Connect with us

iWorld

MY FM launches ‘Healthwala Show with celebrity fitness trainer Yasmin Karachiwala’

Published

on

Mumbai: MY FM, the radio arm of DB Corp Ltd. is bracing up its existing line-up of content with the launch of “Healthwala show with Yasmin Karachiwala”. This is a one-of-a-kind show featuring celebrity fitness trainer Yasmin Karachiwala that aims to revolutionise the way we approach fitness and well-being. She is all set to share her fitness secrets with the world through this show, the show is on air across the entire MY FM network.

Karachiwala is no stranger to the fitness world, having sculpted the sought-after and enviable figures of bollywood celebrities. With her expertise and profound experience, she has been instrumental in shaping the bodies of Bollywood celebrities such as Katrina Kaif, Kareena Kapoor, Deepika Padukone, Alia Bhatt, Nora Fatehi and Vani Kapoor.

Listeners will discover exercises that strengthen muscles, pre-wedding and post-vacation workouts and important techniques to recover from pain.Furthermore, the show delves deeper into the fascinating topics such as alphabet workout, healthy recipes like Ota panettone and detox drinks. Additionally, it also covers stress management, personal hygiene tips pre and post workout sessions.

Advertisement

Speaking about the new show launch, My FM CEO Rahul Namjoshi said, “This is another attempt from our side to provide unique & engaging content for our listeners. Post covid it has become utmost important to keep oneself in great shape both body and mind, this show will help give tips to our listeners to upgrade their wellbeing and I am sure this content will resonate well with our listeners.”

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

iWorld

Leonid Radvinsky, the man who made OnlyFans a $5.5bn empire, dies at 43

The Ukrainian-American entrepreneur transformed a niche subscription site into a $5.5bn cultural force, then kept almost entirely out of sight

Published

on

LONDON: He owned one of the most talked-about platforms on the internet and almost nobody knew his name. Leonid Radvinsky, the billionaire majority owner of OnlyFans, died on Monday after a prolonged battle with cancer. He was 43. The London-based company confirmed his death in a statement, saying he had “passed away peacefully.” His family has requested privacy.

Radvinsky was not OnlyFans’ founder. That distinction belongs to British entrepreneur Tim Stokely, who launched the subscription platform in 2016. But it was Radvinsky who turned it into a money machine. In 2018 he acquired Fenix International Ltd, OnlyFans’ parent company, becoming its director and majority shareholder. What he inherited was a modest content platform. What he left behind was a global phenomenon, valued at roughly $5.5bn including debt, according to a Reuters report in January citing talks with investment firm Architect Capital over a potential majority stake sale.

Born in the Ukrainian port city of Odesa, Radvinsky moved to Chicago as a child and most recently lived in Florida. Long before OnlyFans, he had built businesses in the adult internet sector, including the live cam site MyFreeCams, and founded a venture capital firm focused on technology in 2009. He knew the terrain.

Advertisement

His masterstroke was timing, or rather, recognising what the pandemic would do. When Covid-19 lockdowns drove millions of people indoors and online in 2020, OnlyFans was ready. Creators poured onto the platform. Subscribers followed. The model, which allowed creators to charge users directly for content, much of it adult-oriented, became a template for the broader creator economy. OnlyFans did not merely survive the pandemic; it became one of its defining commercial stories.

Despite presiding over all of this, Radvinsky maintained a near-total public silence. He rarely gave interviews. His illness was never disclosed. OnlyFans said he had supported several philanthropic projects, including donations to the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, open-source initiatives and the West Suburban Humane Society. A Wall Street Journal report noted that he and his wife supported a $23m grant programme for cancer research through a gastrointestinal research foundation in 2024, a detail that now carries a particular weight.

His death lands at an uncomfortable moment for the platform he shaped. OnlyFans faces growing scrutiny from regulators and policymakers on both sides of the Atlantic, even as it continues to redefine how content creators make money online. The sale talks with Architect Capital add another layer of uncertainty. Radvinsky built something vast, then quietly stepped back from view. The question now is who steers it next, and whether anyone can do so with quite the same invisible grip.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Advertisement News18
Advertisement All three Media
Advertisement Whtasapp
Advertisement Year Enders

Indian Television Dot Com Pvt Ltd

Signup for news and special offers!

Copyright © 2026 Indian Television Dot Com PVT LTD