A misdiagnosed fin stall killed a 130 back in the 1980's; first half of the decade, as I recall. There was a cluster eff on the flight deck, someone said "fin stall" (though it apparently wasn't) and if memory serves, they mushed into the drop zone.
I have a little stick time in a 130, though I wasn't a rated USAF pilot; it handles a lot like a 182, actually. it has a very benign approach to stall (power way back, of course) - very pronounced aerodynamic buffet to warn you.
Lightly loaded, with a lot of power in, I'm not sure you'd get a real stall - more like a weird helicopter effect? I wouldn't want to find out in person. The airplane's gross weight range is enormous; if I recall our "E" models typically weighed about 78-80K pounds, and MGTOW was up around 175K in war time. We did muck about at less 120K pounds routinely, and I remember coming down final at less than 100 knots on occasion.
The airplane looks bigger than it is - look at one head-on, vs from the profile view; and again, lightly loaded, it has stupendous performance - climb and acceleration.
With a lot of power in, maybe not too heavy, I could see it departing violently. .