What Now? with Trevor Noah - Bryan Johnson
Episode Date: February 15, 2024Trevor is joined by Bryan Johnson, the tech entrepreneur devoted to reversing his biological clock. Trevor and Bryan discuss the extreme lengths Bryan has gone to in his anti-aging regimen, Project Bl...ueprint, using himself as “patient zero.” Bryan shares what changes we all could be making to live longer, how he achieved 8 months of “perfect sleep,” and why he’ll never crave a hamburger again. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Who wants to live forever?
It's a song that's been playing in my head over the past week,
knowing that I'll be speaking to our guest for this episode of the podcast, Brian Johnson.
Now, you may not know his name, but you've probably heard the stories about him.
He's the man who is aiming to not just prolong his life, but reverse aging in his body.
prolong his life, but reverse aging in his body, which sounds like science fiction, but by all accounts, by the measurements, by the doctors, by, I mean, everyone, it looks like
he's succeeding somehow. The question is though, who wants to live forever? Do you?
It's a really interesting conversation to have with somebody. What does it mean to try and live
longer? What does it mean to try and live forever?
And why do people hate you for trying to do it?
These are all the things that Brian Johnson is going through.
So here we are, this week's guest, Brian Johnson, Mr. Don't Die.
This is What Now? with Trevor Noah.
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Mr. Brian Johnson, welcome to What Now?
Thank you for having me.
You know, every time I speak to a guest on the podcast,
it's interesting how they affect how I see the days leading up to the conversation with them.
So if I'm speaking to a comedian, I think about everything that's funny and everything that could be funny.
If I'm speaking to a filmmaker, I see the world through a different lens.
And knowing that I was speaking to you made me so self-conscious about how I was sleeping,
what I was doing before bed, how I was eating, how I was living.
What was your experience in thinking about those things and in making those observations?
I mean, mine were stressful, to be honest with you. Do you find it stressful?
I find it liberating because without a schedule, you need to make decisions every minute of every day of,
do you do this or do you do that? And you're subject to how you're feeling in that moment.
You're subject to how you slept the night before. And so I found before in my life that I was on a
roller coaster of emotions. I've never been more stable in my entire life. I think that what's
interesting is people make observations
about me based upon what they see and they hear. And I would say their intuitions are exactly
wrong. That every observation they have, you know, for example, the first thing they do is they want
to put me on trial and say, you know, this man is not really living. He's trapped himself in a
cage of misery.
And I've never felt happier in my entire life,
never felt more stable, happier, joyful, less stress.
And so it's really funny.
It's just like such a different reality,
which I have and which people assume.
Well, you know, it's funny you say that because I've definitely been one of those people.
When I first read about your journey and I read about you trying to reverse your aging,
I would read your schedule and I'd go, and you'll correct me at any point where I'm wrong.
So you wake up at 4.30 a.m., yes?
That's right.
Okay, wake up at 4.30 a.m.
And then the day just becomes a series of, I mean, controlled isn't even the right word. It's so
precise. Waking up, taking supplements at a certain time, taking the right amount of food,
taking time to stretch, to work out. It's a specific type of workout. One thing leads to
the... And I read through this and I was like, yeah, I was like, man, this guy, what's the point
of living if this is how you're going to live? I thought to myself, he's having a terrible time. Did you find that you were surprised
at how liberating your quote unquote rigid structure would become?
Very surprised. Yeah. I think I had a similar bias that if it were that strict and that
superimposed by a scientific process that I would feel burdened.
I did not expect to feel liberated.
You know, I think to me it boils down to change is hard.
Being miserable is harder.
Damn.
If you look at what I'm doing through the frame of the 20th century,
where death was inevitable.
Yeah.
You could say live fast and die young.
And that's a reasonable thing to do that so far as we can see, death has always was inevitable. You could say live fast and die young, and that's a reasonable thing to do
that so far as we can see,
death has always been inevitable.
And what I'm suggesting is a thought experiment
that if you could, for example,
travel in time and go to the 1870s
and whisper something into their ears
and say, hey, everybody,
this is going to sound crazy,
but there are new ideas right now
about these microscopic objects
that cause infection.
They're called germs.
And so when doctors don't wash their hands between surgeries or they don't sanitize their instruments, it causes infection, which leads to death.
And if you lived in the 1870s, you may say, that's nuts.
You're telling me something I can't see is the source of death.
Which is what they said, right?
Most everyone.
thing I can't see is the source of death. Which is what they said, right? And most everyone.
