought this is it.

  • This is where we take off.

  • But getting into Ulta just added a whole new set of production problems and new marketing

  • costs and now you've got to acquire those customers.

  • And then we got into Target and I was like, if we could just get into Target and Ulta...

  • That's, I think, a mentality that I've had to really work on getting away from, is like

  • that something will come to make it easier and it's not.

  • It's never easier.

  • It's always harder.

  • It's that arrival fallacy.

  • Yes.

  • I feel like we have that in business and we also have that in our lives.

  • I mean, there's been so many times, we human beings do this, I'll raise my hand to that

  • because it's how we're built.

  • It's like, oh, when I finally get that VP of Business Operations, then the business

  • is really going to take off and run.

  • When I get that next XYZ person, or even personally, right?

  • When I have X amount of money in the bank or we have this house or whatever the thing

  • is, it is almost like a fantasy that things are going to magically change.

  • And we're like, "Nope, that's not how it works."

  • So I love that.

  • Interesting.

  • I don't think it's negative at all.

  • I think it's actually realistic.

  • It's so interesting that you say this.

  • I've never connected this before, but it's kind of the way I feel about my body, which

  • is like...

  • I look at women all the time and I'm like, your life doesn't start when you lose weight.

  • That's not how things work.

  • And then I have never thought to apply that to my professional career.

  • It's interesting.

  • Yeah, it is.

  • Sorry to be a...

  • No.

  • Just a listener on your show right now.

  • No, I think this is awesome.

  • And at some point we should talk about create before you consume, because that was super

  • fun when we first met.

  • Okay.

  • But I want to actually talk about your blog 12ish Style.

  • What does that name mean and why did you start the blog, and how long ago was that?

  • I started the blog in 2014 and I called it the 12ish Style because my weight's always

  • fluctuated and I was kind of going between a 12 and a 14, and I felt like there was just

  • this whole group of women that didn't feel plus size.

  • They didn't identify with the plus size community and the plus size community didn't identify

  • with them.

  • And I still feel that way in some sense of the word, even though I use the word plus

  • size all the time.

  • Because a size... it's very complicated in there.

  • There's a whole, not hierarchy, but everything is separated into small fat and infini-fat

  • and all these different categories of fat that you can be.

  • Fat being used in an acceptant, positive way.

  • And I still don't feel like I belong in any of the categories, I guess.

  • Anyway, where was I going?

  • Oh, 12ish.

  • Yeah.

  • So I wanted to address women who felt like the fashion world didn't really care about

  • them, and the plus size world didn't really care about them.

  • It was more of like a size purgatory.

  • You're not...

  • Like the French designer who stops at a size 10 doesn't care about you.

  • And the at the time, the plus size designers were starting at like a size 16, 18 so they

  • didn't care about you either.

  • So the 12, 14 was really lost.

  • And I am now a size 18, I gained 62 pounds during my divorce, which happened after I

  • started the blog.

  • And so I've had to deal with a whole new body and a whole new set of shopping issues and

  • everything that goes around it.

  • So it's been really interesting.

  • So the blog was really your way to say, “Hey, I'm a whole bit of this market that is being

  • completely underserved.

  • No one's talking to us.”

  • And it was like you were filling in this space where you just like, who is taking care of

  • us right now?

  • Nobody.

  • No one, yeah.

  • I'm going to fill that.

  • Yes.

  • That's amazing.

  • So you were, I love this, you were quoted in a Glamor article called Everyone Is Terrified

  • of Getting 'Quarantine Fat' and Just Enough Already.

  • I saw you talking about this on your Instagram because I love following you on Instagram.

  • This is such a, I'm just going to...

  • It's a dumb thing.

  • What the hell is quarantine fat?

  • This is ridiculous.

  • I don't know.

  • It's just... it was very interesting to me that in the middle of a global pandemic that

  • suddenly everyone was like, "Oh, bikini season, beach body.

  • I need a redo on my beach body prep."

  • And I was like, this is the thing you're going to grab onto?

