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Danny Malin

Danny Malin su salute, equilibrio e vita oltre la fama virale

When Danny Malin first appeared on Yorkshire Talks, viewers met a man at a moment of huge change. Joined by his wife Sophie Malin and their baby daughter Athena Malin, Danny spoke candidly about becoming a father, navigating sudden fame, and the pressures that came with being recognised everywhere he went.

Now, Danny returns for Series Two, and this conversation feels different. Quieter, more reflective, and rooted in health, wellbeing and what it means to listen to your body when life starts asking too much.

Danny Malin: A New Chapter & Honest Catch-Up

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From Rate My Takeaway to a national favourite

Danny became a household name during the Covid lockdowns through the YouTube channel Rate My Takeaway. With a fold up table, a takeaway bag and his unmistakable opening line, “Now then guys…”, he brought comfort and familiarity into millions of homes at a time when the world felt uncertain.

What made the channel special was never just the food. It was Danny’s warmth, his honesty, and the sense that viewers were sitting down for tea with a friend. That authenticity turned a simple idea into a national phenomenon, and Danny into one of the UK’s most recognisable online personalities.

But success came at a cost.

Earlier this year, Danny made the difficult decision to step away from regular uploads. In this episode, he opens up about the serious health issues and personal challenges that led him to that point. He speaks plainly about ignoring early warning signs, about pushing through exhaustion, and about how the pressure to keep producing content can slowly erode both physical and mental wellbeing.

His reflections will resonate with anyone who has experienced burnout, chronic stress, or the feeling that stopping is somehow a failure. Danny talks about the moment he realised that continuing as he was could mean losing far more than an audience. It could mean losing his health.

Stepping back was not easy. It meant disappointing viewers, questioning his identity, and sitting with uncertainty. But it was also the first step towards recovery.

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Danny also reflects on the psychological side of internet success. The constant visibility. The pressure to be upbeat and available. The strange intimacy of being recognised by strangers while feeling increasingly disconnected from yourself.

He speaks openly about online trolling, how even occasional negativity can land harder when you are already unwell, and how learning to set boundaries became essential. His experience highlights an often overlooked truth. Online fame can amplify stress, anxiety and self doubt, especially when your work and your personality become inseparable.

For Danny, protecting his mental health meant redefining success, and accepting that rest is not weakness.

As the conversation unfolds, Danny shares how he is beginning to find balance again. Slower days. More time with Sophie and Athena. Space to reflect on what he wants the next chapter to look like, rather than rushing to fill the silence.

He talks about healing as an ongoing process, not a quick fix. About learning to listen to his body. About allowing himself to change. There is humour here, as there always is with Danny, but there is also a depth that comes from facing vulnerability head on.

This is not a comeback story. It is a story about recalibration. About choosing health, family and longevity over relentless output.

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What makes this episode so compelling is that Danny is still unmistakably himself. Warm, funny, and grounded. But there is also a new honesty about limits, and about the importance of taking health seriously before crisis forces your hand.

His story is a reminder that wellbeing does not only break down under dramatic circumstances. Sometimes it wears away quietly, through overwork, pressure and the belief that you cannot stop.

About the authorView full bio

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Thomas Andrew Porteus, MBCS

HealthTech

MBCS

Thomas writes to inform, inspire, and equip practice leaders and health professionals navigating change, drawing on two decades of hands-on work across the UK health system.

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