logo
Here's Why Nara Smith, A 23-Year-Old Mother Of 3, Is Pushing Back On The "Tradwife" Label

Here's Why Nara Smith, A 23-Year-Old Mother Of 3, Is Pushing Back On The "Tradwife" Label

Yahoo12-07-2025
You know Nara Smith, the TikTok star and influencer who posts fashionable DIY cooking videos and lifestyle content.
Related:
Often, she creates content alongside her husband, Lucky Blue Smith, mentioning their children with their pretty unique names.
Their children's names are Rumble Honey, Slim Easy, and Whimsy Lou, and they're expecting a fourth child.
If you've seen her content and thought she simply fell under the category of a traditional wife, aka a "tradwife," you'd actually be very wrong. Nara is officially pushing back on that label.
On a July 10 episode of On Purpose with Jay Shetty, Nara discussed her struggles with her "online presence" and people's projections as a content creator. "When people hear that I have three kids at 23, and I had my first a few weeks after I turned 19, they always freak out," she said. "They're projecting how they want their life to be onto me. That's one thing I struggled with in the beginning, doing social media."
@JayShettyPodcast / Via youtube.com
Related:
"People love projecting things onto me and kind of how I live my life just because I cook for my husband, because it's my love language and I love cooking," she said.
@naraazizasmith / Via tiktok.com
"They project onto it that I'm in the kitchen and trapped and I'm just at home and [my husband] the breadwinner and all of these things," Nara added, "and I'm like, no, I work."
Related:
In addition to being an influencer, wife, and mother, Nara has had a modeling career since she was 14 years old. She's not just a traditional stay-at-home mother. "I work. I'm very busy. I travel almost every week. I have kids that I raise," she said. "I love being in the kitchen because it's a passion of mine, not because I have to. And sometimes I feel like this is where social media gets tricky for me personally."
"It doesn't matter how much I voice those things and try to make people understand that I am actually a full-time working mom that they just don't wanna get it," Nara continued. "They use me as this poster child of this like very traditional wife and I'm not. There's nothing truly traditional about us as a couple, apart from maybe that we chose to have kids young and get married young. But apart from that, we split towards 50/50."
In the interview, Nara explained that even her husband wouldn't fall under the role of a traditional husband. "There's things that Lucky does that I guess, traditional men wouldn't do. Like do the dishes or get the kids dressed or do their hair, or whatever it may be that people don't associate with a traditional man," she said. "And there's things that I do like having a full-time career and having Lucky be home while I travel for two weeks. People see that side of my life, and I voice that side of my life but they still don't want to accept it."
Related:
Nara discussed how people on the internet can be negative, and it's even led to her crying to Lucky about it. "Nowadays, society they love drama. They love negativity. They feed off of fights and opinions and online situations that cause conflict," she said. "I think that's what people love projecting onto me. They love that I'm so controversial, and they can kind of say whatever. And in the beginning, it really used to bother me. I used to cry at home and tell Lucky, like, 'I don't understand why they're saying all these things.'"
When Nara challenged the negative comments and tried to defend herself, she explained that she would face more pushback. "Then all the comments would be like, 'She's lying, she's gaslighting us,'" she explained, "and I'm like, I literally cannot win. And I think that's what I've learned. People don't want to hear the truth. They don't care for the truth. They care about what they wanna hear and what serves them. So the less I say, kind of the better."
"It preserves my energy," she concluded. "There's no point in me saying something that someone doesn't even wanna hear."
Watch the full interview where Nara discusses balancing her career, building healthy boundaries, strengthening her relationship, and more:
Also in Celebrity:
Also in Celebrity:
Also in Celebrity:
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

True Detective: Nicolas Cage Eyes Lead Role in Season 5
True Detective: Nicolas Cage Eyes Lead Role in Season 5

Yahoo

time6 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

True Detective: Nicolas Cage Eyes Lead Role in Season 5

True Detective is looking to book another Oscar winner. Nicolas Cage is in talks to star in the upcoming Season 5 of HBO's crime anthology, Deadline reports. Season 5 will reportedly be set in the Jamaica Bay area of New York, with Cage potentially playing the lead role of New York detective Henry Logan. More from TVLine NCIS Casts Nancy Travis as [Spoiler]'s Sister in Season 23 (Exclusive) Casting News: Dafne Keen Joins Percy Jackson Season 3, The Comeback Adds 4 and More Casting News: Dominic West and Sienna Miller's HBO Thriller, Mike Epps' CBS Sitcom and More Issa López, who wrote and directed Season 4, aka True Detective: Night Country, returns as showrunner in Season 5, which is expected to start shooting next year for a planned 2027 premiere. True Detective debuted on HBO in 2014, with each season telling a new story with a new cast. Matthew McConaughey and Woody Harrelson starred in Season 1, with Colin Farrell and Rachel McAdams taking over in Season 2 and Mahershala Ali and Stephen Dorff in Season 3. Jodie Foster headlined Season 4's Night Country, winning an Emmy for best lead actress in a limited series. (Nic Pizzolatto created the series and oversaw the first three seasons, but stepped back in Season 4, with López taking over.) Cage is best known for his film work, including roles in acclaimed films like Moonstruck and Leaving Las Vegas (which won him an Oscar for Best Actor) and action blockbusters like Con Air and National Treasure. He's never been a series regular on a TV series before, but he is slated to reprise his Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse role in the live-action series Spider-Noir, due to premiere next year on MGM+. Are you liking the idea of Cage on ? And who would you dream-cast as his partner? Tell us in the comments! Best of TVLine Stars Who Almost Played Other TV Roles — on Grey's Anatomy, NCIS, Lost, Gilmore Girls, Friends and Other Shows TV Stars Almost Cast in Other Roles Fall TV Preview: Who's In? Who's Out? Your Guide to Every Casting Move! Play Farm Merge Valley

