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India's Pilates pioneer Yasmin Karachiwala on Ozempic, Mounjaro boom: 'It's sad people are finding the quick fix'
Lifestyle

India’s Pilates pioneer Yasmin Karachiwala on Ozempic, Mounjaro boom: ‘It’s sad people are finding the quick fix’

by jummy84 November 7, 2025
written by jummy84

In India, which has the world’s third-largest number of overweight adults and over 77 million people with Type 2 diabetes, weight-loss drugs are on a boom. Mounjaro, a tirzepatide marketed by American drugmaker Eli Lilly, reportedly became the second-highest selling drug in India in six months. And doctors, mostly endocrinologists, are flooded with queries about weight loss through GLP-1 medications. It’s a trend that worries India’s Pilates pioneer Yasmin Karachiwala, who has over three decades of experience in the wellness world. A celebrity fitness trainer to a brigade of Bollywood stars, she says people must be wary of the likely side effects, including muscle loss.

Celebrity fitness trainer Yasmin Karachiwala says weight-loss drugs are not a one-size-fits-all solution to lose weight.

In an exclusive interview with Health Shots, when Yasmin Karachiwala was asked if she is worried about the popularity of weight-loss drugs, she says: “Yes, it is really sad because people are finding the quick fix, which always happens when something new comes in. In the last 30 years, I’ve seen a lot of quick fix coming in, and people justify it.”

One of the weight-loss drugs, semaglutide, developed by Danish company Novo Nordisk, is available as Rybelsus (oral) and Wegovy (injectable). Its version Ozempic is approved in India for diabetes management but not yet for obesity. The other, tirzepatide, produced by Eli Lilly and sold as Mounjaro, is officially meant for diabetes but is now widely used off-label for weight loss in India.

Both these work differently. Ozempic is a GLP-1 drug, which means glucagon-like peptide-1. In layman terms, it mimics the natural GLP-1 hormone which supports regulation of blood sugar and appetite. Mounjaro has a dual mechanism with GLP-1 and GIP (glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide) to regulate blood sugar.

According to Yasmin Karachiwala, “The injectables are really good for people with diabetes and people who are overweight, may have tried everything but still can’t lose weight and it’s affecting their health. For them to lose weight, it’s either this (the weight-loss drugs) or going through bariatric surgery, depending on what their doctor suggests.”

“I’m no person to judge, but I feel like a lot of people who want to lose five kgs and think they’re overweight, are taking the aid of injectables. This is not something that I would recommend anyone to do because what they’re not realising is that it’s making them lose muscle mass,” adds Karachiwala, whose celebrity clients include the likes of Deepika Padukone, Katrina Kaif, Kriti Sanon and Ananya Panday.

As a fitness expert, she can vouch that muscle is really difficult to put on.

“It is very easy to put on fat, but it is very difficult to put on muscle. And if you don’t have enough muscle as you grow older, you’re going to lose bone density. The thing that protects our bones is our muscle! So, if you’ve lost the muscle, you’ve lost the bones, you’re heading for osteoporosis,” she warns.

Instead, she recommends a combination of weight training, increase in protein intake through diet and hydration.

Yasmin Karachiwala spoke to Health Shots during the launch of her Yasmin Karachiwala Body Image (YKBI) studio in New Delhi.

Talking about how a lot of people only join a gym or fitness class when they feel unfit or self-conscious, she says: “When I coined the word body image for my studio, I wanted everyone to have a great body image. Whatever your body image is, fitness has nothing to do with the body, right? Because they say thin is not fit and fat is fit sometimes. I want people to think about how they wake up in the morning. What is the level of fatigue they feel during a day? Are they stressed, are they tired at the end of the day? Do they wake up with a spring in their step? For me, these are the things that translate into your body image. You need to have a very positive image about yourself and you can conquer the world.”

(Note to readers: This article is for informational purposes only and not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always seek the advice of your doctor with any questions about a medical condition.)

November 7, 2025 0 comments
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‘9-1-1’ Expands to Nashville, ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Goes Boom, Marine ‘Boots’ Camp, All About Victoria Beckham and Saquon Barkley
TV & Streaming

‘9-1-1’ Expands to Nashville, ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Goes Boom, Marine ‘Boots’ Camp, All About Victoria Beckham and Saquon Barkley

by jummy84 October 9, 2025
written by jummy84

ABC

9-1-1

The long-running first-responder drama opens its ninth season with a tribute to the 118’s fallen leader, Bobby Nash (Peter Krause), as the crew prepares to dedicate the firehouse in his memory. But duty never stops calling, and they snap back into action for an emergency involving a billionaire tech giant in critical peril.

Golden Bachelor

The Golden Bachelor

The second season of The Golden Bachelor is available Wednesdays on ABC and streaming next day on Hulu and Hulu on Disney+. It’s the senior spin on the beloved dating reality show, with 66-year-old former NFL linebacker and lawyer Mel Owens searching for his later-in-life lover. This season is hosted by Jesse Palmer, a former Bachelor and NFL player himself. Fingers crossed he can help Owens find love.

Chris O'Donnell as Don — '9-1-1: Nashville' Series Premiere

Disney/Jake Giles Netter

9-1-1: Nashville

It’s a sign of the times, and the state of broadcast TV, that ABC’s only new scripted series this fall is that most reliable of standbys: a spinoff. Chris O’Donnell, who starred in one of TV’s most successful spinoffs (NCIS: LA), leads the ensemble as Captain Don Hart of Fire Station 113. In the premiere, he and his crew respond to a franchise favorite — a weather emergency — when a tornado rips through Music City, threatening a country-music festival. Jessica Capshaw (Grey’s Anatomy) co-stars as Don’s wife Blythe, whose well-heeled family brings a Dynasty vibe to Don’s working-class world when a scandalous family secret is revealed.