And so if you look at that and say, throughout the history of the human race, it has always been the case that the future is present. It's just extraordinarily hard to see it in your time
and place, and you're much more likely to defend the status quo. And so my thought experiment led
me to say, if the 25th century could whisper into our ears, what would they say? And to me, after thinking about this for a decade, it was, psst, don't die. That's it. That after 4.5 billion years on this earth, we're baby steps away from superintelligence. And when you're that close, what do you do?
super intelligence. And when you're that close, what do you do? And so if you put it in that context and see what I do, there's a different way of understanding it.
That's an interesting idea. You know, I've read through some of these ideas. You know,
I know you've spoken about it. And then obviously on a philosophical level, everyone argues like
the back and forth of, should we live forever? Why do we want to live forever? What
does living forever even mean? If you could wave your magic wand, would you live forever? Would you
just go on until infinity or would you cap it off somewhere? What is your end goal? Obviously,
not scientifically. I'm saying this is purely magic. Forget the science for now.
I know that I want tomorrow. I think the question on living forever breaks the human brain. I don't think the human brain can understand that concept. Okay. I think
what we can understand is, do we want to live tomorrow? Wanting to live tomorrow is the same
as wanting to live forever because there's no difference in our minds. Damn. You really have
to sleep to think like this. You have to sleep to think like this, or you have to stay up all night to think like this. So, okay, let's take a little step back
to help people understand how you got to this place. For those who don't know your story,
you weren't always this guy. You know, Brian Johnson wasn't always Mr. 4.30am, Mr. Stop
Eating at 11am, you know, Mr. Count Every Calorie and Make Sure Everything is Precise.
You were just living the way everybody lives, right? You were working in tech. You were going
from one day to the next. Seems like you've always been pretty smart and really analytical.
But something changed in your life where you decided, I'm going to try and fix how I feel
and how I exist in the world. And that's something
that I haven't been able to find in all of my research is what actually prompted the change
on your side? Was it a physical thing? Was it an emotional thing? Or was it a mental thing?
What made you decide you want to change how you live?
It goes back to when I was 21 years old. I just came home from Ecuador. I had lived among extreme poverty
for two years, dirt floors, mud huts. And I came back to the US. And even though my upbringing in
the US was fairly poor, my mom made my clothes. We were fine as a family. We still had food to eat.
But I came back and it was such a stark reality to what I had been in in Ecuador. And for some
reason, this fire lit with inside of me that I
wanted to spend my life trying to improve the human race. I didn't know what that meant. I
didn't have any special skills. I wasn't really good at anything. I just wanted to see if I could
do some good. And so this is what I've been trying to work for for 25 years. At the age of 21,
in my naive mind, I said, I'm going to make a whole bunch of money by the age of 30. And then
age 30, I'm going to figure out how to do something useful for the human race. And so I really have been
thinking about this and working towards this for 25 years. I sold Braintree Venmo 10 years ago,
I made a couple hundred million dollars, and then it was real. And it was like, okay, now what?
What do you do? This was the company that dealt with credit card processing, right?
That's right. If you've ever paid somebody with Venmo, yeah, that's what it was.
That's right. If you've ever paid somebody with Venmo, yeah, that's what it was. That's you.
That's me, yeah.
And so the question is,
if you're flush with cash,
you're without obligation,
and you can do one thing in the world,
what do you do?
And how do you decide what to do?
So I thought about that for 10 years.
And I was building my brain interface company.
We built basically a wearable fMRI,
the most scalable brain interface in the world. And started measuring myself extensively, and really as a hobby. And then I started getting deeper and deeper into this. And I started piecing together what is really happening in this moment. And I thought, you know, what are the existential risks we face as a species, we have climate change as a risk of the earth not being, you know, habitable for us. We've got nuclear, you know, bio, like weapons of mass destruction risk. We have AI risk. How do we actually think about these
problems? Because most of the time when we confront those problems, we say we're helpless.
Like, what do you do? Recycle your Amazon boxes? You know, like, what do you do about the situation?
Right, right.
And I wanted to become the existential problems myself.
And if you collapse all of them, they collapse in an elegant fashion to don't die.
And so this takes a little bit of time to unpack.
But basically, what I'm trying to do is continued existence is the only thing we care about.
And to do that, we have to solve the things that create existential risk for us, including personal death, planet death, weapons of mass destruction death, and AI death.
Okay, so you decide that you're going to do this.
You think to yourself, I can do this.
But where's the first inkling that made you think this might be possible?
I proposed a question. If you take all of the human race's best science and you put it into one person, can you get
an answer?
Where are we today with the fountain of youth?
Is it totally hopeless or is there a glimpse of hope?
And that's what we did.
And so we have a team of 30 medical professionals and we scoured through the scientific literature.
We did power rankings on all the best performing lifespan and health span studies. We ranked the evidence,
and then we put all the power laws we could safely into me. And then I became the most
measured person in human history. And so we basically said, this is a scientific exploration
of where are we at with aging and death? And we have the results. We have like a
pretty decent idea. And the answer is you can do a lot to slow one's speed of aging and even
address some aging damage, more so than most people think is possible.
