Ananda Lewis, the dialogue program and MTV, died in the 1990s, after a long battle with breast cancer.
Her sister Lakshmi announced the news of the 52 -year -old death in a Facebook post earlier today.
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She said: “She is free and in his heavenly arms. O Lord, lie her soul.”
In 2020, Ananda revealed that she had been diagnosed with cancer in the third stage.
She said she did not get normal X -ray breasts due to the fear of radiation.
In 2024, the late TV hostess revealed that her cancer had reached the fourth stage after she opposed medical advice and refused to remove dual breasts.
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While she said her plan was to remove “excessive toxins” from her body, but later admitted that she had made a mistake.
CNN told: “My plan was initially out of excessive toxins in my body.
“I felt my body is smart, and I know it was true. Our bodies are made brilliantly.
“I decided to stay, throw and try to work outside my body in a different way … I hope to go back. It is important for me to admit where I made a mistake in this.”
Ananda rose to fame in the late 1990s when she fell as one of MTV's VJ, as she hosted the likes of Total Request Live and Hot Zone.
In 1999, the New York Times described it as “a hip -hop -hop girl.”
MTV left in 2001 to host her dialog program, The Ananda Lewis Show.
TV star was born in Los Angeles in 1973. She divorced her parents when she was two years old, an experiment that said her relationship with her mother as adults.
After the divorce, she and her sister moved with their ancestors, as Ananda continued to attend a high school of art.
After graduating from the University of Howard in 1995, she obtained her first job as a teenage bt hostess to a teenager in which she had an interview with the first lady Hillary Clinton.
Ananda has grown to be one of the most popular hosts in MTV – interviews with some of the largest Hollywood stars.
“In the past, our talent was sometimes just beautiful people who could read braid cards,” Bob Kostebit, the first Vice President of MTV for production of the New York Times.
“But when we brought Ananda to MTV, we decided that we would make a lot of direct TV, and I was interested first and above all its ability to do direct TV.”

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