Challenging Bryan Johnson On His “Never Die” Biohacking Protocol

  Рет қаралды 1,686,831

Doctor Mike

Doctor Mike

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 5 300
@danieltehee
@danieltehee 8 ай бұрын
The thing I like the most about this interview is that Bryan legit sits there and thinks about the questions and his response before answering. A lot of people have a preset agenda and the answers just roll off their tongue because they aren’t putting any thought, just reading from their mental flash cards.
@elizabethtorres2132
@elizabethtorres2132 8 ай бұрын
Yes i enjoyed that too
@alfiewright1396
@alfiewright1396 8 ай бұрын
He definitely has some preset agenda to some extent
@Zephyr425
@Zephyr425 8 ай бұрын
​@@alfiewright1396if he didnt then this podcast wudnt exist lol
@alnewick
@alnewick 8 ай бұрын
Yep. Bang on observation.
@MrZebanHai
@MrZebanHai 8 ай бұрын
Did we watch the same video? I feel like Bryan spent half of the time dodging questions or just coming up with some bs on the spot. He did not sound like a well educated individual here. An eloquent and verbose "I don't know" is still just "I don't know."
@nicholascantelmi9534
@nicholascantelmi9534 8 ай бұрын
We all thought this was an episode on health, but it’s actually a masterclass on how to have a respectful conversation. Incredible
@jzmn0033
@jzmn0033 8 ай бұрын
Yeah 😂 I keep thinking I'd be stretching some mental/politeness muscles throughout the whole convo
@joemama8243
@joemama8243 8 ай бұрын
that was a master class of how a non doctor rekt a doctor lol
@derekderek2570
@derekderek2570 8 ай бұрын
@@joemama8243😂 that’s what I got out of this too, but Brian is a supreme genius and he’s talking to a very intelligent doctor. They are just on different levels of intellect.
@AmandaGrey-ss5bb
@AmandaGrey-ss5bb 8 ай бұрын
I'm still amazed that they were both able to keep their cool.
@anovosedlik
@anovosedlik 8 ай бұрын
Dr Mike killed it (no pun intended). Bryan ... ooof. I'm sure he's lovely.
@normang3668
@normang3668 8 ай бұрын
Me sitting on my couch eating potato chips: 'Bryan has some really good points."
@stretchkitty21
@stretchkitty21 8 ай бұрын
Lol
@daan260
@daan260 8 ай бұрын
living forever is a good point?
@maymayyyy
@maymayyyy 8 ай бұрын
​@@daan260 improving life expectancy is
@MandyMoon12
@MandyMoon12 8 ай бұрын
Oooo what flavor?
@Drewsguitarvids
@Drewsguitarvids 8 ай бұрын
Yeah what flavor?
@maxadjusting3917
@maxadjusting3917 4 ай бұрын
Just remember - we NEED people like Bryan. This kind of endeavors is why so many incurable diseases are not even scary anymore. People have to push the boundaries and haters will continue to stay on the wrong side of history. He's not wrong, he's learning. You can tell by his attitude he's not some Liver King scam.
@PeripheralVisionary.
@PeripheralVisionary. Ай бұрын
I don’t think Bryan is a good case study. Like how do you understand the changes within one person when so many variables are being introduced at once? Science is not just throwing things at the wall and seeing what sticks, it is taking a methodical approach to cause and effect and ruling out or controlling all unknowns. Most of what Bryan is doing is not that. If anything, the doctors around him are taking advantage of him.
@Izak012
@Izak012 Ай бұрын
@@PeripheralVisionary. still interesting
@adnanahmed5606
@adnanahmed5606 20 күн бұрын
@@PeripheralVisionary.except you’re wrong because he’s being measured when they start a new therapy and they try to do one therapy at a time, don’t let perfect be the enemy of good, he might be a single person and doing these therapies pretty close together but the data he’s providing is still new data we would never have and could lead us to testing better therapies
@blasphimus
@blasphimus 19 күн бұрын
​@PeripheralVisionary. He is a good case study. A case study is a review of a specific phenomenon or person. We currently don't have any proof that life extension works at all. If we get one person who does all of this and he lives to 120+ it would be useful to see what, if anything seemed change to give us even a clue what might be effective. Maybe his heart just gives out from muscle loss because there's something genetic or hormonal that wasn't affected. If he dies at 60 we also can see what might not work. The data itself would be useful.
@TheRuben_music
@TheRuben_music 17 күн бұрын
Everything has an end on Earth, including humans, nature, and even the planet itself.
@Roger_808
@Roger_808 8 ай бұрын
it was inevitable that someone like brian would exist. and thank god it was him. hes so open about all the things he does. hes honestly the best person to be doing this.
@advancedbasicsAB
@advancedbasicsAB 8 ай бұрын
Very good point. I like him
@vernon121
@vernon121 8 ай бұрын
It’s fortunate that he also has the financial means from his company’s success to fund his project. Had he been some average wage earner, his dreams would probably just stay as dreams. We’re extremely fortunate he’s using his wealth for the benefit of human health. Imagine if all billionaires used their wealth like this - to solve global challenges. Utopia would probably be reachable.
@un1kum42
@un1kum42 8 ай бұрын
The problem is that he is using a lot of stuff all the time. He can be measured as often as he wants, but if something positive changes through a new drug you cannot tell if it was really through that drug or treatment or if it was the combined effect of all stuff together and every one thing alone wouldn't'd do anything, or he has started a new treatment a month ago, then the next one, something good happens, everyone thinks it was the second treatment, but it was the first or the one before just acting a little late. I don't think that what he is doing is clinically viable and can only lead to traces of new knowledge.
@dogdjinn
@dogdjinn 8 ай бұрын
@@un1kum42 it would still narrow things down REALLY drastically though. tbh starting from the maximum amount of things thrown at the wall, getting a positive, and then narrowing it down to a smaller and smaller subset repeatedly seems like the most efficient way to me
@Naguib55
@Naguib55 8 ай бұрын
Others have done it but less openly and by experimenting on others not themselves.
@yashtrivedi2717
@yashtrivedi2717 8 ай бұрын
Dr. Mike asked the best possible questions without creating an argument, And Bryan answered all those questions in the best possible manner..! It's a sign of a very good podcast. Edit: I've watched the entire podcast..!
@aciuschristophores7789
@aciuschristophores7789 8 ай бұрын
And what a well-worded compliment you gave too, brother!
@simonstanton5299
@simonstanton5299 8 ай бұрын
​@@aciuschristophores7789And what a well worded reply!
@twincherry4958
@twincherry4958 8 ай бұрын
They are both extremely intelligent and well to do.
@ABc-nu6jb
@ABc-nu6jb 8 ай бұрын
Brian is obsessive compulsive to say the very least but what many ppl forget is that he makes money off this whole thing
@jerppazz4525
@jerppazz4525 8 ай бұрын
@@ABc-nu6jb puplic experiment that costs millions to upkeep without money? whats your point
@thabulos
@thabulos 8 ай бұрын
I thought Bryan was obnoxious when he first went viral with what he was trying to do. Every video I watch of this guy he grows on me. After this video I like him even more. His super power is he never gets defensive when he is being criticized. I wish I can be like that more.
@anovosedlik
@anovosedlik 8 ай бұрын
stan
@KingNStheMighty
@KingNStheMighty 8 ай бұрын
For sure. I, for one cannot believe the amount of criticism this guy receives for DARING to further progress within science that could lengthen my own lifespan. It's honestly baffling. And he always sits there and takes it like a champ, answering honestly and with reflection.
@thabulos
@thabulos 8 ай бұрын
@@KingNStheMighty Well said! Couldn't agree more!
@Sindrijo
@Sindrijo 8 ай бұрын
That's probably because he´s actually put some deep thought into it, and also, self-criticised it a lot and genuinely views critique as a path of improvement.
@thabulos
@thabulos 8 ай бұрын
@@Sindrijo Very true! Good insight!
@mindtheprivacy
@mindtheprivacy 5 ай бұрын
13:43 this man is from another planet. The way he sits with the question in such prolonged silence without any defensiveness or signs of a hurt ego is OUTSTANDING for me to observe. I wish i could have that quality. Also Dr. Mike, his questions are so intelligent and so assertive and so, so poignantly insightful, i also wish i had that quality in me.
@kathleenmoore9534
@kathleenmoore9534 4 ай бұрын
Jesus is coming back. . Please Get right with the Lord and read the Bible.
@impo9645
@impo9645 4 ай бұрын
@@kathleenmoore9534he’s real?
@deathbyzen
@deathbyzen 4 ай бұрын
I’m projecting but I think this guy is a rationalist and the fundamental question of rationality is “what do I think I know and how do I think I know it?” So in my mind he truly listened and attempted to understand the question so that he could ask his mind for the answer.
@Ostanes_The_Persian
@Ostanes_The_Persian 4 ай бұрын
​​@@impo9645Nah but those M&M people are definitely real
@AstroSully
@AstroSully 2 ай бұрын
Reminds be of Steve Jobs
@user-kj2gf1cn1p
@user-kj2gf1cn1p 8 ай бұрын
dude, you're an awesome interviewer. you listen closely, let them speak their entire thoughts out, and ask provoking questions without bias. i really appreciate this kind of stuff.