When you're searching for doctors who are going to join you on this journey,
there are two things that spring to my mind. One, how do you get them to take you seriously? And then two, how do you know that you can take
them seriously? Because most doctors, and this is just anecdotally, most doctors want to work
in a field where they're working at a research laboratory, or they're working at a university,
or they're working in a space that is defined and comes with a certain level of esteem and prestige.
Some guy comes out of tech and says, hey, I basically helped empower Venmo. And now I want
you to be a doctor who helps me not die. How do they take you seriously? And then how do you know
that these doctors, and not the current ones, obviously, but I'm saying at the beginning,
how do you know that they're not just taking you for a ride? I mean, you're just a guy who rocks
up with a few hundred million dollars. How do you know they're not
just giving you the information that you want at that stage? Yeah. Most of these medical professionals
we work with are overly enthusiastic to work with me because they have this ambition that they want
to be on the frontiers of anti-aging and medicine and health and wellness. But oftentimes their
current roles are very limited to standard of care and
what insurance companies want and what big hospital systems want. And so they feel very stifled in
what they can do in life. And so this is just a breath of fresh air where they can just play.
And then I think they like it because they see that we are scientific in nature, that we
approach things with the scientific method we use gold standard measurement
okay we do everything based upon scientific evidence it's not like we're spinning up some
kind of like you know celery juice is good for you and it's a fad everything is you know is like
is rigorously quantified we have scientific evidence as a basis and so and then yeah i
think they find it's really fun to play because
we do things according to the training they learn in science. Essentially, you're a guinea pig who
is willing and also financially able to play. So you're a rich guinea pig, which is really rare to
find. Thank you. I think. Oh, no, definitely. I think, I think, so he, no, it is, it is, it's neither a compliment,
nor, nor is a, you know, a diss in any way. It's, it's just, I guess, to your point, what
medicine and science is desperate for, you know, is, is a willing participant who also is able to
circumvent all of the limitations that have been put into place, as you say, by the medical industry
and big pharma, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. Okay, let's step into the space. I've wondered two things that I
haven't been able to find anywhere when reading up about you. What is the easiest, and I mean,
the simplest thing that you changed in your life that dramatically changed your health?
And then on the opposite side, what is the hardest thing that you had to change? And not difficult because you had to figure it out, but because it was actually quite
difficult to do that actually yields amazing benefits.
What would you say those two are?
Yeah, the most powerful thing I did was I fired Evening Brian.
So Evening Brian is a version of me.
His duty starts around 5 p.m. and it ends
around 10 p.m. And he's handed the baton at the end of the day when Brian is stressed out and
he's dealing with all kinds of burning fires at work and dealing with conflict of life.
And all he wants is to be soothed of the pain because it's hurt so much.
And in that time of my life, you know, I was chronically depressed.
I had three little babies.
I was building a full-time startup.
I was trying to leave my religion.
I had some challenges with my partner.
Life was just on fire.
And he would go into the kitchen and he would overeat to soothe himself.
And this led to me being over 60 pounds heavier than I am now and miserable because I couldn't sleep. It was just an awful time of life. So I tried everything to stop myself from my bad behavior. I was helpless. And so one day I just said, tongue in cheek, evening, Brian,
you're fired. You make my life miserable. And so I made a rule that when he, when he comes on the
ship between 5 PM and 10 PM, he cannot eat food no matter what.
It does not matter if it's a special occasion.
It doesn't matter if he's hungry.
He just is unauthorized.
And so then I created this list.
I listed out who Evening Brian is, the arguments he makes, like today's the last day.
You've had a really tough day.
You deserve it.
You'll exercise a lot tomorrow morning to burn it off. And I'd list out all the arguments and then have a dialogue and say you
know brian hi i you know welcome i see you i understand what you're saying but tonight we're
not going to do it and so it was basically understanding that i am not my behavior i don't
need to be the shame i don't need to be the guilt that I can actually treat myself like various persons
because I am. We all are. That was the biggest breakthrough for me in all of this. It was the
hardest. I'm both grateful for this insight. And then at the same time, I am extremely depressed
because I live as nighttime Trevor. I think many people listening to this would probably relate as
well. I mean, like, let's say when I'm doing stand-up, I'm on stage.
Oftentimes, I only get off stage at 10 p.m., 11 p.m., depending on the show.
You know, you're flying overnight.
You're moving from one place to the next.
There's many people who work jobs that are late.
I mean, have you found anything with your team of 30 doctors that can translate for people who are unable to fire late themselves?
Yeah, it's really trying to find the behavior that is the domino effect.
So if you eat late or you drink or you do something else,
it's going to deteriorate your sleep value.
