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Johnson, however, already conquered capitalism. In 2013, the former Mormon tech entrepreneur-turned-wellness guru walked away from the sale of Braintree Venmo with $300 million.
Mr. Johnson founded the payments company Braintree in 2007 and became a multimillionaire when PayPal bought the start-up in 2013. He soon shed his Mormon roots and began a phase of exploration.
Bryan Johnson spends $2 million a year trying to reverse aging and avoid death Death is inevitable — but Bryan Johnson doesn't think it should be. The tech entrepreneur — the subject of ...
"Don't Die" tracks Bryan Johnson's unrealistic journey toward peak physical health – unrealistic because not everyone has $2 million to spare.
In Netflix’s new documentary Don’t Die, Johnson shares his ongoing — and pricey — mission towards eternal life.
In the new documentary Don’t Die, Bryan Johnson shares his ongoing — and pricey — mission towards eternal life.
‘Don’t die’: Who is Bryan Johnson, the millionaire biohacker behind Netflix’s new immortality documentary? A new film by the executive producer of Tiger King chronicles one 47-year-old man ...
Tech meets longevity as biohackers learn how to cheat death by obsessively measuring — and optimizing — their vital signs.
The Netflix doc “Don’t Die: The Man Who Wants to Live Forever” tries to paint a full portrait of anti-aging obsessive Bryan Johnson—but mostly, he just comes off as creepy.
What I learned at Bryan Johnson’s “Don’t Die” summit is that optimizing yourself like artificial intelligence is not only futile. It is also very expensive. It turns out that optimizing ...
Bryan Johnson in Don't Die: The Man Who Wants to Live Forever - Credit: Netflix There’s currently no magic routine that will make humans live forever. But for tech millionaire Bryan Johnson, the quest ...
This doc treats the guy who’s trying to reverse the aging process better than the internet does — although that’s admittedly not difficult.