@120-l3l
@120-l3l 6 ай бұрын
I believe that’s definitely part of why he’s such a good doctor!
@notaras1985
@notaras1985 6 ай бұрын
He made good questions but he simps for big pharma
@devcen249
@devcen249 6 ай бұрын
Without bias is inaccurate, but the other points I agree with.
@RiverReeves23
@RiverReeves23 5 ай бұрын
Yeah, the constant look of contempt and a patronising disposition is clearly a good trait to have both as a doctor and as a podcaster.
@waynehedd
@waynehedd 5 ай бұрын
@@notaras1985 Lol - you're troll bot that is stealling Victoria Pheifer's images and videos and uploading on your troll bot channel.
@Appp21
@Appp21 8 ай бұрын
I like how Doctor Mike always has an open mindset with any conversation or belief
@lifestylelines
@lifestylelines 8 ай бұрын
Yes. He’s an amazing communicator / host ❤
@Dontbustthecrust
@Dontbustthecrust 8 ай бұрын
Ehhhhhhhh....
@kroneexe
@kroneexe 8 ай бұрын
@@puffdaddy69open mindset doesn’t mean just going along with falsity.
@Camarda9Francesco
@Camarda9Francesco 8 ай бұрын
thats why we need david goggins next. dr mike is such a great podcaster
@thisiscait
@thisiscait 8 ай бұрын
Naaaah I wanna see him get sassy at obvious crackery
@essendossev362
@essendossev362 8 ай бұрын
I'm really blown away by how you're such a good interviewer. You're researched, knowledgeable, sensitive, have your own valuable background to bring to the conversation, and so competent at formulating your thoughts and questions into accessible, understandable, and still precise language.
@Alexander300gr
@Alexander300gr 8 ай бұрын
Doctor Mike paints Bryan as a wacko with the intro and when speaking to other KZbinrs. Ego has taken over. He is going after Money from my perspective. Not ver doctor like.
@jooolius
@jooolius 8 ай бұрын
​@@Alexander300grdid you watch the video bucko?
@oscartejada9498
@oscartejada9498 8 ай бұрын
@@Alexander300grbrother is just wrong. That’s not at all what happened throughout this video.
@DiogenesNephew
@DiogenesNephew 8 ай бұрын
Oh come on, dude..
@Alexander300gr
@Alexander300gr 8 ай бұрын
@@jooolius sure did buckaroo, interview was sightly better than the “click bait eye popping OMG Bryan is a Crazy” photo. Mike is just like other KZbinrs. All about the clicks.
@unispirit2010
@unispirit2010 6 ай бұрын
I love their respectful conversation, they aren't jumping to conclusions about the other's opinions but actually considering them before telling them theirs. Keep it up Dr. Mike!
@Vollee
@Vollee 5 ай бұрын
An amazing way to show what Bryan is actually trying to do and his views on everything Dr mikes respect towards an idea he is skeptical about is admirable
@kathleenmoore9534
@kathleenmoore9534 4 ай бұрын
​@@VolleeJesus is coming back. . Please Get right with the Lord and read the Bible.
@nadiakhadra1587
@nadiakhadra1587 4 ай бұрын
Dr. Mike is just like every other doctor. Bryan is a revolutionary
@DeanGurren
@DeanGurren 4 ай бұрын
​@@kathleenmoore9534keep your fantasy to yourself
@FlippinFruitFly
@FlippinFruitFly 8 ай бұрын
This is going to be a good one for sure. What I respect most about Bryan is his openness and sense of humor while putting his body through an extreme kind of experiment and without being too pushy about anything.
@tominieminen66
@tominieminen66 8 ай бұрын
At the same time his life is the least extreme and the most extreme 😂
@Karl_Smink
@Karl_Smink 8 ай бұрын
His method is too expensive for anyone outside his earning class, and he's not making money on it. There's no reason for him to be pushy.
@Cora-wh1rr
@Cora-wh1rr 8 ай бұрын
I think the fact that he isn't pushy was why by the end I could in some ways respect his reasoning. The amount of times he just simply said "that is correct" to one of Dr.Mike's arguments was refreshing.
@voiceanddrum
@voiceanddrum 8 ай бұрын
Honestly, Bryan’s don’t die philosophy nudged me enough to get in for my regular checkups which I had procrastinated during covid. It’s nice to contemplate a hopeful future for a change. Not everyone will use these ideas to experiment wildly or without their own approach to measurement. Some will just sleep more, eat better, exercise and go for suggested screenings.
@dinomiles7999
@dinomiles7999 8 ай бұрын
Glade your AWAKE !❤
@sriramananthakrishnan138
@sriramananthakrishnan138 8 ай бұрын
My biggest takeaway from this is that when Bryan is challenged on his methodology he doesn't get defensive as so many others do, he simply states that he doesn't know and presents his argument as to why he believes it will work and how he is objectively measuring it.
@juliendelvat8506
@juliendelvat8506 15 күн бұрын
He also takes a moment to think before jumping to an answer
@rksacademybangla
@rksacademybangla 8 ай бұрын
This is what a conversation between a doctor and an engineer looks like. Both are intellectually sound, yet their logical reasoning skills were built through different mediums of knowledge. Love this episode!!!
@joannas2533
@joannas2533 8 ай бұрын
Well said!
@Meneya
@Meneya 8 ай бұрын
i don’t think he’s an engineer
@joannas2533
@joannas2533 8 ай бұрын
@@Meneya probably meant software engineer / computer scientist based on his prior companies
@paulbarclay4114
@paulbarclay4114 8 ай бұрын
yes its interesting to see someone who was trained in "medical" "science" attempt to reconcicle that with evidence based medicine and logical thinking just shows you how backwards "modern" "medicine" is
@alexv5581
@alexv5581 8 ай бұрын
Engineer lol ? No.
@decbur300
@decbur300 5 ай бұрын
This is SUCH a great example of what a great conversation looks like! Take note of the silence that's left between questions, something which is rarely exercised these days. Great questions formulated in an insightful way and answers to match.
@jessandrews9576
@jessandrews9576 8 ай бұрын
To all Podcasters! its ok to be quiet! I love the short silences between questions, it really creates a sense of professionals considering their answers carefully, giving us as listeners a short period to consider our own answers! This is an example of a perfect podcast! so good! two very different professionals being utterly considerate of each others views and Dr.Mike, your questioning was beautiful!
@SilverFlame819
@SilverFlame819 8 ай бұрын
I think early KZbin days got everyone into jump cuts, and the short video format followed, and now so much content is exhausting. You have to pause or rewind just to have time to take in what you've seen or heard. It's ridiculous.
@xtiebro
@xtiebro 8 ай бұрын
@@SilverFlame819this makes me feel better about how often I pause or rewind content... was thinking something was slow with me!
@SilverFlame819
@SilverFlame819 8 ай бұрын
@@xtiebro They are often just trying to answer quickly, and viewers want that fast, snappy feel... but how much of it are people really taking in and ruminating on when they consume content that quickly?
@Eric3Frog
@Eric3Frog 8 ай бұрын
Silence is just as important as sound. This is true in all conversations and relationships. It gives time to process and creates differential, which are both valuable.
@tyrelsjohnson
@tyrelsjohnson 7 ай бұрын
I've met Bryan in person, and have to say he's an incredible human, and puts a lot of energy into open sourcing such an awesome protocol.
@PakistanIcecream000
@PakistanIcecream000 4 ай бұрын
I like him but disapprove of his fear for death.
@kathleenmoore9534
@kathleenmoore9534 4 ай бұрын
Jesus is coming back. . Please Get right with the Lord and read the Bible. ​@@PakistanIcecream000
@HappyDragneels_page
@HappyDragneels_page 4 ай бұрын
@@PakistanIcecream000 imagine thinking anyone needs your approval to fear death lmao if you were on a plane and the engines failed youd brick your pants, mad cope if you think you wouldnt
@Eren-dl5cs
@Eren-dl5cs 4 ай бұрын
@@kathleenmoore9534yall have been saying that for centuries way back when people shouted on a horse carriage road with a sign. How long are yall going to shout this and be wrong? What makes you so different then those who where convinced this was going to happen up to hundreds of years ago? Why repeat history? How’s it different this time?
@therabbithat
@therabbithat 2 ай бұрын
My mom: don't run with scissors Me: no previous generation has ever correctly mapped the future. 150 years ago horses..
@GeetaNadkarni
@GeetaNadkarni 6 ай бұрын
I think this may have been one of my fave podcast episodes of all time. I had followed some of Brian’s experiments peripherally, but with a skeptical eye, thinking, “Okay here’s a rich guy doing something eccentric.” After this interview I have TREMENDOUS respect for what he’s working on and HOW he’s thinking through it. His thoughtful answers reveal a clarity that is enviable. I want to listen again and absorb the depth that this conversation inspired in me. What a fabulously hopeful message. And of course Dr Mike’s own intellect, emotional intelligence and curiosity brought out the best in Brian. Wonderful!