And then it's going to cause the same experience the next day.
So my brain interface company, Kernel,
I measured my brain
looking at my willpower. You can measure it in the brain. And you could see based upon my REM
and my deep sleep how much willpower I had. And so if you create a cycle where you do something
that lowers the quality of your sleep, next day is going to be a little bit worse and a little
bit worse, and you just grind yourself down. And this is why sleep is my number one life priority.
Life is not my priority.
Sleep is my priority.
Because when sleep is well, life is well.
And we're in a cultural moment where sleep is a thing that can always be pushed around.
You can always get less sleep and be just fine, culture tells you.
But it's not true. Sleep is the elixir of life. And this is why, again, going back to the first
thing we talked about, people think I'm nuts. And I conversely look at them and think, are you
kidding me? You're insane. The misery you're inflicting upon yourself day to day is just
unbearable for me to watch.
Meanwhile, I just recorded what is potentially the best sleep score in human history.
Eight months of perfect sleep.
I wanted to demonstrate that you can.
Eight months.
Every single night, eight months.
No ways.
Wait.
No, no, no. Wait, wait, wait.
Let's pause on this.
Hold on.
Okay, I'll tell you why we need to pause on this.
I'll tell you why we need to pause on this i'll tell you why because so i've i've i've played this game with one of
my best friends where we um we used every type of sleep tracker you can imagine so i had the um
i had the what was it the eight pod you know the bed with the that would measure your your movements
and then i had like a little this weird little infrared device that would aim a camera at me while I was sleeping to see how much I'm moving, my temperature, my sound, et cetera.
And then I would wear the aura ring on a finger and then I would have the whoop and then I would
have the Apple watch. So, I mean, basically I go to bed like Robocop. Okay. So strapped up,
you name it. Everything is calculating everything. And I would go to bed and we would compare scores every day. And we were trying to, on a very amateur level, figure out what you seem to have figured out, all these things. What are the things that can affect your sleep? And then inversely,
how much of that sleep actually affects the next day? And no matter how good we were, Brian,
I'm talking like I would fast from 5 p.m. I would eat nothing sugary, nothing. The best score I think I've ever achieved is 98%. And you're telling me
you've achieved perfect scores for eight months. Yeah. I get a hundred percent every single night
for eight months, excluding I think three nights. That is wild. So do you just, do you just wake up
every day feeling amazing? I do. Yeah. I am no longer on the roller coaster that just swings me wildly.
I've never been happier in my entire life.
When was the last time you had a craving for something terrible?
Like ice cream or, I don't know, a bagel with cream cheese or...
You keep on going.
Or a candy bar or a hamburger or fries or I mean, I'm just killing
myself right now. I could list the ores forever. I'm just listing what's in my brain right now.
I look at a situation where let's just say friends are all having ice cream or
burger, whatever the case may be. I can imagine doing that thing. I can fully imagine what I'm going to feel like doing it.
And then after, and then I can imagine what my sleep is going to be like, and I can imagine what
I'm going to feel like in the morning. And I can see that sequence of events. And I think
absolutely unquestionably not worth it. Like it is the worst thing ever. So the pain of what I experienced from those now is so severe, I do not want to do it.
So it's not even a craving.
I'm just kind of repulsed by it.
In a way, I always think of this with hangovers.
When people drink, if they have a really bad hangover, they will have a level of fortitude
that is unmatched about not drinking again.
It usually lasts like a week or two weeks,
but everyone goes, I don't even want to see alcohol.
People are like, I don't even want to touch that stuff.
I'm never drinking again.
And then people go back in.
What you're saying is you're able to maintain
that state constantly whenever you come across temptation.
Exactly.
And this is why when you say, hey, human,
do you want to live to blank?
This is why I don't trust any of us at all.
We can't make up our minds minute to minute on whether we want to eat a donut or not,
or whether we want to drink alcohol. You're acknowledging, we all see this in ourselves.
Our ability to maintain consistency with what we want minute to minute is really hard.
So your son, how much of this
does he participate in with you? Because I remember there was a time when you were testing,
I think you were testing something to do with his blood, right? I mean, there were stories online of
you like being a vampire, obviously, but I can say that I've seen you during the day, so we can,
we can squash that. But there was definitely a period where you were testing,
was it plasma or was it plasma, right? And you were trying to see if the plasma from a younger
person actually has an effect. And then once you found out it didn't, you stopped doing that. Is
that correct? Or how did that come about? Yeah. I mean, so to set the record straight,
there's been a lot of confusion about this. I do keep my son in a dungeon, but his room is not 10 by 10. It's eight by eight. Just to put that out
there. Misinformation is a bad thing. I mean, what happened is my father is 71 years old. He did a
calculation of his life expectancy. So he included in the, and these are good models, very accurate.
