Who is Bryan Johnson? All about the subject of Netflix's Don't Die: The Man Who Wants to Live Forever

Roshini
Who is Bryan Johnson? All about the subject of Netflix
Who is Bryan Johnson? All about the subject of Netflix's Don't Die: The Man Who Wants to Live Forever (Image via Netflix)

Bryan Johnson has shaken up the world with his latest idea about longevity and how it promises to change the future. The very subject of the Netflix documentary Don’t Die: The Man Who Wants to Live Forever, his life-amazing antiaging regimen is a little insight into the health and technology future.

He has self-funded his annual millions through "Project Blueprint" to stop or reverse aging via strict diet changes, high-tech treatments, and daily monitoring by a team of experts. His controversial and ambitious quest raises thought-provoking questions about the ethics, science, and limits of any aspect of humanity's fight against time.

The official summary of the show reads as follows:

"Bryan Johnson, a wealthy entrepreneur, puts his body and fortune on the line to defy ageing and extend his life beyond all known limits."

A tech entrepreneur's pursuit of immortality

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To indulge his obsession over time, Johnson launched "Project Blueprint," which was a holistic program against aging, in 2021. It includes a strict vegan diet, over 100 supplements taken every day, vigorous exercises, and very high-end medical therapies.

Among other things, Johnson is said to have undergone plasma transfusion, some of which would have come from his teenage son, in an effort to bring back the body into youthfulness.

This has set aside around $2 million a year for spending on anti-aging. Johnson has a team of 30 doctors and wellness experts checking his body's functionality to lower biological age. Skeptical, however, are some experts about the efficacy and scientific backing of some of his methods.


Controversial methods and public scrutiny

Bryan Johnson's methods have always sparked arguments and criticisms. Johnson used to do some plasma transfusions, the last one of which took place while his son was in prison. These transfusions drew the ire of major ethical and medical issues. The FDA took a stand against these procedures, considering them unsafe and ineffective.

And it was the same with Bryan Johnson's "Baby Face Project," which involved fat injections into the face to return a young pratfall. It provoked severe allergic responses, the most prominent among them swelling of the skin on the face as well as temporary loss of vision. These have raised a myriad of issues against the safety and rationale behind Johnson's extreme anti-aging cases.


Exemplified in the Netflix documentary, Bryan Johnson's intense search for immortality shows how far humans will go in the effort to extend the life of a single man. Although he certainly is committed, there is a lack of consensus in the scientific community regarding the efficacy and ethics of his methods.

Bryan Johnson's life, on the other hand, becomes a compelling case, both in extreme promises of anti-aging science and the limitations it may impose.

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Edited by Apoorva Jujjavarapu