  • Right.

  • I mean there's a lot of...

  • I love jokes, I love it.

  • I have a great sense of humor, but I just felt like, couldn't we have...

  • You know what?

  • It just showed me how deep the diet culture runs in our society and how scared people

  • are of fat.

  • They're so scared to be in that category, and we talk about it a lot also, it's just

  • like the worst thing you can do or be called is fat, and how crazy that is.

  • Especially during a global pandemic.

  • Mmhmm.

  • One of the other things I admire you so much for that you do so well is your #SuperSizetheLook

  • and #MakeMySize.

  • Can you tell us about both of these?

  • Yeah.

  • Supersize the look is something that I came up with because as I was new to being a fashion

  • blogger and I didn't realize, and if any of you out there are deciding to become... that

  • you want to share your style with the world, you realize quickly it's a lot of production

  • to put out content every single day.

  • Especially with the outfits, the clothes, calling things in.

  • And if you're not at the point of calling things in then you're buying or you're returning

  • and it's a lot of work.

  • So basically Super Size the Look came out of me finding inspiration in celebrity looks

  • and then realizing that when I would talk and be like, "Hey, I saw this on Jessica Alba,"

  • people would be like, "Oh, I love her style.

  • I can never wear that."

  • And so I think I just want to show people who it goes beyond like, I can't wear someone

  • else's style but like, I can't wear shorts, I can't wear this.

  • I can't wear that.

  • We have all these rules for ourselves.

  • And I just wanted to show people that they could achieve the kind of look that inspires

  • them and they don't need to hide in black jersey or...

  • I mean, I can see it from 10 miles away when someone is uncomfortable with their body because

  • they are in head to toe black, which is different than New York black.

  • It's like head to toe black, it's stretchy and they're hiding.

  • And hashtag Make My Size.

  • You have actually shifted the way that people make their clothing.

  • Am I right?

  • Yes, I think so.

  • Which is crazy.

  • I think so.

  • I love it, because when I'm on your Instagram and I see you in a dressing room, and just

  • with your classic Katie Sturino face, like what?

  • And it's like you got your boobs squished or you know what I mean?

  • So you were like, "This is just not working," and I'm like, I love you so much.

  • And I feel like there's a way in which you do it, which is like, “hey brand whatever,

  • I would really love to shop at your store, but guess what?

  • I can't because of X, Y and Z.”

  • And so what's that been like for you?

  • Have brands reached back out and actually started a dialogue?

  • So that's really scary.

  • It was really scary to do because you don't call out brands.

  • Brands pay your rent.

  • Brands are very...

  • And also you don't want to be the girl on the internet who's like, no, no, no, no, no.

  • No one wants to be that girl and no one wants to work with that girl.

  • So that's why I thought it was really important, and I always whenever I do a Make My Size,

  • I want to let the designers see on my physical body how far away their largest size is from

  • fitting me because all the time, all the time designers will reach out and be like, "We'd

  • love to send you something."

  • Go to the site.

  • It stops at a large and extra large, and may think that they see me on the internet and

  • that they think that their largest size, well, why wouldn't it fit you?

  • They don't have perspective on it.

  • So I just need to visually show them how far they are away from making my size.

  • But it's been so cool because brands like Veronica Beard, DVF, they've seen it and they

  • react and they do something about it.

  • And that's what's really crazy.

  • I think it's so exciting.

  • It just goes to show the power of using your voice.

  • And I do think you do it very deftly.

  • I feel like whenever I've read your captions, it's not necessarily like, “I can't stand

  • you.”

  • It's like, hey, it's this version of, “look, I am a beautiful, powerful woman.

  • I'm in your store and I would love to achieve this particular look that you're so great

  • at putting out, but we need to have more bandwidth here in all the ways.”

  • I admire you so much and I think you're one of the funniest people ever.

  • And I just think it's just so important for we as human beings to see ourselves, all of

  • ourselves represented and to remove any kind of shame away from our real bodies or aging

  • or our passions.

