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On the agenda today:This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. I asked Mia de Graaf, Business Insider's deputy executive editor of health, which anti-aging trends are actually worth it. One couple, Tam and Gary Holm, was among the people who actually participated in the $1 home deal. AdvertisementAlso read:Paul Zimmerman/Getty Images for NYCWHigh-end steak house red flagsDining out at a steak house is an indulgent — and pricey — experience. Two former "Top Chef" contestants, who also own a steak house, shared what differentiates luxury steak houses from more mediocre options.
Persons: , Bryan Johnson, Magdalena Wosinska, Bryan Johnson's, Bryan Johnson —, Mia de Graaf, Skip, Mia, Luke Renard, Tam, Gary Holm, Paul Zimmerman, pricey, Searchlight Here's, Oppenheimer, Jamie Davis Smith, Yorgos Lanthimos, Kevin, Abanti Chowdhury, Guy Ritchie's, Joi, Marie McKenzie, Jordan Parker Erb, Dan DeFrancesco, Lisa Ryan Organizations: Service, Business, Warner Bros, Universal, Searchlight, Searchlight Pictures, Netflix Locations: Silicon, Moroccan, Morocco, AnaYela, Marrakesh, New York
Biotech CEO Bryan Johnson's strict diet, which he claims reverses aging, involves eating a blended mush of steamed vegetables and lentils. "I no longer have arousal from eating junk food," Johnson told Insider in a separate interview. Johnson told Time's Charlotte Alter that he thought his strict health routine was "the most significant revolution in the history of Homo sapiens." "I no longer have arousal from eating junk food," Johnson told Insider in a separate interview. AdvertisementAdvertisementTo be sure, scientists told Insider that Johnson's approach has unclear health benefits.
Persons: Bryan, Johnson, Bryan Johnson, Time's Charlotte Alter, Jan Vijg Organizations: Service, Albert Einstein College of Medicine Locations: Wall, Silicon
Bryan Johnson is trying to reverse aging through an experimental project that costs up to $2 million a year. A Time Magazine profile found that the biotech CEO's bedroom is almost completely empty. The only objects in his bedroom are his bed, a laser face shield, and a device to attach to his genitals to measure nighttime erections. No work, no reading," Johnson told Time Magazine's Charlotte Alter. Scientists told Insider's Marianne Guenot and Lloyd Lee in February that many aspects of his routine have unclear health benefits.
Persons: Bryan Johnson, Bryan Johnson —, Johnson, Charlotte Alter, Napoleon, Ben Franklin —, old's, Insider's Marianne Guenot, Lloyd Lee, , Johnson isn't, Sam Altman —, Peter Thiel Organizations: Service, YouTube Locations: Wall, Silicon
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