@KatieDeGo
@KatieDeGo 8 ай бұрын
I admire this dude for performing these science experiments on himself, at least, instead of other people.
@ChronicallyMandyMay
@ChronicallyMandyMay 7 ай бұрын
Great point
@sushil6509
@sushil6509 7 ай бұрын
That too Being a billionaire where he can definitely afford performing it on others
@kj_H65f
@kj_H65f 7 ай бұрын
Didn't get take his sons blood? I get your point though, he is at least putting his own body on the line.
@tainicon4639
@tainicon4639 7 ай бұрын
@@kj_H65fblood draws are pretty harmless… especially if you’re like 20
@warbler1984
@warbler1984 7 ай бұрын
They're bot experiments...its just a mess
@KeelanJon
@KeelanJon 8 ай бұрын
What an amazing episode filled with deep philosophical ideas and conversation. It really shows how we as humans struggle to get past our psychological barriers as a species, and how AI is likely to be our only hope to ever go beyond our biological limitations of thought.
@roni_aust1594
@roni_aust1594 26 күн бұрын
Amazing all right??? Earlier on, he said, "Don't do bad things." Then here he is stealing plasma from his young son. What else will this group of people do in the future for their longevity. What about those that don't have children. Who's children will they be using. And how will they go about getting or finding these children to use for their own benefits.
@KeelanJon
@KeelanJon 26 күн бұрын
@roni_aust1594 I imagine you're a bot, but here's some food for thought. It's no different to organ doners, even easier infact as you don't need full organs. Blood, plasma, etc is in incredible abundance as it replenishes easily in all of us, so you can remain calm that this isn't a huge problem or culture shift.
@marybell8995
@marybell8995 8 ай бұрын
Mike with all the disinformation out there it is a breath of fresh air to have somebody like you on the Internet trying to help people be educated. Thank you so much.
@sgsgbaegbdfb6416
@sgsgbaegbdfb6416 8 ай бұрын
oh man the lack of a comma after "Mike" really tripped me up a little bit 😅😄
@tani2929
@tani2929 8 ай бұрын
@@sgsgbaegbdfb6416 True 💀💀
@DrAndrewSteele
@DrAndrewSteele 8 ай бұрын
Agreed! It’s a real shame that longevity science has become so closely associated with tech billionaires wanting to live forever because there’s genuinely exciting science going on that could help far more than the ultra-wealthy…
@marybell8995
@marybell8995 8 ай бұрын
@@sgsgbaegbdfb6416 sorry ‘bout that 😂
@Dancky2
@Dancky2 8 ай бұрын
​@user-hq4vj3go7boverly aggressive there mate, grammar is there for a reason.
@Beepbeep_its_treasure
@Beepbeep_its_treasure 6 ай бұрын
Bryan Johnson is so admirable. He's striving for excellence and quality in every way. I also admire Bryan to ask the questions that we never have a chance to ask these people behind a screen, that we'll never have a chance to ask, questions that are beyond curious, but are respectfully want to know what's in their heart and mind behind the things they do, believe, feel and want.
@jmd1980
@jmd1980 8 ай бұрын
A part of the debate around this guy's lifestyle that doesn't get discussed enough is his unique situation to do all this. And I don't mean just the fact he can afford it, which he does talk about. I mean that he had the time in his day, this is basically his job at this point. So he's less having to trade his free time for his health and longevity dedication like most of us would. He gets to still have free time for things he enjoys like family. This changes the quality vs quantity debate quite a lot.
@xpaperxcutx4588
@xpaperxcutx4588 8 ай бұрын
He’s spending the money on the testing so that the average layman doesn’t need to. His recipe meals and certain supplements are affordable. The only expensive thing are the biomarker testing
@MNP208
@MNP208 8 ай бұрын
Is he selling any snake oil? This is where I draw the line. Supplements are not proven to be effective for people who are not lacking that particular vitamin in the first place.
@LyrixNChill
@LyrixNChill 8 ай бұрын
​@@MNP208he was literally selling snake oil yesterday 😂 (April 1st)
@SarcasticData
@SarcasticData 8 ай бұрын
@@MNP208 Yes. I am sure that I'm not shocking anyone by letting you know he sells his own special blend of olive oil and chocolate, as well as supplements because of course he sells supplements. But remember it's for the future of the human species 🙄
@NewtZeroist
@NewtZeroist 8 ай бұрын
@@SarcasticDatahis stuff is basically break even. He already made a ton of money, stop being so skeptical
@JayasuryaParthiban
@JayasuryaParthiban 8 ай бұрын
The way you sculptured the questions for Bryan is mindblowing. I can literally see the kind of preparation you did before interviewing him on your podcast. Big fan of your work on KZbin, Doctor Mike!
@Alexander300gr
@Alexander300gr 8 ай бұрын
Doctor Mike paints Bryan as a wacko with the intro and when speaking to other KZbinrs. Ego has taken over. He is going after Money from my perspective. Not ver doctor like.
@Anthonybrother
@Anthonybrother 24 күн бұрын
@@Alexander300gr Of course that's what you get from watching *only* the intro. ''Didn't watch the video'' take.
@ItsJennNotJenny
@ItsJennNotJenny 8 ай бұрын
I absolutely love how empathetic, well thought out and understanding Doctor Mike is. Even if he isn't agreeing with someone, he's not condescending, rude or antagonistic, which is something we need more of these days. The best way to understand something/someone is to communicate and remove ego. There's too many great interviews on this channel to count! I'm a rare disease and multiple rare condition warrior who has lived a very different life than most, and your channel led me to become aquiantences with Bea. She understands more than most people I've known what it's like to be a medically complex person and be judged for superficial and difficult life situations by ignorance. Keep being awesome ❤ I truly hope to have you on my podcast someday!
@mitalishinde6890
@mitalishinde6890 8 ай бұрын
Right I really admire that!
@sophiemarlonansems
@sophiemarlonansems 8 ай бұрын
What’s your podcast called?
@ItsJennNotJenny
@ItsJennNotJenny 8 ай бұрын
@sophiemarlonansems it's called "Seriously Random." It's new and not released yet as I'm still recording and editing, but keep an eye out for it on KZbin, Spotify, and Apple. 🙂
@Anna-ms1pd
@Anna-ms1pd 8 ай бұрын
Dr Mike for president!
@Alexander300gr
@Alexander300gr 8 ай бұрын
Doctor Mike paints Bryan as a wacko with the intro and when speaking to other KZbinrs. Ego has taken over. He is going after Money from my perspective. Not very doctor like.
@Kenzingo
@Kenzingo 11 күн бұрын
I haven’t even watched the podcast yet… But with what he is doing, I don’t see it hurting society, but it can help society and put him in the history books if he is able to accomplish longevity. Hell, even if he didn’t accomplish the longevity, he is putting valuable firsthand research into new methods & test the POSSIBLE efficacy of them. But then you have the issue…how do you truly measure that.
@tab8294
@tab8294 8 күн бұрын
True , infact we have to be thankful to this guy who is doing some experiments with his body to know how to extend human life🎉
@marvanbee
@marvanbee 8 ай бұрын
I would love to see Bryan's work expand to mental health and trauma. I think there is sooooo much humans have to cope with that negatively impacts their health, literally impacting things like immune response, breathing, etc. and to the best of my knowledge, nobody is bridging the gap here either. I would especially like to see this with children/people who grow up in the foster care or group home situations; a massive percentage of these people end up living on the streets and having severe addictions at frighteningly young ages. Nobody can simply just tell those people to sleep more or eat better; the absence of parental and societal love has deep, deep impacts. Imagine somebody could say, "so, you went through [insert trauma here], which resulted in x and *this is how we fix that* "! So few people have access to affordable, quality therapy that supports not only the mental & emotional well being but also tracks things physically to determine physical effects. Healthcare is still far too much of a piecemeal model with specialists not talking to one another and the patient kept largely out of the loop. Maybe one day Bryan will be minister of Health in some part of the world. I wonder what he'd do in a role like that. Anyway, lovely and intriguing interview. :)
@Jade-ms2ys
@Jade-ms2ys 8 ай бұрын
perhaps dr Gabor mate would interest you on this subject
@marvanbee
@marvanbee 8 ай бұрын
@Jade-ms2ys thanks. I've listened to bunch of his talks and he seems to also lack scientific tracking of physical changes with treatment. And not all treatments are effective for all issues. Hopefully we're heading in the right direction though.