Insurance companies use them. He included the time in life that he's been obese. He had heavy of his life expectancy. So he included in the, and these are good models, very accurate insurance
companies use them. He included the time in life that he's been obese. He had heavy drug usage
and his number is 68, which was alarming to him because he's now past due. Right. And so he called
me one day and he said, I was working on a legal brief. He's in a law legal profession. And he said,
I came back to my work and it was a jumbled mess.
Words were all over the place.
It wasn't coherent.
And he said, I couldn't see it.
And I became terrified.
I'm losing my mind and I can't see it.
Now, in that moment, my team and I were looking at these plasma infusions.
And some of the studies being done were around Alzheimer's.
And I said, Dad, you know, if you want, I'd be willing to give you a liter of my plasma to see if it helps out with your cognitive decline. And he said, I'm in. And
my son overheard the conversation. He's like, I'm into. So we're like, great, we'll make it a
multi generational plasma exchange. How fun that for a family, you know, is fun for a family
activity. And so we did it. And so my son gave me a liter of plasma, I gave my father a liter of
plasma. And so it did not work in me my biomarkers a liter of plasma, I gave my father a liter of plasma. And so
it did not work in me, my biomarkers, I think the reason why is because my biomarkers are pretty
close to an 18 year old already. Okay. But my father is a different story. And so the difference
between his markers and mine are very significant. So he experienced with one liter of my plasma,
taking one liter of his plasma out, and putting one mine in, his speed of aging, looking at his DNA methylation,
lowered by the equivalent of 25 years.
So he went from aging at the speed of a 71-year-old
to a 46-year-old with one infusion.
And that has stayed at that level for six months now.
So the results were dramatic for him.
And actually-
Just from the plasma.
Just from the plasma.
Wow.
We're going to continue this conversation right after this short break. Dramatic for him. And actually from the plasma. Just from the plasma. Wow.
We're going to continue this conversation right after this short break.
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Is there ever a part of you that acknowledges how random life can be?
Like, so for instance, do you walk in the street?
Do you drive? Do you go for runs outside? Do you fly?
Like, what, if anything, do you restrict yourself to in the physical aspect of living outside of your home?
Yeah, I do most things that most humans do right now.
So, I mean, my son and I went to New Zealand.
We biked around the country for two weeks.
You know, I drive.
I do have a ritual, though.
When I get into my car, I will say out loud,
driving is the most dangerous thing I do to remind myself, don't pick up the phone.
Don't be distracted by messages. Pay attention. Can I just say that is amazing for you,
but for passengers who are getting into a car with you for the first time, that must be one
of the most terrifying experiences anyone can have. You get into a car with somebody and they look up for a second and say,
driving is the most dangerous thing I do.
And then you put the car into drive and you head off.
You know, it's like, I was with a few friends.
We were going to this event in the desert
and we had a driver and we're on the road.
The driver's phone rings and I'm horrified.
You know, I'm like, what's going to happen now?
Everyone else in the car, like you're talking and they're hanging out.
Yeah.
He reaches down, he grabs his phone and I see this in slow motion and like picks it
up and there he has one hand on the wheel and one hand on the phone, like assessing
the situation.
And I said, sir, can you please pull over the car right now if you insist on taking
that phone call?
And it stunned the entire car.
Everyone knew that was a bad idea.
Everyone knows you shouldn't be on your phone.
And his sole objective was to drive us safely in that car.
And my friends have told me that that was a moment
that changed their lives,
where it snapped them into the sobriety
of how tolerant we are.
I mean, we're weirdly, we all know it's dangerous,
but we don't say anything because the social norms are so significant.
Like, is it rude?
Are you going to make a scene?
It's really complicated to be human on all these circumstances.
But no, I do all these fun things.
But I have to say, Trevor, like, it's guaranteed I'm going to die
in the most ironic way imaginable. I'm probably going
to be hit by a bus. It's guaranteed. I'm going to die. I'm choking on pills. There's no way out
of this. I'm for sure going to die. And it's going to be the biggest gift in the world to the
internet. Everyone's going to love it. And it's going to be like, it's going to be the favorite. So yes, like that's just inevitable.
Knock on wood, that doesn't happen. Knock on wood, that doesn't happen. You know,
it's funny you say the thing about social norms and how powerful they are, because
the longest I went without eating sugar, like processed sugar was, I'd say six months.
And I was really proud of myself. I was on this journey. I didn't need anything. I mean,
I avoided every restaurant with dessert, every nibble, every cookie in a hotel, you name it, I avoided it. And I'll never
forget the day when it broke. I was at work, I was in the office and someone came with a slice of
cake and they said, hey, would you like some cake? And I said, no, thank you. I don't eat sugar.
