A man has tested Bryan Johnson’s $2 million-a-year age reversing routine to see if it actually works, and the results may ...
Tech entrepreneur and longevity advocate Bryan Johnson has discontinued his use of rapamycin, a controversial anti-ageing ...
Biohacker Bryan Johson claims to have turned back the clock — or at least stalled the progress of aging. The new Netflix documentary “Don’t Die: The Man Who Wants to Live Forever” focuses ...
While you and I are finding ways how to apply anti-aging products to stay young and energetic with our coffees, there are brilliant minds out there deep ...
"This was my third day in India, and the air pollution had made my skin break out in rash and my eyes and throat burn," he ...
Anti-aging advocate Bryan Johnson, who gulps down 54 pills for breakfast, recently discovered a wrinkle in his meticulous approach to dodging death. Every two weeks, the 47-year-old tech ...
Bryan Johnson was born on August 22, 1977 and he is an American entrepreneur, venture capitalist, and author. He founded ...
Bryan Johnson, known for spending $2M annually to reverse his body’s aging process, stopped taking a drug that had been tested on mice after experiencing severe side effects.
Bryan Johnson (47) used to take 13 milligrams of rapamycin, every two weeks, hoping to reverse aging. Rapamycin, which is an immunosuppressant given to transplant patients to prevent them from ...
Bryan Johnson has dropped the medicine he had been taking for last five years. Bryan Johnson, the 47-year-old tech entrepreneur who has spent millions on his quest to reverse his biological age ...
NPR's A Martinez speaks with tech entrepreneur Bryan Johnson about the Netflix documentary "Don't Die: The Man That Wants To Live Forever," which portrays his quest to slow aging.
Bryan Johnson explained why the “bad air quality” in India caused him to walk out of Nikhil Kamath’s podcast mid-episode.