@tw8464
@tw8464 6 ай бұрын
That's an excellent point
@MagicBodyMind
@MagicBodyMind 6 ай бұрын
I hope @BryanJohnson would read this idea in the comment above& If I had the means I'd be measuring the s**t out of my trauma and effects of therapy! I wanted to do it for Phd but it's really unsustainable here in Russia at the moment
@seitanbeatsyourmeat666
@seitanbeatsyourmeat666 5 ай бұрын
I’m a believer that the sins of the father are visited on the son; aka we don’t have free will because of trauma our parents and grandparents went through. It not only changes our physical DNA while still in our mother’s eggs, while she’s inside our grandmother as a fetus, but her trauma-bonded raising will dictate how she raises you (even if she makes a huge effort to change. I’m proof of that with my son). This pre-born damage changes everything, imo. It’s a faulty foundation to build on… it creates the perfect environment for serious mental health issues
@kevinbing730
@kevinbing730 8 ай бұрын
I am shocked at what a talented interviewer Dr Mike is. New Yorkers are not afraid to ask you hard questions to your face :)
@joemama8243
@joemama8243 8 ай бұрын
those were not hard lol they were all answered and debunked easily, the doctor just wants more patients lol so he wants people to live unhealthy
@argoneonoble
@argoneonoble 8 ай бұрын
I thought Dr Mike is Canadian.
@beckbeck1432
@beckbeck1432 8 ай бұрын
@@argoneonoblehe’s actually originally from Russia.
@rachana777
@rachana777 8 ай бұрын
A Russian New Yorker at that !
@Artaxerxes.
@Artaxerxes. 8 ай бұрын
​@@argoneonoble he Russian, lil f*ck
@Chocolatestarfish105
@Chocolatestarfish105 8 ай бұрын
This was an unexpectedly thoughtful conversation with a man who has undoubtedly made a splash in the headlines for being seemingly eccentric in his quest for youth. He came across as much more self aware than I would've expected. Thoroughly enjoyed this one!
@kingcosworth2643
@kingcosworth2643 8 ай бұрын
The idea of living forever sounds like hell, no thanks
@VirusTree1000.
@VirusTree1000. 8 ай бұрын
​@@kingcosworth2643 You don't have to do it, but I bet your tone would change when you're finally decaying at a nursing home.
@joshwadsworth8261
@joshwadsworth8261 8 ай бұрын
I also was not expecting him to be as self aware as he appeared to be during this interview. I enjoyed it.
@DemsW
@DemsW 8 ай бұрын
​@@kingcosworth2643the best thing is having a choice how much time you spend there. Most people that die would probably wish to have been younger longer.
@v4ln
@v4ln 8 ай бұрын
@@kingcosworth2643the idea is not necessarily living forever, but living until you choose not to, or, not dying when you want to live
@melbournewolf
@melbournewolf 6 ай бұрын
I've seen all the media hype Bryan did not generate himself and I'm so glad I watched your interview with him. I've always maintained I want to live forever and everyone says "you'll get bored", Bryan is proving that statement wrong by being humble about his personal achievement and what he wants to communicate more broadly, as with your wap up take away hope. I might achieve my goal but I think Bryan will achieve his.
@HaraldEngels
@HaraldEngels 8 ай бұрын
I have watched multiple interviews with Bryan Johnson. This was one of the best, it was conducted in a great pace and with questions which really made sense. And Bryan Johnson is a pleasure to speak with I guess. If his clarity of mind is a mirror of his physical health then he is a goalpost for what we all should try to achieve - especially on the philosophical level.
@clay5677
@clay5677 7 ай бұрын
Thank you for making this point about Bryan Johnson! I read the articles written about him and thought "I have to look up this quack." After watching his KZbin channels and looking deeper into Blueprint, this guy makes a ton of sense and should be an example (yes, an extreme one) of health that we can all learn from.
@ForeverTCB
@ForeverTCB 7 ай бұрын
I also enjoyed Tucker Carlson’ interview
@ronjakh
@ronjakh 8 ай бұрын
I have so much respect for Bryan! He’s not gatekeeping anything and I truly believe that he’s going to make a difference. He’s also so empathetic and understanding of people who aren’t able to do what he’s doing. He doesn’t expect anyone to walk his path, he doesn’t shame anyone for making “wrong” choices and shares what’s most effective according to the research so we can adapt it to our own lives. He’s basically surrendering his body and life to the research and furthering what we know about longevity. I love watching his videos, fascinating!
@etz8360
@etz8360 8 ай бұрын
@@OArchivesXwhat is this "psuedoscience" you speak of?
@Real28
@Real28 8 ай бұрын
He is not empathetic at all. Dudes doing what only 0.001% of the population can and being naive thinking he can live forever. He dies before 100. Watch.
@NoobieToob
@NoobieToob 8 ай бұрын
@@etz8360 pretending his n=1 case study has massive bearings on the wellbeing of humans as a species
@ronjakh
@ronjakh 8 ай бұрын
@@OArchivesXI’m a casual viewer of his videos and don’t know anything about his “following”. Wouldn’t call myself a follower as such other than being subscribed to his youtube channel. I watch a lot of creators on here for entertainment or interest. as far as I know he only does things that are backed by science and tangible results. No pseudoscience or opinions. If you don’t like him or his way of life, don’t watch his videos and don’t follow his advice. No one is forcing you into anything 🙂
@RobStewart-jp8pz
@RobStewart-jp8pz 6 ай бұрын
@@etz8360 seems like you're working for someone
@Do27gg
@Do27gg 7 ай бұрын
I admire this man Sent from iPhone 84
@MagicBodyMind
@MagicBodyMind 6 ай бұрын
😆
@divyalattoo
@divyalattoo 5 ай бұрын
😂😂
@lloyd4011
@lloyd4011 5 ай бұрын
Such a great comment 😂
@PsycadelicScion
@PsycadelicScion 5 ай бұрын
Go back to your own time , chrono-immigrant.
@JakeB-Real
@JakeB-Real 4 ай бұрын
lol
@KekeeBlack
@KekeeBlack 5 күн бұрын
He's doing precisely what I'd be doing if I was wealthy, I'm happy to see him doing all of this. Also, his shirt is so darn cute.
@jaymills1111
@jaymills1111 8 ай бұрын
You're legitimately one of the best interviewers I've seen, and this was super interesting. I particularly like the way you asked Brian questions and I really enjoyed the way he answered them and thought about them. Great discussion, please for the love of all things keep interviewing people!
@grumpyhawk509
@grumpyhawk509 8 ай бұрын
For the love of God you mean? Or don't believe in God?
@MinisterioÚltimoPacto
@MinisterioÚltimoPacto 8 ай бұрын
@@grumpyhawk509 She meant “all things” in other words “don’t stop interviewing people for the love you have for life!” As much as he loves life, that’s how much he should interview others. 👍🏼
@vdp888
@vdp888 8 ай бұрын
It's because he's a family medicine doctors. Unlike majority of specialities he has to take time (although limited) to listen to his patients to help treat them. Most important test is the the history and physical! ❤
@ElderBobcat
@ElderBobcat 8 ай бұрын
So he’s recognized that he’s in a unique position where he has the ability to focus on future ideology and sees while this may not make him live forever it’s somewhat neutral positive for his health and simultaneously influencing future researchers to pick up the mantle. Gotta say he’s not as crazy as i thought from media
@east_coastt
@east_coastt 8 ай бұрын
Shows how the media sensationalise things
@jeremyrennerapp
@jeremyrennerapp 8 ай бұрын
just look at his face. you’re seriously calling that neutral positive ?
@ElderBobcat
@ElderBobcat 8 ай бұрын
@@jeremyrennerapp if you want a real response I believe he’s taking some derivative of estrogen that has caused his skin to be somewhat smoother without the feminizing effects. As I said hes the guinea pig for future generations to go that worked, that didn’t. And progress from there
@bperez8656
@bperez8656 8 ай бұрын
You shouldn’t have been listening to the media in the first place
@Vastilious
@Vastilious 8 ай бұрын
​whats wrong with his face ??? He just has glass skin @e7193
@ItzEpix
@ItzEpix 8 ай бұрын
As a person who is 9173 years old I can confirm this video is real
@everlyneawino1769
@everlyneawino1769 8 ай бұрын
Oh ok😅
@nicholaswilliams3133
@nicholaswilliams3133 8 ай бұрын
I can confirm it is real too im 6969 years old
@mohammedezzinehaddady7252
@mohammedezzinehaddady7252 8 ай бұрын
I thought i was the only one, i think i am gone throw a birthday party the next month i should be 10k by then hopefully 🥸
@roymarrerodz4141
@roymarrerodz4141 8 ай бұрын
Im pretty sure this video is true im 4115 years old and i eat 98% of hes diet 🤔
@azpont7275
@azpont7275 8 ай бұрын
Long live the Emperor!
@mickeymosso75
@mickeymosso75 Ай бұрын
I am impressed by the quality of the interview, both the interviewee and the interviewer. There is really a lot of quality in the questions asked and a lot of intelligent thinking in the answers.
@fantastichan
@fantastichan 8 ай бұрын
Don't get why some people say the interviewer is being condescending. Just because he's asking pointed questions and challenging the believes doesn't mean it can't be done respectfully. People nowadays are so fragile. Also very impressed with how the answers are provided. Always taking time to think and answering straight to the point and with careful consideration. And he's very self aware.
@jeremyrennerapp
@jeremyrennerapp 8 ай бұрын
“people nowadays are so fragile” is such a cop out. people have always been fragile. you’re just feeding into the long held belief that the loud minority is actually the majority
@bperez8656
@bperez8656 8 ай бұрын
Dr. mike is a hater vying for gotcha moments Big pharma spokesperson trying to take down independent people and free thinkers who are engaged in research outside of big medicine.
