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Anti-aging mogul Bryan Johnson says NY Times preparing ‘hit piece’

Anti-aging tech giant Brian Johnson accused the New York Times of preparing to publish “Hit Piece” about him.

The 47-year-old Centimeriollion, who spends around $2 million a year to achieve the body of an 18-year-old, is I posted a long thread On his X account on Monday, he wrote, “The New York Times is preparing to release a hit to me.”

According to Johnson, a Times reporter said, “What he called a 'fact check' question about Brian Johnson, covering a variety of bad behaviors with Brian Johnson about weaponizing a long-standing non-disclosure agreement. “I contacted you.

Brian Johnson, 47, accused the New York Times of preparing to publish a “hit work.” Netflix

Johnson is best known for his “blueprint” project. This is an anti-aging experiment where millions of people spent every year trying to slow or reverse aging, accusing a gray woman of “reviving the accusations.” Rejected twice in two legal forums and repackage them for clicks. ”

The anti-aging mogul who built up his fortune after selling payment processing company Braintree to PayPal in 2013 may be referring to a 2021 lawsuit filed in Los Angeles Superior Court by television actress Taryn Southern .

In the lawsuit, Nanbu alleges that Johnson is a serial con man who abandoned her while undergoing breast cancer treatment.

Southern also claimed that Johnson fled “dozens or more women” during his relationship, being paid to prostitutes and chased the women through the “Sugar Daddy” app.

Johnson wrote in his X-thread: “For five years, my ex has been trying to extract money from me. One of her main tools was a series of false allegations.”

He added: “All her attempts have failed.”

According to Johnson, Southern was ordered to pay $500,000 after she and her attorneys decided they had filed a serious allegation. [that were]…Verified accounts of no legal basis, frivolous. ”

Johnson will be seen alongside his ex-fiance Tallinn Southern in May 2019. Getty Images from Tribeca Film Festival

“This is the behavior of the media. If you can't legally take you, they'll try to take you socially. They don't need the truth. They need a story,” Johnson said. I wrote it.

This post is being asked for comment from the South.

Johnson also said that the Times journalist who reached out to him plans to report that his anti-aging company employee felt “forced to sign” a so-called “opt-in” contract. I am writing. [them] They are ok with a wide range of unusual workplace behaviors and proven they don't think they are “abusive” or “professional.”

TV actress Southern was accused by Johnson of trying to force money from him. Getty Images for Our Planet

“I post nude on social media. I track my erections at night. My team openly discusses my semen health,” Johnson wrote to X.

“We make dunk memes. Rather than blinding people, we disclose in writing with this upfront payment, so it's not surprising.”

Johnson also wrote that the Times Reporter asked about confidentiality agreements with “at least 20 people over the past decade.” Your personal relationships and other restrictions…”

Johnson goes extremely long to slow the aging process. He photographs about 100 dietary supplements per day. Brian Johnson/Blueprint

The mogul defended the practice of non-disclosure agreements, saying it was “standard and normal.”

“I would be surprised if they didn't sign it as a condition of employment for the New York Times,” Johnson wrote.

Johnson quoted the Times Reporter as asking him about the agreement that was used to cover up business failures.

According to Johnson, the Times reported last year that his leadership team informed his company that the company was running out of money.

“I also know you used them to hide details of your personal life. That includes prostitute use, as well as drug use such as acid, ibogain, and DMT. Comments Is that?” The Times Reporter wrote to Johnson.

Johnson said The New York Times is preparing to publish a “hit” about his drug use and procurement of prostitutes. Christopher Sadowski

Johnson denounced the reporter, “mixing professional topics (funding) to induce personal allegations of inflammatory (prostitutes, drug use) to induce a broader pattern of secret and fraud. “He said.

“It's a classic guilt tactic designed to make every reaction look like an admission,” Johnson wrote, calling the Times Reporter's approach “twist.”

“By omitting important contexts, such as multiple legal rulings in my favour, she will look at the details to mislead readers.” Johnson wroteAdded: “This is not good journalism. It's a pre-built hit that disguises the report.”

This post is being asked for comment from the Times.

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