  • Oh, aging.

  • I mean the whole range of who we really are.

  • So I just think you're brilliant.

  • For anyone listening who might not be familiar with the body positive movement or who feels

  • like, even right now as they're listening to us, they love this, they're inspired by

  • it, but there is still that voice in their mind that says, you know what, I'm not going

  • to be happy and I'm not going to feel good unless I radically lose weight, change the

  • shape of my body, whatever.

  • What can we do to start being kinder to ourselves?

  • What's the first step that we can take?

  • So this is interesting because I think some people hear my message and they think, okay,

  • I don't know what are you condoning, gaining weight and all this stuff?

  • That's not what I'm condoning.

  • I'm saying if you're in a body like me, I'm a size 18, 20 right now, will I be an 18,

  • 20 forever?

  • I don't know.

  • But what I've been able to do is disconnect the shame and the feeling of needing to like,

  • oh well, when I lose that weight, when I lose the weight, then I'll do that, then I'll do

  • that.

  • I've disconnected that.

  • So weight loss has become more of like a health thing if I'm interested in that right now

  • and I check in with myself about that a lot.

  • The first thing, because the thing is the reason my blog switched from being a clothing

  • blog to really a place of body acceptance at all sizes, because thin women are the hardest

  • on themselves.

  • If you're a big girl, I've always been a big girl, you know you're a big girl and the expectation

  • is you're never going to be a zero and the idea is to stop looking at the zero as like

  • someone who has it all figured out.

  • But women are so hard on their bodies.

  • It's a real...

  • I don't know why we're doing it and I don't know who it serves.

  • But getting to my tip.

  • My big tip is that you have to notice yourself and your self talk when you are looking in

  • the mirror, when you are trying something on, when you are getting dressed in the morning

  • you need to say...

  • And you're grabbing your stomach and you're goingugh,” that's how people talk to

  • themselves in the mirror.

  • You need to just notice it and try to stop it.

  • Just notice it is the first step, and be like, oh, I did just say something mean.

  • Oh I did just say something mean.

  • And then you kind of start to like...

  • It's not magic.

  • You just start to notice the behavior and then you can start to change the behavior.

  • Have you seen for yourself any shifting over time that isn't necessarily due to perhaps

  • self-awareness, but maybe just experience and age.

  • So I'll call myself out for this.

  • When you said sometimes thin women can be the most brutal on themselves, I have been

  • so hard on myself about my body, since I was little.

  • I don't know if it was when I little little, it was probably like...

  • I mean, I just started feeling different when I was starting to get pubic hair, and because

  • I'm Italian, you know I wrote in the chat, people are like, "Oh my God, Marie, your hair,"

  • I'm like, "Oh yeah?

  • I got hair everywhere."

  • And I was the little girl with the unibrow and the hairy arms...

  • Mustache.

  • ...the hairy legs.

  • Absolutely.

  • Major mustache.

  • Yeah.

  • I just felt so much shame about who I was.

  • And then I remember just from the twenties and the thirties and just being so hard on

  • myself and my body.

  • And the one thing that I so appreciate about getting older is giving so many less fucks

  • and loving myself so much more and noticing as I walked by the mirror how grateful I am

  • that my body works, and that I can dance and that I can move.

  • And when I see things that I used to be so critical on, I just remember how much fricking

  • time I wasted.

  • I remember wasting so much time trying to perfect my legs.

  • Does that make any kind of sense?

  • Yeah.

  • Oh gosh.

  • But do you think that has to do also with the fact that once you go through an experience

  • or two where, it goes back to what we were talking about earlier, where you think life

  • will change when, what did you call it?

  • The arrival fallacy.

  • It's something...

  • Yes.

  • Yes, arrival...

  • Yes.

  • Yes.

  • Because I think that starts with, at least for a lot of girls in their twenties it starts

  • with getting married.

  • You think that it's all about the... you're just prepping to get married.

  • I think this happens with women in their twenties.

  • It happens absolutely for...