@Antifuzz1
@Antifuzz1 8 ай бұрын
I have seen this a lot online, could potentially be a lot of people who speak English as a second language and or don't understand the complexity of the conversation/ don't understand the nuances of asking a complex question holistically not because the person asking the question has that stance but to test ideas.
@broken_abi6973
@broken_abi6973 7 ай бұрын
@@Antifuzz1 I see these comments against the interviewer challenging the guest's views everywhere on the internet. I don't think it is just a non-native English-speaking phenomenon because I also see it on youtube channels focused on American politics. People seem to just have forgotten what's the point of interviews. They either want the guest to do a sales pitch with no interruptions, or they think that an interview is a debate.
@willlagos8554
@willlagos8554 8 ай бұрын
I really appreciate Bryan’s earnest thoughtfulness - his ability to consider questions, his own experience, and his admission when he doesn’t know or hasn’t considered something. And the questions that provoke this sort of thought. Great conversation between two very thoughtful humans. Great video.
@VRayDantesTrygorn
@VRayDantesTrygorn 8 ай бұрын
I loved that Bryan actually stopped to think about answers. This was a brilliant conversation between two very smart human beings. Loved it ❤
@bettyphan1239
@bettyphan1239 6 ай бұрын
I LOVE the fact that they have their own opinions and are able to have a super chill, respectful conversation!! This is a whole VIBE and I’m loving it. I have a lot of respect for these two men.
@yajurvendrachudasama7497
@yajurvendrachudasama7497 8 ай бұрын
I like the way this Bryan Johnson talks. The way he’s thinking before answering questions.
@JamalIssa
@JamalIssa 8 ай бұрын
such a respectful, calm, and insightful conversation. this is how debate and modern-day conversations should be about, regardless of topic.
@jozefwoo8079
@jozefwoo8079 8 ай бұрын
Second conversation I watch on this channel and now I understand why it has so many subscribers. What a respectful and yet thorough conversation! Well done.
@AngelaDruckmanCST
@AngelaDruckmanCST 6 ай бұрын
Of all the things Bryan has done, I most admire him because he did something very few people do: he saw the way his life was going, didn't like that trajectory and changed it. How many people really truly do that? In their 40's? He seems so happy in his life and he was so very unhappy before. I say good for him.
@Bela363
@Bela363 8 ай бұрын
"Don't die" puts me on alert. Live! Gives me strength.
@markmits9075
@markmits9075 8 ай бұрын
I think he might be expressing that on purpose, to try and fight common unhealthy things people do.
@theanarchonazbolinquisition
@theanarchonazbolinquisition 8 ай бұрын
Being alert increases your chances of staying alive though.
@decoy8198
@decoy8198 8 ай бұрын
You have spent all of the last 20 days living, how many have you spent not dying. Worth thinking about
@Bela363
@Bela363 8 ай бұрын
@@decoy8198 It's a question of perspective. Words have power. This is called positive psychology. Using words like “death” increases my stress level and therefore my range of thinking. Those who fight with a cool head fight better and are not cramped like he is. Better to climb upwards in life than to only hold on before death. Do you feel the emotional difference when you read this?
@Plamler
@Plamler 8 ай бұрын
If a human’s goal is to reproduce prior to death, in a post- death society the core instinct would be to not die because the opportunity for reproduction is always available. Just on a logical sense I kinda get it.
@jplayzow
@jplayzow 8 ай бұрын
I appreciate no matter right or wrong he hasn't deluded himself into thinking he has all the answers and knows immediately what will happen
@danielgriffiths5901
@danielgriffiths5901 8 ай бұрын
Yeah, both were really sharp here
@TsChryssa
@TsChryssa 8 ай бұрын
I admire Bryan Johnson for his innovative spirit and entrepreneurial vision. His ability to merge philosophical and scientific concerns in such ventures showcases his multidimensional approach to problem-solving. Dr. Mike's expertise as a doctor and his pragmatic nature adds depth and perspective to their podcast discussions, making it a valuable and enriching experience. I thoroughly enjoyed the entire video and watched it non-stop!
@kingcosworth2643
@kingcosworth2643 8 ай бұрын
The concept of living forever might sound great to someone who lives without stress and has the freedom to live the way they want. The idea of me having to work my labour intensive job for eternity sounds like a fate far worse than death, I'll take the death.
@Dr.Hiccup
@Dr.Hiccup 8 ай бұрын
I agree with everything u said but ur comment sounds AI generated lol
@Stereochemistry
@Stereochemistry 8 ай бұрын
I find him delusional, abominable, self-absorbed and entirely detached from the reality. Likely the saddest person I've ever seen in my whole life. Yes, he reflects on things but from a perspective of a super rich American capitalist... A perspective that is reserved for the 0.0001% of this planet, entirely unsustainable at any level. Infinite life on a finite planet makes no mathematical sense and no AI will ever fix that paradox
@francescafrancesca3554
@francescafrancesca3554 8 ай бұрын
​@@Dr.Hiccup I know right? I thought the same thing JAJ
@Stereochemistry
@Stereochemistry 8 ай бұрын
@@neovyk I'm definitely not miserable. I just find that he's entirely detached from reality. His mission and belief is to advance the human race by doing a single person experiment. A single person experiment that costs millions will do nothing to advance the human race as such, when the majority of that race lives in poverty lacking basic stuff. Very, very few people have access to that level of care that he's using for his experiment. Moreover, thinking that the outcomes of a single case study can be generalised and considered valid for the entire population is flawed and goes against the very core of that science that he claims he understands and uses to his benefit. And ultimately - longevity is overrated. It really really is.
@krossxeye660
@krossxeye660 2 ай бұрын
I really love not necessarily Bryan's content but his intent and transparency with his intent. He's a guinea pig and wants his work and research to advance the scene, even if his methods and procedures are flawed at times (you run a continuous experiment for years and not goof here and there) he's putting a lot of information into the longevity scene.
@AwakenYourSensory
@AwakenYourSensory 8 ай бұрын
This pod hosted by Dr. Mike and Bryan Johnson provide valuable insights. My key takeaway is the importance of adopting a lifestyle that prioritizes the quality of life. This involves focusing on aspects such as improved nutrition, regular exercise, sufficient sleep, overall mental and emotional well-being, and allowing other uncertainties to resolve themselves. Additionally, it's essential to embrace the mantra of living, loving, and laughing along the way.
@J.Colfer
@J.Colfer 8 ай бұрын
I swear my brain grew bigger after listening this conversation. Impossible “listen to it in the background”, requires all the attention to understand this deep conversation. Loved every second of it!
@Noctua07
@Noctua07 8 ай бұрын
You should see a doctor to make sure the swelling doesn't cause brain damage ;) :P
@DILFDylF
@DILFDylF 7 ай бұрын
It's true, I was sitting behind you and I could hear your skull cracking apart from the pressure, I got scared and passed out. Have you seen my wallet, by the way?
@PrincesaAzalea
@PrincesaAzalea 8 ай бұрын
I LOVE how respectful Dr. Mike is. He makes the interview with healthy skepticism but remains open minded at the same time. What an incredible interviewer. Thank you for this, I truly appreciate it.
@loganpraz2566
@loganpraz2566 2 ай бұрын
17:38 I love how he’s totally blunt like “nah I wanna be somebody I wanna be known (basically regardless of the work it takes)”
@katnbud
@katnbud 8 ай бұрын
I was the person who asked for this video in a comment on another episode of The Checkup! Thanks Dr. Mike! 😊
@MusoStuu
@MusoStuu 8 ай бұрын
One of the most thought-provoking interesting debates I’ve heard for ages, I was glued for the entire time.. he’s actually quite a philosopher..❤
@Joe_SharkSkin
@Joe_SharkSkin 8 ай бұрын
Remember, longevity starts now! People always make the common mistake of worrying about wear and tear when it’s too late, I.e. blasting music in your ear and now you are going deaf and want treatment! Treatment starts now! Practice preventative measures now! NOW!!!
@nicbarth3838
@nicbarth3838 8 ай бұрын
This is true thanks for the inspiration
@martaribeiro96
@martaribeiro96 8 ай бұрын
For real. I started changing my lifetsyle a little bit (emphasis on A LITTLE BIT) and I was seen as crazy because I was too young to worry about those things. Like, yeah, sorry I'm trying to prevent future health problems, I really must be crazy 🙄
@Havok135
@Havok135 8 ай бұрын
Mmm fear mongering, gotta love it.
@PS-lv1mr
@PS-lv1mr 8 ай бұрын
wear earplugs in concerts. they make great fidelity earplugs that make it so it essentially reduces outside volume but retains audio quality
@east_coastt
@east_coastt 8 ай бұрын
@@martaribeiro96what stuff did you change?
