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Nineties fitness guru Susan Powter earning living as Uber Eats driver after losing millions Powter once sold $50 million products a year with her fitness program, ‘Stop the Insanity!’ Amber Raiken ...
She discussed the rise and fall of her fame during a Q&A session at the Bentonville Film Festival on June 18, following the premiere of her new documentary, Stop the Insanity: Finding Susan Powter.
Former health guru Susan Powter has become an Uber Eats driver in Las Vegas, Nevada, after losing her million-dollar fitness empire. In the Nineties, Powter became a fitness icon with her infomercial ...
Susan Powter, who built a diet and fitness empire and then lost it all, reemerges in the documentary 'Stop the Insanity: Finding Susan Powter.' ...
Susan Powter rocketed to fame in the 1990s, propounding the idea that it was possible to lose weight, feel better, and regain vitality by eating clean and exercising – a message that resonated with ...
Susan Powter in 1994. Ron Galella/Getty “I ring the doorbell of this big order, and Louie Anderson opens the door—and he knew who I was. He looked right at me and he knew.
Susan Powter is getting candid about her unexpected run-in with a beloved, multi-hyphenated comedian. In an interview with Entertainment Weekly published Thursday, Feb. 27, the ‘90s wellness ...
In a new life- and career-spanning interview, Powter, whose 1993 weight-loss infomercial Stop the Insanity! became a crossover pop culture phenomenon that led to a reported $300 million fortune, tells ...
In a new life- and career-spanning interview, Powter, whose 1993 weight-loss infomercial Stop the Insanity! became a crossover pop culture phenomenon that led to a reported $300 million fortune, tells ...
In a new life- and career-spanning interview, Powter, whose 1993 weight-loss infomercial Stop the Insanity! became a crossover pop culture phenomenon that led to a reported $300 million fortune, tells ...