And they went, oh, but it's Mary's birthday. And I was like, yeah, but I don't eat sugar. And they went, oh, but it's Mary's birthday. And I was like, yeah,
but I don't eat sugar. And then a group of people looked at me like I had killed everybody's family
member with one sentence. And they were like, it's just a piece of cake, Trevor. And I was like,
yeah, but I don't eat sugar. And they're like, just taste the cake. Why are you being like this?
And I'm not going to lie to you. I caved. I caved. I had some of the cake. are you being like this and I'm not gonna lie to you I caved I caved I
had some of the cake it wasn't bad and then I was like I may as well finish it because I've done and
then that was it and then I was back on the sugar train because then like a few weeks later was
somebody else's birthday and then I didn't want to be the person who had cake for their birthday
not the other birthday yeah yeah turns out a lot of people have birthdays and then I had a lot of
cake and then yeah I was on a flight and I was like, yeah,
I mean, I might as well celebrate flying. And then I was back. I was, I was back eating sugar.
You're not wrong. I'll tell you now you're not wrong. Going back to what you said about going
to New Zealand with your son though. I want to know what do you do when you travel? So you fly
all of these hours. Sleep is the most important thing. How does Brian Johnson overcome the jet lag slash the time difference? How do you get
your sleep back? What do you do there? Yeah, we put that to the test. My son and I went to
Singapore over this holiday break. And so going to New Zealand is pretty easy from Los Angeles.
The time zone difference, I think, is three hours hours where Singapore is like 12 hours, I think. And so, yeah, we did this thing a few days before the flight. I started pushing my
bedtime forward an hour each night to start the adjustment. What is your current bedtime? Help
us paint this picture. 8.30. 8.30 PM. Damn. Okay. So I won't ask you if you watch the Superbowl.
So, and so, yeah, I pushed my bedtime back for an hour each
night. So 8.30, so 9.30, and then 10.30. And then we caught up, I think the flight was around
midnight. And then when we arrived in Singapore, I basically just tell my body, hey, body, we are
on a new schedule. So get used to it. So the first thing I do when I wake up in the morning, it's 5
a.m. in Singapore, I work out. And so I say, hey, body, we're now on this new schedule, I eat just like I would normally. So I just get everything back in rhythm.
Okay, but you don't eat the food in Singapore, though you eat your pre packaged food because
you have specially designed food. So what are you eating?
Yeah, I brought some food with me. But then otherwise, I just went to the grocery store
and bought a few things. And so yeah, I learned this when I went to New Zealand last year with my son. I went through LAX and I got cornered by airport security. They called out the bomb squad. They call it the executive bomb squad. They call out dogs. I had all this powder in my bag and they're like, sir, what is this? And I'm like, well, actually it's creatine and it's amino acids. It's like, sir, this looks highly suspicious
because it looks like it was just a bunch of powder
meant to do other things.
It looks like you've emptied out a stick of dynamite
into a Ziploc essentially.
Yes.
And my son has this on video.
There I'm explaining like the molecular components
of what he's asking me what it is.
And the guy's just like, what's going on? I
don't understand the situation, but it was, yeah, it was kind of funny, but yeah, I've learned how
to travel now and it's much easier. So if I go, if I can go to a supermarket that I'm good, but
yeah, I mean, it's like, it's almost impossible to eat well in the world. It's really, really hard
anywhere, like any restaurant to eat well. Everything is just,
the food system is just not great. And so now that I've been eating as clean as I have in the past
three years, when I taste food from a restaurant, even one that's trying really hard, it's so
obvious that the food system just cannot generate the quality. So yeah, I've really learned a lot
about food and food quality and food systems and how, why we're probably not all doing well in our health because what we're being fed
is really not great. Well, I mean, fundamentally it's because it goes back to the incentives,
right? The incentive of a restaurant isn't to make you healthier. The incentive of a restaurant
is to make you want to come back to that restaurant. And so the easiest way to achieve that, unfortunately,
is by packing the meal with as much sugar and salt as possible so that your body craves it,
so your body feels like it got everything that it wanted. So in effect, we're always hacking
ourselves as people because whether it's a snack or whether it's a meal at a restaurant,
you're tricking your body into thinking it is getting what it in fact isn't, or it's
getting too much of it.
So you are working against all of this.
Your incentive is yourself, fundamentally.
So I guess it makes a lot of sense speaking to you, to be honest, because on the one hand,
I'm still resistant in that I agree with you about nighttime.
I'm the same. Nighttime, Trevor,, like, I agree with you about nighttime. Like I'm the same.
Nighttime Trevor is the most destructive version of me.
There is, I've consumed more ice cream than I think at nighttime, you know, I've stayed
up later.
I've, I will also say the best stories come at night.