@jamesadowney
@jamesadowney 6 ай бұрын
I really appreciate this episode. As a doctor myself, I had been contemplating Bryan Johnson's "experiment" for some time and you bring up the same questions I had. The problem with the "orders of magnitude intelligence" argument with insects vs humans and humans vs AI is that we are orders of magnitude more intelligent than insects, but we are not able to assist insects in living forever despite the fact that their biologic systems are significantly less complex than humans. Increasing intelligence does not produce infinite knowledge/skill. With increasing cellular complexity comes decreasing longevity. Bryan Johnson would have to turn himself into a system of pluripotent stem cells to be successful at immortality. And, sadly, the issue of "quality of time" over "quantity of time" means he is actually no longer pursuing a true "human" existence.
@llkoolbean4935
@llkoolbean4935 6 ай бұрын
Well said
@huckwalton2307
@huckwalton2307 8 ай бұрын
I really admire the way he stops and considers each question. It makes me trust his pursuits and his intelligence.
@Zack_Taylor
@Zack_Taylor 8 ай бұрын
Only ten minutes in but I do respect this guy more than I thought I was going to. I don't necessarily agree with him on everything but he's a lot less arrogant than I was expecting him to be.
@huckwalton2307
@huckwalton2307 7 ай бұрын
Right? Thoughtfulness and humility go a long way. I had the same feeling.
@Duneram
@Duneram 7 ай бұрын
I got to say, this touched me on a personal level - not so much because im very interested in anti aging procedures (thoough it does sound like a fun sience field), but instead because of the utmost respect you guys had for each other. Both of you guys were 100% willing to listen out the other person, there was no talking over the other, even when you disagreed you were respecting yourself on a personal level. Long story short thanks for this beautiful conversation and best of luck to both of you
@zhangir40
@zhangir40 8 ай бұрын
I didn’t how much I needed this podcast because in most cases I see videos with Bryan Johnson as rich man with some cool slash weird gimmick while this podcast actually deeply shows he is thoughts process rather simply saying I want live longer.
@manuel0689
@manuel0689 4 ай бұрын
The best interview to Bryan to date. Excellent mix of philosophical and scientific questions and excellent follow up questions. My take on Bryan’s attempt is that it will indeed be a reference to future humans, he will answer the what if question that 100% of us have but don’t have the time, resources or just the will power to discover. Now here is what I think will happen either he will die of other causes like accident and will be unable to accomplish his goal, or just like he predicted AI will have the answer to his question before he can. I’m a Christian and my other take on the matter is that the flesh has an expiration date and only the soul survives. Still I enjoy every minute of intellectual conversation this two had.
@AlecSorensen
@AlecSorensen 8 ай бұрын
Kudos to both of them. I have a rarely seen a video where a person challenges another's ideas so thoroughly, and yet both are respectful.
@garrygrant2394
@garrygrant2394 7 ай бұрын
You need people like him to help push things forward. The average MD scores an E or F when it comes to healthy longevity or general overall health but scores a respectable B or even an A for trauma. If you're involved in a car crash or just been poisoned your MD is King. But they can destroy your longterm health with prescribing your countless pharmaceuticals.This was a good interview and more doctors should be having these conversations.
@BespokeBookArt
@BespokeBookArt 5 ай бұрын
Yes, I agree fully and I wonder why that is, htat the people paid and trained to improve peoples health often destroy it longterm.
@garrygrant2394
@garrygrant2394 5 ай бұрын
@@BespokeBookArt Because the money is in selling pharmaceuticals. The entire medical training industry is geared towards prescribing /selling big pharma which is terrible but I wonder why so many medical students don't question this? Maybe because they are book smart but not actually that intelligent. Academia and intelligence are very different things of course.
@olandsmith2660
@olandsmith2660 8 ай бұрын
That question about the value of life being less valuable when adjusted to be longer was such a great point.
@BiggieChungulus
@BiggieChungulus 8 ай бұрын
So wait, someone who lives a short life dies earlier than someone who lives longer... The person who lives longer gets more value out of their life by living beceause the person who died earlier is already dead?
@saurabhsonic
@saurabhsonic 8 ай бұрын
The other way of looking at the value of life is to compare life lengths --- if you had the choice of two life lengths - one much longer and one much shorter - would you (or anyone) choose the much shorter lifespan because its shorter length implies that it's more valuable? Let me give you my answer: I would choose the longer life every day and twice on Sundays.
@olandsmith2660
@olandsmith2660 8 ай бұрын
@@saurabhsonic Just seems that knowing how long on average we live; would make human beings push for more in life and innovation increases. Remember that although you may live longer not everyone around you will…which is sad because eventually you would continually be hurt by all the people you will eventually have to miss.
@challengerjakku1943
@challengerjakku1943 8 ай бұрын
The question becomes value to who? Value is ultimately subjective, so for Bryan I would assume not dying is more valuable to him. If this man figures out immortality, sign me tf up.
@Brian-oz8io
@Brian-oz8io 8 ай бұрын
This particular ideology is dependent on technology changing everything and stopping aging and eventually solving most (or all) of our problems. If we hypothetically assume that to be the case, the idea would be that if you live long enough you’ll get to experience completely new things that haven’t yet been thought of. You might also get to do all the things you want to do now (that you feel might increase your quality of life) and more For example: If we had complete control over our biology in the future, you might get to eat all those potato chips or whatever else you wanted to do and it wouldn’t matter anymore. So the quality of life you have now wouldn’t seem like a big deal. If you lived 500 years, you’d probably look back and say “wow the first 40 years of my life weren’t exactly what I wanted, but these last 300 have been awesome.” This part of your life would probably seem like less than a prologue For some people, I guess those possibilities are worth making some sacrifices
@JM-zi1wp
@JM-zi1wp 6 ай бұрын
He's not "obsessed"... He could give sh!t all to the rest of the world with the kind of money he has, instead he's doing more for the human race than the science community together ever could, or would. However he's going about it is his prerogative, and he's doing so well I'm truly happy for him.
@Thrive_Momentum
@Thrive_Momentum 8 ай бұрын
I finally understand what Bryan Johnson is doing, thank you Dr. Mike for helping us see a better side of his view
@Appp21
@Appp21 8 ай бұрын
The questions that Doctor Mike asks is always very deep. It is never boring or straightforward
@nijiayame848
@nijiayame848 8 ай бұрын
I came here as a skeptical (even biased) but this whole postcast was so mindblowing and eyes opening - I cannot thank both of you enough.
@Leaving_TheMatrix
@Leaving_TheMatrix 2 ай бұрын
This doctor is so smart. Not only he tries to warn and educate the public about the potential drawbacks and dangers of such an extreme lifestyle, but there's a genuine desire to make the interviewee think over many aspects of his don't die philosophy. His knowledge is wholesome and practical, I wish more doctors would be like him. 👏 👏 👏
@esaef91
@esaef91 8 ай бұрын
2 intelligent people with different viewpoints having a civil discussion. I love your podcast.
@The-bi5ry
@The-bi5ry 8 ай бұрын
I have a lot of respect for Bryan watching this. Its interesting that everyone keeps saying he looks healthy and ill at the same time and I realised it could be his eyes. His eyes just look so tired while his body looks healthy. I wonder if he takes into account the toll of stress and mental health on physical health. Objectively speaking, no matter how much control you have and like having, sometimes that can be very stressful internally and counterproductive to extending his physical wellbeing. To kick your feet up and just relax even with inevitable bad things is both a blessing and a mode of healing for humans, regardless of who you are.
@xwanyatx
@xwanyatx 6 ай бұрын
Eyes will always give away your true age.
@kremzupa_69
@kremzupa_69 5 ай бұрын
It's a work in progress, all of it. So you have a good point ✍️ I think it's possible that Bryan might not complete his goal in this lifetime, and that someone else might.
@Mike-da
@Mike-da 4 ай бұрын
He was partying the night before lol. Just saw his vid of being in NYC. Maybe that’s why.
@alextromler6407
@alextromler6407 4 ай бұрын
@@Mike-dahe parties?
@kathykonkle1097
@kathykonkle1097 4 ай бұрын
@@alextromler6407 as long as he can be home and in bed by 8:30 pm I guess. His longevity lifestyle is probably toxic to everyone that has to deal with him.
@Studycase3000
@Studycase3000 8 ай бұрын
This was SUCH an interesting conversation. Bryan Johnson is a futurist, through and through. Once I thought about it (took me 2 days to hit play) and gave the vid it's chance, I was completely engrossed within the first 3 minutes. This was one of the fastest hour long pods I've sat to watch. Thank you both for being open and candid on THE eternal hot topic
@newbeginnings3859
@newbeginnings3859 6 ай бұрын
One thing I like about him is he shares his insights for free with the masses. We can’t afford these expensive tests so I appreciate him doing the testing then sharing
@coocat231
@coocat231 8 ай бұрын
Perfect conversation between a scientist and an engineer. This needs to happen significantly more. This is how innovation and advancement happens.
@Rodrigo_Goes
@Rodrigo_Goes 8 ай бұрын
I like Bryan! He’s doing an amazing experiment, truly valuable to science 🙏🏻
@matheusulisses5579
@matheusulisses5579 8 ай бұрын
Well. Look at him!
