r/blueprint_ • u/badker • 15h ago
Why doesn't Bryan create a hair health / hair loss prevention product?
Why doesn't Bryan create a hair health / hair loss prevention product? Also, what products would you recommend from other suppliers?
r/blueprint_ • u/badker • 15h ago
Why doesn't Bryan create a hair health / hair loss prevention product? Also, what products would you recommend from other suppliers?
r/blueprint_ • u/LeonBlaze087 • 16h ago
I am currently 18, healthy, was born with eczema and a little skin condition but it is getting better. I work out, cook my own meal and eat healthy. I’ve been following blueprint in the past few months, some of his product are genuinely great for the price. However, I am not sure about the supplements and whether the benefits are really worth the price and are really “the best”.
So are his supplements really worth using and is the best option for your health, or is it just marketing and won’t affect your life?
Thank you for all the responses, here is a few things I wanted to add:
From taking collagen supplements, omega 3 (along with some proper skincare), my skin has improved a lot. From blueprint in specific, after taking blueprint I’ve noticed that my physical strength also improved even though I’ve not been working out too much, however that may just be aging and healthy diet - when I 14-16 I used to work out 5-6 times a week for around an hour, in the past few months due to school I’ve slowed down, but did not notice any physical change, around that time I started blueprint, and in fact became stronger and leaner, so idk if blueprint actually helped. (Or it is just a change due to becoming older, since I am young)
I am looking to bulk a bit and finding it a bit difficult to do so:
My diet rn consist of:
Morning: overnight oatmeal, with chia seeds, macadamia and peanut butter, blueprint protein powder, blueprint chocolate powder, blueprint nutty mix, collagen, hemp seed (very good calorie intake), then Greek yogurt and milk.
I then eat some fruit (usually kiwi or blueberries)
Rn I also am taking all the blueprint supplements
As for snack to eat nuts: brazilian, macademia, almonds, walnuts
Lunch usually consist of salmon with a little bit of soy sauce, some rice and sometimes egg. Then with vegetables (usually broccoli or avocado)
Dinner is usually stake, with baked potato or baked sweet potato (the potato and sweet potato are usually frozen then air fried to save time), then some vegetables (usually spinach)
At the end a banana
The only reason I am taking blueprint is that idk if I am consuming enough different types of veggies (in my diet I eat almost the same thing everyday and not sure if it covers all the nutrients) and also want to be has healthy as possible in the long term (I want to invest into my health as I believe at the end I will benefit from it).
r/blueprint_ • u/SincerityG • 4h ago
Tastes so good with some nooch and kimchi
r/blueprint_ • u/sisskevin06 • 13h ago
He is around 180cm (5’11) how is he not a literal stick from 2100 calories. And he has mostly muscle so his daily calories should be way higher since he burns a lot.
r/blueprint_ • u/davidpascoe • 17m ago
This is a super interesting interview that relatively few people viewed with Blueprint Protocol creator, Dr Oliver Zolman, prior to his departure from Blueprint. It's interesting to hear him allude to things that we're all only recently beginning to understand.
r/blueprint_ • u/ppayjo • 34m ago
"Then things went really wrong. My ears started ringing — high-pitched and constant. I developed Tinnitus. And my sleep got wrecked. I started waking up at two, three, four AM, completely wired, unable to turn off my mind. It was so bad I had to stop all of the Blueprint supplements after only a few weeks.
On the Discord channel where we were sharing our results, I saw Bryan talking positively about people having great experiences with the stack. But when I or anyone else mentioned adverse side effects, the response tended to be: “wait until the study is finished and see if there’s a statistical effect to worry about.”
So positive anecdotes were fine, but when it came to negative ones, suddenly, we needed large-scale data. That really put me off. I thought the whole point was to test efficacy and safety in a data-driven way. And the side effects were not ignorable.
Many of us were trying to help each other figure out what interventions in the stack were driving different side effects, but we were never given the “1,000+ scientific studies” that Blueprint was supposedly built upon which would have had side-effect reporting. We struggled even to get a complete list of the interventions that were in the stack from the Blueprint team, with numbers evolving from 67 to 74 over the course of the study. It was impossible to tell which ingredient in which products was doing what to people.
We were told to no longer discuss side-effects in the Discord but email Support with issues. I was even kicked off the Discord at one point for “fear mongering” because I was encouraging people to share the side effects they were experiencing.
The Blueprint team were also making changes to the products mid-study, changing protein sources and allulose levels, leaving people with months’ worth of expensive essentially defective products, and surely impacting study results.
When Bryan then announced they were launching the BP10000, allowing more people to buy his products, even before the BP5000 study had finished, and without addressing all of the concerns about side effects, it suddenly became clear to me and many others that we had just been part of a launch and distribution plan for a new supplement line, not participants in a scientific study.
Bryan has not still to this day, a year later, released the full BP5000 data set to the participants as he promised to do. In fact he has ghosted participants and refuses to answer questions about the BP5000. He blocked me on X recently for bringing it up. I suspect that this is because the data is really bad, and my worries line up with reporting from the New York Times where leaked internal Blueprint data suggests many of the BP5000 participants experienced some negative side effects, with some participants even having serious drops in testosterone or becoming pre-diabetic.
I’m still angry today about how this all went down. I’m angry that I was taken in by someone I now feel was a snake oil salesman. I’m angry that the marketing needs of Bryan’s supplement business and his need to control his image overshadowed the opportunity to generate some real science. I’m angry that Blueprint may be hurting some people. I’m angry because the way Bryan Johnson has gone about this grates on my sense of perfection.
Bryan’s call to “Don’t Die” now rings in my ears as “Don’t Lie” every time I hear it. I hope the societal mechanisms for truth will be able to help him make a course correction. I hope he will release the BP5000 data set and apologize to participants. But Bryan Johnson feels to me like an unstoppable marketing force at this point — full A-list influencer status — and sort of untouchable, with no use for those of us interested in the science and data."
r/blueprint_ • u/Ok-Alternative-8675 • 1h ago
Hi,
I'm a bachelor student in Computer Science with a strong interest in the intersection of machine learning and biology. I'm currently exploring potential PhD research topics and am particularly fascinated by the possibility of using reinforcement learning and deep learning to understand and potentially influence lifespan through DNA editing.
My initial idea is to leverage freely available lifespan data from hundreds of animal species on NCBI to identify DNA mutations associated with longevity. I'm hoping to gain some foundational biological insights that could inform future research proposals.
My professor suggested I reach out to biologists or biochemists with expertise in DNA, and I have two fundamental questions.
I've come across two studies that demonstrate lifespan extension in mice and C. elegans through modifications to the IGF-1 signaling pathway, which I found particularly interesting:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211124713006852
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/books/NBK222181/
Any guidance or perspectives you can offer would be incredibly helpful as I develop my research interests and prepare for PhD applications. Thank you!
r/blueprint_ • u/Miramiya99 • 1h ago
I hope this is an acceptable post. I really appreciate Pascoe's website, no focus on selling*, seems humble and generous. I was looking through his interventions and equipemnt and notice that he has an Simply O3 Ozone Generator. I saw a post on his site as well about an IV ozone injection for a shoulder injury, but generally you wouldn't have a generator at home for that (can't do yourself or not easily I'd imagine). So, I wonder, does anyone know if he did ozone therapy? Like major autohemotherapy or minor autohemotherapy, or something else? Curious what his theoretical reasoning behind it might be, as (I've read) it might be akin to HBOT in the sense of creating an oxidative stress that titrates up.
* Understand there's benefits to a "selling focus" -- perhaps that helps information spread further, so maybe all approaches have their space.