  • I didn't have that particular arrival fallacy, before we even started recording, like, Marie

  • is that an engagement ring on your finger?

  • I'm like, yeah, I've been engaged forever.

  • Josh and I have been together for 17 years.

  • Last night we were joking, making dinner, and he's like, "Oh, I can't believe we still

  • like each other over seven years."

  • He keeps making these jokes that we haven't been together as long as we are.

  • But you're right though, I think society has just fed all of us so many narratives about

  • what it means to be successful, powerful, beautiful women.

  • And rarely do we stop to challenge that narrative and say, wait a minute, where did that come

  • from?

  • Who fed us this and why are we trying to live up to these ridiculous expectations that have

  • no root in my own heart or my own soul or my own wildest dreams of who I want to be?

  • All exterior.

  • Yeah.

  • All exterior.

  • I'm with you.

  • And I guess one of my goals is to get... is to wake women up before they've wasted so

  • much time.

  • Yes.

  • Yes!

  • Oh my goodness, yes.

  • I mean, I'm thinking about just the times I've spent going down the internet rabbit

  • hole for this fix or that fix or whatever.

  • And even as a fitness person, I spent a good part of my career teaching fitness, here's

  • the good thing for me about that.

  • I feel like society in general is coming around to, moving your body is about feeling strong

  • and about mental health and keeping yourself really clear and creative and energized.

  • And for me, that's what it's about now.

  • And I know...

  • What's some of your favorite fitness classes?

  • How have you been doing in quarantine as it relates to just even movement?

  • Yeah.

  • So we left New York City on March 4th because I'm just an anxious mess of a person.

  • I don't do well, no one does well in a global pandemic...

  • I left.

  • Okay.

  • I did it.

  • Right?

  • Yeah.

  • And we're in Maine and so I go for walks every day and then I do a Megan Roup class.

  • Have you ever worked out with her?

  • Megan Roup?

  • Yeah, she's in my DMs right now.

  • I have so many friends that love her.

  • She's great.

  • And I hear she's brilliant.

  • She kicks your butt.

  • And then Marnie Alton, do you know her?

  • No.

  • She's new to me.

  • She just launched her online platform.

  • But what I like about her is that I am always exhausted when I'm done, but she works me

  • out in a way that I don't even know how hard I'm working and she stretches me.

  • Yes.

  • And so I go between those two platforms.

  • And you want to know something?

  • Is that I pay for both of those platforms, and I'm a notoriously cheap person.

  • And I feel like that's a testament to how much I really benefit and get out of those

  • workouts.

  • Yeah, I feel like I've discovered so many new ways to move and also so much more efficiency,

  • to be honest.

  • I love going to the gym, when we all could, but now that my home workouts, it's like I'm

  • here in LA, we go for walks with the dog, we do bike rides, which have been amazing.

  • And then I'm always finding all these new workouts online and I'm like, "This is so

  • fun."

  • So it's been good.

  • Who do you work with?

  • Marie Forleo: Katrina Scott, the Tone It Up girls.

  • I'm friends with those girls.

  • I love them because Katrina is a dear friend, and I like it because they actually laugh

  • through the workout and they don't take themselves too seriously and they're really loving towards

  • each other.

  • And I like that it's not like, you have to do this so perfectly.

  • It's like, why don't we take a break for a sec?

  • It's just, it feels more fun and gentle and like friends working out.

  • And then I've been sampling different things on YouTube just to switch it up.

  • Like I'll put in “15 minute workout, no weightsor “20 minute workout with little

  • dumbbellsjust to see what comes up on the YouTube roulette machine, and then I try

  • something and I'm like, "Okay, that was fun."

  • I've also been really enjoying Yoga With Adrienne.

  • I think...

  • I don't know this.

  • You should check her out.

  • Okay.

  • She is...

  • I really like her style.

  • There is something really approachable and gentle and welcoming and just there's like

  • an ease to it with her that I really appreciate.

  • Not too much woo-woo.

  • Not that I don't like woo-woo, but it's just great.