You have to admit that that is one concession you're going to have to make.
Brian is like, there's no crazy story that happens at 7am where people go, man, I woke up early and let me tell you the craziest thing.
It always happens at night.
Okay, I do have one though for you.
Okay, go, go. Let's see.
Okay, so I woke up on Sunday morning, today is Tuesday, and I had achieved a new nighttime
erection record. So nighttime erections are a significant biomarker for physiological,
cardiovascular, and sexual health. If you remember as a young boy, you probably had a lot of
erections all the time. And as you age, erections go down. So it is a biomarker for age. So I've
been measuring my nighttime erections as any good measured human would do. And there's age ranges. So for example,
in the age category between 20 and 25, the average erection time is 145 minutes. So my new record was
179 minutes of erection during nighttime. So yes, Trevor, you're never going to believe it.
7am, the wildest thing happened to me. I woke up and I had a new nighttime erection record of 179 minutes. Okay. I'm going to need to take a moment
here because we're going to have to process a lot of information because I can't just accept
everything you've said without going back on this. So number one, am I hearing you clearly when you
say one of the best ways to measure your health is through your
erections. That is correct. Okay. Okay. And what you are saying is this is through a combination
of, I'm assuming the firmness of the erection and then also the duration of the erection.
Exactly right. There's a little cube. It's about a centimeter by centimeter. You put it on the shaft, you put it at the base. And as you put it on, you'll forget about it. It's very innocuous. And then as you sleep...
Okay, forgive me, Brian. Forgive me. I hate cutting in, but forgive me. You just said there's a little cube as if we all have one. I don't know that there is just a little cube. I'm sorry, what is the thing?
Where do you get it?
And what is this penis cube that you use?
Yeah, it's a company in the UK, Atom Health.
Okay.
And it's like 150 bucks or something like that.
Okay.
Yeah, you just put it on the shaft of the penis.
And as you sleep and as you have an erection,
the penis engorges and measures the
strength and the duration of your erection. So you get scored on how long it was, and you get
scored on the quality of the erection. Huh? I've been scored on that before,
but never through an app. This is interesting. So the app tells you how long you had an erection
for and you've achieved a new...
So now I have to go back to the information.
Did you say 170 minutes?
179 minutes, yeah.
So this was my baseline.
I did this six months ago to see where I was at.
This is...
Wait, wait, wait.
Am I doing the math?
This is three hours you're saying?
That's right.
Yep.
Three hours in one go or three hours during the night?
That night was four different erection episodes.
Okay, okay.
Because I know they say if it's four hours and above, you see a doctor.
So, okay, this is good to know.
So, three hours during the night of erections.
That's right.
You know, nighttime erections is a provocative concept because, you know, it's taboo.
It's funny.
It's a good joke.
It's definitely funny.
It's definitely funny. It's a good joke. It's definitely funny. It's definitely funny.
But it's the same process we went through when we measured my heart or my lungs.
It's the exact same thing.
What I'm trying to do is show people that the way you actually approach health and wellness
is you can do this scientific process where you say, we're going to measure a given thing,
and then we're going to do therapies to change the given thing, and then we're going to do therapies to change
the given thing, and then we're going to measure the outcome.
And so we started with this conversation with my team.
I said, okay, sexual health is a really important function of being human.
What would it take for me to have the most measured penis on earth?
What would we do?
And then we went about and we did every measurement we could find in the literature on the
penis and then we had all these baseline measurements and then we said okay now what
can you actually do to improve the function of the penis and if we do those things and then if you do
those things go back and measure again what you measure in the first place did those markers
change at all and so we're trying to show through this very simple process, you can measure and you can demonstrate through a scientific method, does a given thing work or not?
Don't press anything.
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You know, when you have all of this data, you've
definitely put all of the information out there for free.
Recently, you know, you took
a little flack from some people, and I'll
never, you know, I don't mean to blow it out of
proportion, but there were some people who maybe
didn't even like you before, who, oh, there it is. There's the scam revealing itself. Brian
Johnson has just put out a supplement program and he's now selling you olive oil and he's now
selling you, you know, all different types of supplements. And it's like, oh, here it goes.
It really is an interesting paradox because on the one hand, anyone who discovers
something is expected to share that something with society. But on the other hand, the issue of
conflicting interests and incentives is bound to come up. How do you protect yourself from the incentives warping? When you are selling
supplements, when you are selling food products, how do you protect yourself from falling victim
to the thing that restaurants have fallen victim to, food companies, pharmaceutical companies,
you name it? What is your plan? Yeah. I mean, first I'll say I love my haters.
What is your plan?
Yeah, I mean, first I'll say, I love my haters.
I love them.
I love when they talk trash.
I love how much time they spend to come up with the most piercing insults.
