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Bryan Johnson, a tech entrepreneur who sold his company to eBay for $800 million, now spends around $2 million a year trying to stop himself from aging.
His project, called Blueprint, involves waking before 5 a.m., taking roughly 100 supplements daily, eating all meals before 11 a.m., and going to bed at 8:30 p.m. every night. A team of doctors monitors his health around the clock.
He claims his body now ages less than one year for every year that passes, and that his organs test younger than his actual age. He currently ranks first in something called the Rejuvenation Olympics, a global leaderboard for people trying to slow their biological clock.
Critics point out that his results are self-reported and not independently verified. Skeptics also note that most of what shows in his before-and-after photos — weight loss, hair dye, grooming — has nothing to do with reversing aging at the cellular level.
Whether it is science or the world's most expensive wellness routine, Bryan Johnson has made anti-aging his full-time job.
His project, called Blueprint, involves waking before 5 a.m., taking roughly 100 supplements daily, eating all meals before 11 a.m., and going to bed at 8:30 p.m. every night. A team of doctors monitors his health around the clock.
He claims his body now ages less than one year for every year that passes, and that his organs test younger than his actual age. He currently ranks first in something called the Rejuvenation Olympics, a global leaderboard for people trying to slow their biological clock.
Critics point out that his results are self-reported and not independently verified. Skeptics also note that most of what shows in his before-and-after photos — weight loss, hair dye, grooming — has nothing to do with reversing aging at the cellular level.
Whether it is science or the world's most expensive wellness routine, Bryan Johnson has made anti-aging his full-time job.