They're rich, they travel, and they love to complain
They're rich, they travel, and they love to complain

Boston Globe

time7 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

They're rich, they travel, and they love to complain

About six months ago, Ferney, 24, started posting videos of her calls with clients. In short order, she gained more than 400,000 followers on both TikTok and Instagram. Her fans enjoy listening in as people who have almost everything complain about almost anything. The limes in question gave the client 'a little bit of a tingle,' Ferney explained by phone from Miami, where she makes her home. As she related it, the client's complaint went like this: 'I'm allergic to certain limes from certain countries, because of the pollination. I don't have signs, like my face doesn't swell up, but I know intuitively my body is rejecting it.' Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Ferney, who may be the living embodiment of the axiom that the customer is always right, contacted the resort's provisioning department to investigate its citrus sourcing. Then she saw to it that her client was provided with a steady drip of reposado tequila. Advertisement 'We work with many billionaires and hundred-millionaires,' Ferney said, referring to her employer, Top Tier Travel. 'The main word I use is 'particular.' Rich people like very particular things.' Just how particular? There was the client who authorized $100,000 charged to his credit card for his daughter's vacation, provided she agree not to contact him. Another client demanded a last-minute doctor's consult before boarding a private jet, fearful that her new breast implants might rupture. Advertisement And then there was the woman who insisted on being extracted from a charter boat when rough seas prevented her from reaching a Greek party island. She complained that the waves were not even that high, adding that the captain was no longer speaking to her. Increasingly agitated, the client grasped at ways for Ferney to rescue her from her nautical prison. 'A helicopter would be great, a submarine would be great,' she said. She emphasized that she had not come all this way only to find herself stuck at sea when she should have been dancing till dawn on Mykonos. 'I'm not 90 years old,' she said. Ferney said she recorded her clients only with their permission. Like certain reality show stars, they do not mind going public with their over-the-top behavior. Some videos not recorded in the moment are reenacted afterward, she added. 'The calls I post are less than 10% of what we get,' she said. A majority remain private, because of confidentiality agreements. 'I am very highly NDA'd,' she said. Raised in Dundas, Ontario, population 20,000, Ferney grew up in a middle-class family that was as incredulous as her online fans were about the stories she posted. After attending the University of Western Ontario, she lit out for Miami, where she met Troy Arnold, the founder of Top Tier Travel. She joined the company as a fixer for those who pay $2,500 to $8,500 a month for above-and-beyond services. Advertisement And what are those services? A custom pink Brabus 800 for a 22-year-old's birthday party. Spring water shipped to a Caribbean island for a client annoyed that shampooing with the local tap water gave her an itchy scalp. A $75,000 Shadow Birkin from Hermes overnighted to Capri, Italy. One client requested — no, insisted on — a rental house in Aspen, Colorado, with at least six bedrooms and en suite baths, a gym, a sauna and a chef conversant with her elevated form of carnivorous eating. 'You know my diet — grass-fed, grass-finished,' the client said. 'I'm very numb to a lot of requests,' Ferney said. Her therapeutic neutrality in the face of outlandish behavior may be rooted in the fact that she takes many of her calls poolside. No matter how peculiar the demand or how heated the client, she is there to soothe and oblige. 'To be honest, the clients in the multimillionaire category are more demanding than the billionaires,' she said. 'I don't know why.' Money is seldom an object in Ferney's line of work — though she has noticed that plutocrats enjoy a bargain. 'You'd be surprised at how excited our billionaire clients are when we get them a $1,000 discount,' she said. And if her customers cannot have what they want? 'We usually find it,' she said. 'These are people that never hear no. It's not a word they can process.' This article originally appeared in .

Netflix's ‘Splinter Cell: Deathwatch' Brings Sam Fisher Out of Retirement
Netflix's ‘Splinter Cell: Deathwatch' Brings Sam Fisher Out of Retirement

Gizmodo

time7 minutes ago

  • Gizmodo

Netflix's ‘Splinter Cell: Deathwatch' Brings Sam Fisher Out of Retirement

Fans of stealth video games likely have a soft spot in their hearts for Splinter Cell. Ubisoft's sub-series of stealth-action games endorsed by Tom Clancy has been MIA for over a decade, even with a remake of the original game on the horizon. After doing guest roles in other Clancy games and in Netflix's Far Cry anime, series lead Sam Fisher is back in all his shadowy glory in Splinter Cell: Deathwatch. Developed by John Wick alum Derek Kolstad, the animated series sees Fisher—voiced by Liev Schreiber rather than longtime game actor Michael Ironside—as a field commander for the covert Fourth Echelon unit. Like in the games, Sam is assigned to stop a threat to global security: in this case, the mission is 'personal.' Splinter Cell: Deathwatch deploys on Netflix October 14. Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what's next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store