I'm grateful they spend their time to do it.
I love it.
In terms of, you know, when I did this,
I did Blueprint for two years.
I put it all online.
Everything was exactly the same.
No one cared. No one paid attention. I put it all online. Everything was exactly the same. No one cared.
No one paid attention. And then it blew up. And then all of a sudden everyone said, I want this.
And they said, but I want this, but it's way too complex. Yeah, it is like the food prep is too
much. The supplements are too much. You have too many rules. Like I want it, but you need to make
it accessible. I said, okay, I'll do it. So I spent the last year
making it easy and cost competitive with fast food. And so inevitably, when I do this, you're
going to hear people squawk and say, ah, he's a sellout. Now he's been grifting the whole time,
you know? So fine. It doesn't bother me. So I don't care. Sincerely do not care what anyone right now thinks of me. I care what the 25th century
thinks of me. I want their respect. I want their admiration. If you go back in time,
any given time and place, you're going to be tackled and mobbed with the status quo.
It's noise. The people we admire who broke through, they saw something
others didn't. We are in no different circumstance. If I cared what other people think of me right now,
I would be listening to dead people. It's just not a game you can play. It burdens your ability,
limits your ability to be courageous and bold. And so when you incorporate those frames,
courageous and bold. And so when you incorporate those frames, I really don't care at all what anyone thinks. I'm trying to build a global infrastructure for the species to not die.
It begins with food. It begins with going to bed on time and these other basic things.
It expands out into all other stuff. But if you're a person in life and you say,
I'm in, I want tomorrow too, then who's going to help you do the measurement?
Who's going to help you know what to eat? Who's going to know how to track these things? Who's
going to look at your nighttime erections? You need these basic things in place.
Who's going to look at your nighttime erections?
Yep.
Data. Who's going to look at your nighttime erection data? Be like, this is serious. Who is actually going to step up and help the species not die
when we are all so maniacally bent right now on dying and doing everything we can to justify
our death cult incentives? Look, I think it's amazing because there are many fads out there
that are all about everything you can imagine.
But it's fun to see people getting excited about being healthier.
Yeah.
You know, whether it's don't die or not, it's just being healthier is something I think
we should all be able to appreciate.
I'm going to have to let you go soon, but I do have a few quickfire questions for you.
These are really just yes, no, and sometimes.
Just to give people an idea of where your body is and
how it is. So question number one, do you wake up in the middle of the night?
Almost no.
Okay. Almost no. Do you have cravings?
No.
Okay. Do you find yourself grumpy or listless in the morning?
No.
Huh. Do you have morning? No. Huh.
Do you have nightmares?
No.
Wow, this is really fascinating.
Do you regret not starting the program sooner?
Yes.
Huh.
I'm going to dig deeper on that one.
How much of a difference do you think it would have made in your life?
I told Kate this when she did Blueprint, my coworker. I said, your conscious experience of reality is going to be entirely original.
You never will have felt this conscious in your entire life.
You don't know what I'm talking about because you haven't felt it.
And that was true.
You experience reality differently.
Huh.
Truly, truly fascinating.
experience reality differently. Huh. Truly, truly fascinating. Well, you know, Brian,
it's really wonderful speaking to you. What you're doing is fascinating. The way you see the world is definitely fascinating. And as you say, you're definitely going to have haters for doing it.
As somebody who loves science and discovery, I can only wish you the best. I wish that you do not get hit by a bus or
trip on a curb. I hope that you live this experiment out as long as you can.
My final question for you, it's the same question I ask every guest on the podcast,
what now? Brian Johnson has been in this program. It has been three years, if my time serves me
correctly. You have been living this way. You have been
thriving this way. You've now embarked on a new journey, which is giving people easy access to
your program, which by the way, because of your information, they can follow without, you know,
purchasing anything from you. So what now? What's the next step in what you're trying to achieve
in your life and in your purpose? I've engaged in operation, help dad don't die.
So I did my plasma infusions with dad.
I just took him to an island off the coast of Honduras
and I gave him a longevity gene therapy.
It's one of the first in the world.
I did it in September.
It's the seventh best performing longevity therapy ever done.
And he got it last weekend. And I'm taking him to the Bahamas in March to get 100 million mesenchymal stem cells
from young Swedish bone marrow. So I'm giving him access to all the advanced therapies that I've
done over the past three years that we've considered to be safe. And I'm trying to help
my father get one more day until the next thing comes. So that's really where most of my attention's at right now.
Well, Brian, thank you so much for the time.
Thank you for not taking yourself too seriously.
Best of luck for the next walk,
for the next sleep,
and for the next erection that you measure.
Yeah, thank you, Trevor.
Yeah. Thank you so much for listening.
Join me next Thursday for another episode of What Now?