@matheusulisses5579
@matheusulisses5579 8 ай бұрын
Is Bryan Fake Natty? 🧐
@namelesswonder7077
@namelesswonder7077 8 ай бұрын
@@matheusulisses5579 I don't think there is a point in asking Bryan "natty or not" for what he does. He definitely optimizes his hormonal health which might result in him taking HRT.
@pibs863
@pibs863 8 ай бұрын
imagine what can bryan's baseball bat do
@matheusulisses5579
@matheusulisses5579 8 ай бұрын
@@namelesswonder7077 You're right. But what I said was a joke that you wouldn't understand 😌
@Mayfrancisxavier
@Mayfrancisxavier 8 ай бұрын
I love what he says about people not focusing on wealth and status and more on just living and being healthy which is something we all have in common. Will definitely make the world a better place I think.
@emmab009
@emmab009 4 ай бұрын
I’ve watched a couple of interviews with Bryan, that showed respect for what he was actually doing and trying to achieve, very different from what social media has tried to portray him as. He is using himself as a human experiment which is admirable, should be respected and his choice to do so. He is also an ethical person, for which I have a great deal of respect for.
@alansnyder8448
@alansnyder8448 8 ай бұрын
I am 100% with Bryan on the importance of sleep, and I have used my Whoop strap to figure out what things affect my sleep. I'm still working on improvements.
@AgentOrange96
@AgentOrange96 7 ай бұрын
I use sleep trackers as well, and I do find them useful. I'd say in response to Dr. Mike's point that you'll know if you slept shitty without one, this is true. And I am definitely a better judge of how I slept or how rested I am than my sleep trackers. But I think the insights they can provide are useful in addition to how I feel. For example, if I'm not well rested, what can the data tell me? Maybe my depth of sleep appears to be poor (a big issue for me by the looks of it) or some sleep trackers can detect sleep apnea. Then it becomes a matter of how can I improve this. I think there is a tendency for some to over rely on technology, and I think that's problematic and cause harm. (I've definitely seen bad data on my sleep trackers, but I usually know why.) But for the right mindset, it can be a good supplemental tool.
@gillesh.9405
@gillesh.9405 8 ай бұрын
Thanks to both for this video. I enjoy it deeply. I stumbled upon Bryan through diary of a CEO and find him fascinating. I disregard all the hate he gets, I see in him a truly generous and dedicated person that wants to achieve a goal and he is not hurting ANYONE by doing so. I enjoy Mike’s approach to this discussion and it was a genuine moment with good questions. Great content
@Planetside223
@Planetside223 8 ай бұрын
Could have donated that money to a childerns hospital. I wouldn’t really call this generous, just someone afraid of death with a large PR budget
@eduardobreda1279
@eduardobreda1279 8 ай бұрын
@@Planetside223go make that kind of request from your politicians mate.
@skyw8248
@skyw8248 8 ай бұрын
@@Planetside223you can donate all your money to a child’s hospital. You aren’t even investing your money into various longevity technologies.
@14s0cc3r14
@14s0cc3r14 8 ай бұрын
@@eduardobreda1279por que no los dos?
@OnThatSillyPath
@OnThatSillyPath 8 ай бұрын
I think something like this at some point of the interview but he also say that he's gonna put all the information gathered of his proyect for free and who knows maybe between all that we find some few things that could benefit medical advancement (not necessarily human inmortality but in other kind of stuff). ​@@Planetside223
@lauragamello560
@lauragamello560 8 ай бұрын
I am so impressed by this interview. Both men are extremely intelligent and able to have a conversation delving in to the whys, whats, whens, and hows. Not always agreeing upon everything, but being absolutely respectful and listening intently and understanding the other’s opinion, with what seemed to be great respect. I honestly find this whole exchange fascinating. Although I do have a lot of the same questions, doubts, and concerns as Dr. Mike, I found myself also understanding Bryan’s take on certain ideas and concepts. This is his experience and his reality and he is certainly not an ignorant man. Brilliant interview, gentlemen. 👍
@stacysully7626
@stacysully7626 4 ай бұрын
Brilliant and enlightened conversation. Such a thoughtful interview and Bryan has some true humility and very grounded realistic views. I so appreciate Dr Mikes calm and clear style, allowing so much room a such a conversation.
@jonnypeters0
@jonnypeters0 8 ай бұрын
This checked all of the boxes of a great interview. Listening, prompting interesting and relevant conversation, providing valuable and educated criticism, adapting the questions to fit the tone, giving disclaimers when something moves into opinion territory. Submit it as material for college courses on interviewing.
@quandaryn1231
@quandaryn1231 8 ай бұрын
Franky, I never understood the whole issue a lot of people seem to have with life extension. The whole point of medicine is life extension. If you really don't want to live anymore, you always have the option to end it. Everything else is just cope with what we currently perceive as the inevitability of death and how we try to convince ourselves that "oh it's really not that bad" even though most people, if given the choice, would choose to not die at any given moment.
@lonelylama5222
@lonelylama5222 8 ай бұрын
I agree. I want to live for another thousand years, because there is so much to do in this world.
@KAITLYN-wq2rq
@KAITLYN-wq2rq 8 ай бұрын
I’m not to keen on true immortality due to things like natural disasters and the lifespan of planets. Just a super long lifespan extension with a healthy body is not much of an issue to me. There are many things there are to learn like history or chemistry, gardening or find out how to install solar on a cabin.
@pomberry3591
@pomberry3591 8 ай бұрын
It's not just a personal issue at that point, it's a ressources one. Can someone who is 120 + continue to work or at least be independent? We're going to have to shift away from our hyper capitalistic mindset if there are more "unproductive" members in our societies.
@betiii
@betiii 8 ай бұрын
That's not the same thing. Being Unhealthy causes suffering. You choose treatment to get rid of this suffering. Ideally, aging does not equal suffer.
@jedlabedla5893
@jedlabedla5893 22 күн бұрын
@@pomberry3591 But as they ve said several times in the interview we have no idea what future is gonna be like. Obviously with lifespan quality of life is going to rise as well.
@itswhzly
@itswhzly 7 ай бұрын
I love how Brian really takes time to think, he's so authentic and intentional, I dont see an ego behind his eyes just waiting to counter, he's great
@karthikeshwar
@karthikeshwar 22 күн бұрын
One of the best interviews/podcasts ever
@nolaquev
@nolaquev 8 ай бұрын
I love Bryan. I really admire his discipline and how he's thought through his whole philosophy. Good to see Dr Mike listening so closely with an open mind.
@sabrina_sapphic
@sabrina_sapphic 8 ай бұрын
I really appreciated the philosophical discussion. Once again Dr. Mike being a champion of patience, empathy and education. I do think more discussion on the politics is important- i.e. if we don't tackle climate change none of this matters, we can't live or 'biohack' on a dead planet. If we don't end global poverty, then global health outcomes will only get worse (look into the field of Medical Anthropology for examples). I would love to see the 'don't die' philosophy taken to the societal level as a core focus i.e. stop killing/harming each other (and ourselves), have public investment into health/mental health care, housing, global poverty alleviation, etc. Our individual choices are limited by the social realities we all live in.
@blanche.o
@blanche.o 8 ай бұрын
Such an incredibly respectful and information rich interview. I can totally relate from 49:46 regarding not wanting a “cheat day”. I know that drinking red wine makes me feel like trash and I can’t sleep at all, where a glass of white at dinner occasionally doesn’t affect me. I know that eating any fast food, deep fried things, sugar, large amounts of bread and dairy, messes with my tummy and make me feel bloated, nauseous and just groggy for at least 3 days. I know that eating a lot of vegetables, certain fruits and lean proteins energize me and help with good sleep. I know that fasting 1-2 days of the week is good for me, not only for religious reasons but also because I feel rejuvenated, more productive and can focus my attention on other important things such as work, praying and spending time with loved ones. So why on earth would I put myself through the pain of having a MacDonalds burger and fries, or a Domino’s pizza, or a glass of red wine at dinner when 1) they don’t even taste very great and 2) I know exactly what I’m getting myself into.
@skippy6462
@skippy6462 Ай бұрын
Bryan's such a lovely person. Not a bad bone in his body. That's why he's sharing his work.
@TheRuben_music
@TheRuben_music 17 күн бұрын
So he could just end his KZbin channel and live as well he does today? Well, I guess he does it all for free
@Jake-im8eq
@Jake-im8eq 8 ай бұрын
I don’t understand they hate this guy gets for wanting to live longer. Everything he said made perfect sense and he seems like he has put a ton of thought into existence as a whole
@Bee_Healthier
@Bee_Healthier 8 ай бұрын
It's because it's an act to sell more products that he's partnered with. Welcome to the world, they don't give a fk about you but want all your hard earned money
@zenzen4982
@zenzen4982 8 ай бұрын
There was an older comment that kinda answers this: """ A part of the debate around this guy's lifestyle that doesn't get discussed enough is his unique situation to do all this. And I don't mean just the fact he can afford it, which he does talk about. I mean that he had the time in his day, this is basically his job at this point. So he's less having to trade his free time for his health and longevity dedication like most of us would. He gets to still have free time for things he enjoys like family. This changes the quality vs quantity debate quite a lot. """ My personal take: It is admirable that he does something to advance the species, at the same time it highlights how enormously unacceptable it has become to be poor. Charlie Chaplin said something along the the lines: "As long as tyrants still die there is hope.". It is a lot easier to accept that most people never get to live their dreams, that competition for the sake of competition in a capitalistic system is moot, as long as we share the same fate. He is a trailblazer and I think the hate is motivated by people that would love to explore with him, but society isn't set up for this currently. Even he has to treat this as a business as no-one can predict how long modern slavery will continue.