  • It's like, hey, let's stretch our bodies, move, let's breathe and then peace out, bye.

  • I think we're exiting the 2012 to 2020 trend or 2019 trend maybe of the robotic workout.

  • Yes.

  • Maybe?

  • 100%.

  • 100%.

  • And I've even gotten into...

  • So I've been doing Self-Care Saturdays on Instagram Live and I've dusted off all of

  • my teaching abilities.

  • I think I've done two workouts so far where I just designed, it's just simple body weight

  • with just a yoga mat and went back to my old school days of taking people through a 15

  • to 20 minute workout and that's been actually super fun, too.

  • Oh, I got to join next time.

  • Yeah.

  • They're on IGTV so I'll put it up.

  • Okay, so you and I could talk forevs.

  • It's true.

  • For anyone listening who wants to experience more Katie Sturino...

  • Oh, we'll tell one more quick story.

  • Okay.

  • You and I met at a Create and Cultivate event, and then we had so much fun having coffee

  • and getting together, and I want to just really appreciate you because we had a talk about

  • loads of things and I was sharing with you an idea from Everything Is Figureoutable called

  • create before you consume.

  • And I just want to thank you because I think I overlooked the power of that idea or just

  • thought it was such common knowledge, and after working with you on it and just playing

  • together on text and DM, I really saw it as this whole other thing that it can become.

  • You've been such a champion for that idea for me.

  • Thank you.

  • But it really...

  • I have to tell you that I have not been able to, since we...

  • I have not been able to get back to it, I don't know, in that eight months, nine months,

  • like a really long time, consistently.

  • The way that we did that full detox, we did the whole challenge and then I was in it and

  • then I lost it.

  • But I have never, I have not felt that open in years.

  • It's reminding me of that I need to do it again.

  • Yeah.

  • Well, you know what?

  • Okay, so once we will actually set it for ourselves, but I think we can do, I think

  • what might be fun, maybe over the summer...

  • My team's probably going to be like, Marie, what are you promising?

  • But I think this could be cool.

  • I think if we did like a community-wide create before you consume challenge with a bunch

  • of us, I think it could be super, super fun and get people really reset, especially after

  • all of the stuff that we've all been through.

  • We need to punch out a little.

  • Yeah.

  • Yeah, I agree.

  • So if people want more Katie Sturino, where can they find you and where can they find

  • Megababe products?

  • They can find me @katiesturino on Instagram, and Megababe is sold on our website, megababebeauty.com.

  • We're also available at Target, Ulta and Goop.

  • Awesome.

  • Anything you want to say to the folks?

  • Anyone who's inspired by who you are, what you do or what you create?

  • My God.

  • Oh, it's such a big opportunity.

  • I feel like I'm going to blow it.

  • Adopt, don't shop.

  • I don't...

  • That's it.

  • Yeah.

  • That's good.

  • Adopt, don't shop is good, mama, well.

  • Right.

  • I mean, if people follow you and your brand, they will continue to be inspired like I have

  • been.

  • Thank you so much for making time for us today.

  • You're just fantastic.

  • Thank you.

  • Wasn't that awesome?

  • I had so much fun.

  • Now, Katie and I would love to hear from you.

  • So we talked about a lot of different things and I'm curious, what's the biggest insight

  • that you're taking away?

  • And most important, how can you put that insight into action starting right now?

  • I want you to go leave a comment over at the magical land of marieforleo.com because that's

  • where all the great conversations happen.

  • And when you're there, be sure to subscribe to our email list and become an MF Insider.

  • You will get instant access to an audio I created called How To Get Anything You Want.

  • It's really, really good.

  • So thank you so much for watching and as I always say, stay on your game and keep going

  • for your dreams because the world really does need that very special gift that only you

  • have.

  • Thank you so much for watching and I'll catch you next time on MarieTV.

  • Are you tired of talking into an empty void?

  • Are you ready for more sales, more clients, and more raving fans?

  • Take our free seven-day writing class at thecopycure.com.

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