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Ananda Lewis, a former MTV video jockey and talk show host, has died after a lengthy battle with breast cancer. She was 52.

Lewis’ sister, Lakshmi, made the devastating news in a short Facebook post shared Wednesday.

“She’s free, and in His heavenly arms,” she wrote alongside a black-and-white photo of Lewis. “Lord, rest her soul.”


  Former MTV video jockey and talk show host Ananda Lewis has died at 52. Getty Images Former MTV video jockey and talk show host Ananda Lewis has died at 52. Getty Images

Lewis’ passing comes nearly five years after she revealed her Stage 3 breast cancer diagnosis in an Instagram post in October 2020.

“This is tough for me, but if just ONE woman decides to get her mammogram after watching this, what I’m going through will be worth it,” she wrote in the caption of the video while announcing that she was diagnosed two years earlier.

Lewis spoke about her diagnosis and how it progressed to Stage 4 during a CNN appearance in October 2024.


  Lewis’ sister announced the news on Facebook Wednesday. WireImage Lewis’ sister announced the news on Facebook Wednesday. WireImage

“My plan at first was to get out excessive toxins in my body,” Lewis said, revealing she decided against undergoing a double mastectomy. “I felt like my body is intelligent, I know that to be true. Our bodies are brilliantly made.

“I decided to keep my tumor and try to work it out of my body a different way. I wish I could go back,” she added. “It’s important for me to admit where I went wrong with this.”

She added that “prevention is the real cure” in an issue of Essence published earlier this year.


  Lewis said she was diagnosed with Stage 3 breast cancer in an Instagram video in October 2020. WireImage Lewis said she was diagnosed with Stage 3 breast cancer in an Instagram video in October 2020. WireImage

Lewis gained popularity in 1997 when MTV hired her as a video jockey. She hosted several shows on the network, including “Total Request Live” and “Hot Zone.”

She ultimately left MTV in 2001 to host her own daytime talk show, “The Ananda Lewis Show.” It premiered in September 2001 and lasted one season.

“I wanted a change,” she told Teen People at the time. “It was a matter of proving to myself that I can do [this].”


  Lewis gained popularity in 1997 when MTV hired her as a video jockey. FilmMagic Lewis gained popularity in 1997 when MTV hired her as a video jockey. FilmMagic

But Lewis also regretted rushing into her own talk show and admitted that it was “overkill.”

“I wish I had stopped the people that wanted me to do the show and said, ‘Not yet, it’s a little too early to do this.’ It was overkill for me,” she said after her show was canceled. “It wasn’t what I felt like I signed up for.”

Although Lewis took a brief break from television after “The Ananda Lewis Show,” she returned as a correspondent for “The Insider,” a spin-off of “Entertainment Tonight,” from 2004 to 2005.


  Lewis departed MTV in 2001 to host her own daytime talk program, “The Ananda Lewis Show.” WireImage Lewis departed MTV in 2001 to host her own daytime talk program, “The Ananda Lewis Show.” WireImage

She also appeared on the reality TV series “Celebrity Mole: Yucatán,” and hosted the A&E show “America’s Top Dog” and TLC’s “While You Were Out.”

In 2023, shortly after MTV News shut down, Lewis reflected on her time on the network. She said it was a “pillar of creative and diverse speech.”


  Lewis is survived by her son, Langston. Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images Lewis is survived by her son, Langston. Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images

“A pillar of creative and diverse speech is crumbling,” Lewis told People at the time. “MTV News covered things no one else could. We could get inside the trailer with DMX and Korn as they were taking historic concert stages. Artists trusted MTV News to tell their stories.”

“Even though I was technically a VJ,” she added, “I did many specials with MTV News and know firsthand what a huge loss this is for the culture of music and all who love it.”

Lewis is survived by her son, Langston, whom she welcomed in 2011 with Will Smith’s younger brother, Harry Smith.

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