GREY’S ANATOMY - “Only the Strong Survive” - After the catastrophic hospital explosion, Grey Sloan’s staff scrambles to save not only their patients’ lives but also their own. Confronted with impossible surgical decisions and emotional turmoil, they fight to preserve life amid devastation. THURSDAY, OCT. 9 (10:00-11:00 p.m. EDT) on ABC. (Disney/Anne Marie Fox) ELLEN POMPEO, MICAH MCNEIL

Disney / Anne Marie Fox

Grey’s Anatomy

Another year, another cliffhanger to resolve. Which is how Grey’s Anatomy kicks off its 22nd season, TV’s longest-running prime-time medical drama. The opener is in full crisis mode, and it’s all hands on deck as Grey Sloan’s staff scrambles in the wake of an explosion on the surgical floor. Link (Chris Carmack) appeared to be the doctor most immediately in danger, but we’ll know soon enough who gets to operate another day.

Miles Heizer as Cameron Cope and Liam Oh as Ray McAffey in 'Boots' Season 1 Episode 4

Netflix

Boots

“This is not like summer camp,” laments Cameron Cope (Parenthood‘s Miles Heizer), a closeted gay man who follows his best friend Ray (Liam Oh) into the Marines in 1990, when homosexuality was strictly forbidden (even predating “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell”). Cameron also soon realizes that the “buddy system” isn’t all that it’s cracked up to be in a system designed to break down recruits and shape them into soldiers. This eight-part dramedy, based on Greg Cope White’s memoir The Pink Marine, has moments of whimsy — especially when Cameron’s anxiety-ridden inner self speaks out — but is also unexpectedly compelling in its coming-of-age story as Cameron makes unexpected alliances in his quest to discover what it is to be a man. “I’m such a Rose,” this Golden Girls fan sighs — which is probably something he should keep to himself for the time being.

Victoria Beckham in Netflix's 'Victoria Beckham' docuseries, 2025.

Netflix/YouTube

Victoria Beckham

The road from musical stardom as Posh Spice to celebrated footballer’s wife to being accepted as a fashion designer hasn’t always been easy, says Victoria Beckham in a three-part documentary profile. “I have never forgotten where I come from,” she says, revealing her insecurities and desires as she prepares for “the biggest fashion show I have ever done.”

Saquon Barkley, Philadelphia Eagles

Sarah Stier / Getty Images

Saquon

With Martin Scorsese as executive producer, an intimate documentary spotlights Saquon Barkley, the Super Bowl champion running back for the Philadelphia Eagles. The film covers his career highs and lows (injuries) while also following him off the field as a devoted husband and dad. “It’s not who you are when you get knocked down,” says the resilient superstar athlete. “It’s who you are when you stand back up. That’s why I play the game.”

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October 9, 2025 0 comments
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Inside the Online “Indie” Music Boom
Music

Inside the Online “Indie” Music Boom

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

witty’s charting a different path for this nebulous cluster. On the 20-year-old’s electrifying album #wings, nearly every track sounds like he started without any clue how it would end. “She” dreams up a cosmic pluggnb canvas for TJAYY before ditching the idea and unleashing a chiptune breakdown worthy of a Pokémon Mystery Dungeon boss fight. “I make my music really fucking loud because it’s the only time where I can feel immersed in something,” he says of his sound, which he calls “cryy.” “It allows me to think and feel like a person for a little bit. When I’m outside, there’s nothing going through my brain, just fried.”

witty says he grew up listening to Pokémon soundtracks and that it was pluggnb, not classical training or a jazz music education, that taught him how to write chord progressions. He’s also obsessed with video games, particularly the cartoonish fighting game Brawlhalla, which he’s played professionally since age 14. Under the handle STING RAY, he’s won thousands of dollars at tournaments and been one of the top 15 players for the last five years—even reaching number two in the world. “I feel like the gaming got me good at music,” he says. “I looked at it through the perspective of improving in a game.” One way to interpret his work is through the lens of video game music, which he went to Berklee College of Music to study before he was kicked out. VGM treats vocals and instruments like elements to manipulate and mash up, emphasizing chaos that synchronizes with in-game clicks and actions. “the light left my iris” reminds me of the kind of epic symphony that would suit a cutscene.

bunii, another leader of the scene, grew up listening to ayowitty and now works with him actively. The 17-year-old convinced his hero to collaborate after he saw his music on a repost channel. His solo music is much more guitar-forward, all math rock freakouts and intricate chord progressions. He lists Paramore, MCR, American Football, and Japanese rockers like susquatch and The Cabs as fixations. But even the most analog songs shimmer with producer tags: BASTARDS! Before getting into the guitar, bunii started making beats after hearing the pluggnb of Autumn! and Genius’ beat deconstruction videos.

This so-called indie music is delightfully immature and cracked at the seams, recorded in that climactic sliver of adolescence when you’re not a clueless kid but also not so old that you’re jaded. Many of the artists are self-taught. “Whenever I’m in my room, there’s always a guitar in my hand,” says bunii. In high school, which he just graduated from, he developed distinct chord progressions by rewiring elements from his favorite jazz pieces. Parts of the skyscraping “grand mal” came from Kenny Dorham’s jazz standard “Blue Bossa.”

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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