I went inside biohacking tech bro Bryan Johnson's home. It's a bit different from what you saw on his new Netflix doc.

  • The tech founder Bryan Johnson has become the face of longevity; he's on a mission to live forever.

  • A Netflix documentary details his journey into the world of longevity biohacking.

  • I visited Johnson's home, and it's a bit different from what you see in the new Netflix doc.

A new documentary has arrived on Netflix, just in time for New Year's resolution season. It follows Bryan Johnson, or "that guy" in longevity, the tech founder who's tried pretty much everything — from fasting to infusing his son's blood plasma — to reverse-age his body.

The doc, "Don't Die: The Man Who Wants to Live Forever," streaming now, attempts to peel back the curtain on Johnson, who's become a leader in longevity biohacking.

As a reporter covering longevity, I've met Johnson several times over the past couple of years. We first met in September 2023 at the RAADfest — which stands for Revolution Against Aging and Death — near Disneyland in California. I interviewed him in a hotel room to avoid crowds of his adoring fans.

In October 2024, I visited him at home — the same one depicted in "Don't Die." While the 90-minute doc travels back in time to Johnson's Utah roots in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (along the way, we meet his parents, his eldest son, Talmage, and his longtime business partner, Kate Tolo, who's largely responsible for Johnson's internet success), in real life, Johnson's home is a bit less picture-perfect than what viewers see on-screen.

bryan working at a standing desk next to CMO in home office
Johnson working from home with Kate Tolo, his chief marketing officer.Netflix

His house is HQ for a growing longevity brand

As the documentary shows, Johnson's home is a private, shrubbed-in concrete mansion on an unassuming Los Angeles street. It's a big, empty space perfect for shooting everything from YouTube Shorts to naked photo spreads.

It's less a home than a well-equipped stage with studio lights, sandbags, and social media staffers.

Still, the house displays some small but humanizing details of his everyday life, ones we don't see as much in the film.

In addition to being a decent stage, this home is Johnson's safe house, seemingly shielding him from a world of pollutants in food, water, and air. The big windows all have UV filters. The water is purified. The fridge is full of nutty pudding prepared by his chef, and the garage has been transformed into a home gym.

When I was there, I saw a few subtle signs that Johnson actually lived in the house: a half-empty bottle of rosé left on the refrigerator door, some Xbox controllers on the couch, and family photos taped up above the kitchen range.

His 'Don't Die' pitch versus scientific reality

Johnson is always tweaking his longevity "protocols," but his ethos is consistent.

He says that the corporate forces of fast food and institutionalized healthcare are making us sick. He told me he started his Blueprint company to offer people an alternative so they could take control of their health and longevity.

In many ways, he echoes Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s call to "make America healthy again," extolling the health virtues of preventive care, clean eating, and hitting the gym.

Johnson started his Don't Die brand with a specially labeled olive oil. It now extends to a blood-plasma microplastic test, a Don't Die app, and a line of powders, supplements, drinks, and prepared meals you can order online.

The documentary highlights the deep disconnect between the influencing Johnson does online and the actual professional geroscience and human-longevity research.

The film includes interviews with some of the world's most esteemed longevity scientists, including Dr. Andrea Maier, Brian Kennedy, Matt Kaeberlein, and Steve Horvath, the guy who pioneered the scientific idea of a "biological age."

Perhaps the most apt scientific commentary in the film comes from the Havard aging researcher Vadim Gladyshev. "What Bryan does, I guess, brings attention to our field — this will be positive," Gladyshev says. "But it has almost no contribution to science, right? It's not science. It's just attention."

It's attention that many longevity clinics and elite longevity doctors are seeing drive new business. More than 70% of the 72 longevity clinicians who participated in an ongoing online survey by the website Longevity.Technology said that they felt Johnson "contributes to" instead of "hinders" the progress of longevity medicine. Some said he helped grow awareness for what longevity scientists hope, but can't be sure, could one day be some real human longevity science advances.

bryan and son sitting in living room, talmage on the couch, bryan on a floor mat
Johnson with his son, Talmage.Netflix

"We are experimenting, and we are trialing out, and I think we will have a revolution in the next coming 10 years of very specific interventions we can apply to humans," Maier says in the film.

Any real-deal longevity interventions that may exist for humans in the future would likely be tightly tailored to each individual, not one-size-fits-all protocols. Leading longevity scientists and doctors already agree on this. So far, not one supplement or drug has been proven to slow human aging. Instead, longevity experts have said regular exercise and good nutrition can help.

His following is growing

As I've covered longevity, I've met Johnson's followers, from curious onlookers to devout copycats of his evolving formula.

On-screen, we watch an eye-popping transformation of a once devout Latter-day Saints kid who becomes a dad in his 20s, then a stressed tech founder operating on minimal sleep, losing his faith and sinking into a deep depression.

Johnson now has his own growing following worldwide. His adherents throw dance parties and organize hikes in California and Singapore.

Since filming wrapped, Johnson has traveled to China and India to promote the Don't Die movement in new countries. He's also created a Don't Die app for his followers to connect with one another wherever they live.

bryan standing in a field with dad and son, all wearing white tank tops
Johnson with his son and his dad, who each participated in a blood-plasma exchange with him.Netflix

Once the cameras were turned off and the show was over, I left the documentary feeling much like I did when I left his house.

Johnson seems to be eagerly wrestling with how to live his healthiest, most fulfilled life. He's a dad of three who cried in the aisles of Target while helping his youngest son head off to college. He's a dutiful son — according to the documentary, he's the only person who visited his dad in jail.

It seems what he's endlessly searching for — along with peace and well-being — is clicks, follows, and sales. It's a logical next business move for the guy who once ran Venmo: turning the longevity movement into one more thing we can shop for on the internet.

Correction: an earlier version of this story misstated Johnson's son's birth order. He is a middle child.

Read the original article on Business Insider