@peterhel1077
@peterhel1077 8 ай бұрын
​@zenzen4982 he said multiple times that 80% of results come for free. Cutting nonsense food out, sleeping well etc..
@zenzen4982
@zenzen4982 8 ай бұрын
@@peterhel1077 yeah, sleeping well doesn't come for free through. If you are crammed into a slum and the only way out is work that will destroy your body, so you really gotta pick your poison, because your mentally ill single parent left you nothing but debt and ruined your education. 1/7 children in Japan live below the poverty line and that is a society with relatively little inequality. Again, personally I think it is good that someone is doing what he does, highlighting the inequality in society comes with the territory and the hate he gets is misplaced, but will hopefully lead to having the grossest inequalities reexamined. I just image that is the reason for the hate, personally I haven't seen much of it, might be best to ask the people infuriated?
@user-rawe
@user-rawe 8 ай бұрын
​@@zenzen4982 truth is it will never be possible for everybody, certain jobs have exposure to certain things that he himself needs to avoid to achieve what he's trying to achieve, it would take insane amounts of resources and will power to make it so that those certain things he tries to avoid such as bad air quality are avoided by everybody
@davidholm4999
@davidholm4999 8 ай бұрын
I think it's a mistake to look at him as some kinda role model. He's a science experiment, and you gotta respect his dedication. A lot of what he does has potential to really help us.
@FenrisZAmarok
@FenrisZAmarok 8 ай бұрын
Agreed. It sounds like he does a lot of good, but he’s not really saying or doing anything groundbreaking. The idea he presented in this interview is “someone eventually will invent super intelligent ai and well live forever. I don’t know how, but someone probably will and I won’t have to die ever.”
@lilium_lancifolium
@lilium_lancifolium 8 ай бұрын
Not really. There's absolutely nothing we can learn from him, because he does so many things to live for such a long time that we will never know what actually works.
@arnavrawat9864
@arnavrawat9864 8 ай бұрын
He can be both of those things. I think Bryan is a role model of dedication to the fundamentals of our lives which we let run away from us for pleasure pr ego
@davidholm4999
@davidholm4999 8 ай бұрын
@@lilium_lancifolium That's just not true. He's being monitored closely by professionals. I'm sure they have a pretty good understanding of what's working or not.
@hiskishow
@hiskishow 8 ай бұрын
Exactly what Lilium said. Almost nothing to be learned also since what he is doing is trying things that are already in research. The actual research takes hundreds and even thousands of people to figure out if it has a positive correlation to the lifespan and quality. For example even though there is so much research on the heart medicines of today, still doing meta research on the hundreds of studies reveals that it is not so cut and dry if they are good or not. Doing research on one single person is for nothing, when research done on hundreds of thousands if millions of people has difficulty revealing the truth. Not to say he can't prove it for himself. That he can do but to say it will work for everyone is pretty ballsy.
@HFXmermaid
@HFXmermaid 8 ай бұрын
I'd love you to interview the Blue Zone's guy, Dan Beuttner. He's a natgeo explorer who researches centurions and "Blue Zones" places around the world and studies the commonalities in populations where most live healthy into 90s and 100s. He really pushes more specifics when it comes to diet and exercise etc. There's a Netflix doc series about it and he has several books. I read them and they seem like sound science, and he's backed by NatGEO. But I'd love to see him chat with Dr. Mike!!
@epicipodmodz
@epicipodmodz 8 ай бұрын
Damnnn you got a like!!
@richardgabbrielli3328
@richardgabbrielli3328 8 ай бұрын
You need to research the fraud associated with the blue zones bs...
@hereiamfornow
@hereiamfornow 2 ай бұрын
When I reclaimed my health in my late twenties, everyone assumed I was doing it to live longer, when that was not my motivation whatsoever. It was all about feeling good and healthy TODAY. I honestly had no interest in living longer, in reality. And when I would clarify my intention to them and explain how much energy I felt, more than I even remembered feeling as a child, they would not accept my rebuttal to their assumption as true. The fact is they weren't ready to deal with their own health challenges and the reasons behind them - so they had to make up a reason to not place value on my reclaimed state of health, even if they realized they were already experiencing some health issues themselves. And my obese friends straight up ignored my results and claimed that they just needed to exercise to lose their weight, in response to my telling them I had just lost 35 pounds without any change in activity level. People are more comfortable living by assumption, than in reality, because that's how THEY feel better today.
@TumblinWeeds
@TumblinWeeds 8 ай бұрын
People love to make fun of him for “wasting his life” or saying he’s sad for fearing death. But honestly he seems chill. He’s only experimenting on himself, he has the money and he’s willing to share the results. Nothing shows the ugliness of the human spirit more than a man with a dream. His goals should be no one’s business, he seems happy doing what he does, yet people love to absolutely dunk on this guy with so much malice just to feel superior about themselves and their lifestyles. Keep in mind, even if he finds a single thing that definitely increases lifespan, it will benefit everyone. We should all hope he succeeds.
@infinitedeath1384
@infinitedeath1384 8 ай бұрын
Those people are just jealous of him, I wouldn't pay much mind to them. He's an honest man working towards a goal that could help humanity. Some people just can't help but see negativity in everything 😂, I'd say that's sadder than fearing death.
@jan_schaefer
@jan_schaefer 8 ай бұрын
genuinly love this episode. The conversation is so calming to listen to because both participants think in depth about what they're saying/asking. Both answer in they're own way of thinking and perception without being biased and subjective about things. I'd listen to hundreds of hours of this!
@jan_schaefer
@jan_schaefer 8 ай бұрын
Edit: Not completely unbiased, but well reflective of their biases 'caused by their different jobs/education!
@StudioKujira
@StudioKujira 8 ай бұрын
Such a great listen. Mike is a terrific interviewer and Byran was a terrific guest.
@jjlightsky15
@jjlightsky15 2 ай бұрын
So I’m not all the way through yet. But I see everyone talking about how respectful this conversation was and how thoughtful Bryan’s answers are but I feel like he’s not actually answering any of the questions that Mike is asking. Maybe a few of the questions he directly answers but for the most part he gives these weird, elusive, non-answers.
@LaurelKeiffer
@LaurelKeiffer 8 ай бұрын
He is very interesting and seems super intelligent, however I do feel like quality of life has to be taken into account more. But I love how when he is asked a question, he actually thinks about it. So many people that are interviewed or have conversations rush to push their narrative or defend their thought process, but he seems to really consider, think, and then decide how he really feels about the question posed before answering.
@skyw8248
@skyw8248 8 ай бұрын
From my personal experience the more I incorporate his methods in my behaviour the happier I am. The more full my life seems.
@keepernod2888
@keepernod2888 8 ай бұрын
How do you define and measure quality of life? According to WHO it's : "an individual's perception"
@LaurelKeiffer
@LaurelKeiffer 8 ай бұрын
@@keepernod2888 I mean, he seems happy so he is getting quality of life. Quality of life is individual I think. I kind of stated short without saying much about it, but he seems like a person that enjoys experimenting, being innovative and working towards goals. He also has a ton of money so he is able to use a lot of time focusing on that. I guess my thought process was that the average person, working full time, spending all additional time focusing on things to “live forever” may interfere with other pieces of happiness such as family time, friend time, alone time, activities, whatever it may be. And again, that’s generalized, there are lots of variables to what would make someone happy in life. 🤷‍♀️
@keepernod2888
@keepernod2888 8 ай бұрын
@@LaurelKeifferI agree with you on that point. I just think that the real reason for his pause was that the happiness and quality of life are very subjective concepts. While they are part of the mental health, I wonder if we should exclude them when we are talking about the health of the body?
@sebastianheine378
@sebastianheine378 8 ай бұрын
This guy has little to no understand of the deteriorating of quality of life as we age. Anyone who has worked in the hospital understand this reality
Debating The Value Of Eastern Medicine (Ayurveda) | Healthy Gamer Dr. K
2:19:00
小丑女COCO的审判。#天使 #小丑 #超人不会飞
00:53
超人不会飞
Рет қаралды 16 МЛН
Леон киллер и Оля Полякова 😹
00:42
Канал Смеха
Рет қаралды 4,7 МЛН
Chain Game Strong ⛓️
00:21
Anwar Jibawi
Рет қаралды 41 МЛН
How The Polio Vaccine Destroyed Trust In Healthcare
16:26
Doctor Mike
Рет қаралды 1,8 МЛН
Science Lifters Are Under Attack
17:14
Jeff Nippard
Рет қаралды 997 М.
Dr Mike: The Top 10 Lies Health Experts Have Told You!
1:48:22
The Diary Of A CEO
Рет қаралды 1 МЛН