Google co-founders and Silicon Valley billionaires try to live forever


Sergey Brin

One hundred and fifty thousand people die every day, reports Tad Friend of The New Yorker in the article, “The God Pill: Silicon Valley’s quest for eternal life.” Most check out well before what is considered the maximum age of 115, and some of them could afford to keep going far longer, if only science would allow it.

The urge to combat aging, especially among the affluent, is an old one, but new technological breakthroughs can make the prospect seem tantalizingly close.

Friend joins Nobel Prize-winning scientists, icons of the entertainment industry such as Goldie Hawn and Moby, and tech billionaires like Google co-founder Sergey Brin, for the launch of the National Academy of Medicine’s Grand Challenge in Health Longevity, which will distribute $25 million as part of its endeavors to, as one doctor puts it, “end aging forever.”

Peter Thiel, co-founder of PayPal and Palantir, at the Republican National Convention on July 21, 2016 at the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio.

Alex Wong
Peter Thiel, co-founder of PayPal and Palantir, at the Republican National Convention on July 21, 2016 at the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio.

For the super rich in the “life-extension community,” it’s a small world. Brin, whose company has invested over $1 billion in a “longevity lab”called Calico (short for the California Life Company), is dating Nicole Shanahan, the founder of a patent-management business that will work with some of the National Academy’s biotech patents.

 According to Friend, Shanahan attended the launch with Brin:

“I’m here with my darling, Sergey,” she said, referring to her boyfriend, Sergey Brin, the co-founder of Google. “And he called me yesterday and said, ‘I’m reading this book, “Homo Deus,” and it says on page twenty-eight that I’m going to die.’ I said, ‘It says you, personally?’ He said, ‘Yes!’ ” (In the book, the author, Yuval Noah Harari, discusses Google’s anti-aging research, and writes that the company “probably won’t solve death in time to make Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin immortal.”) Brin, sitting a few feet away, gave the crowd a briskly ambiguous nod: Yes, I was singled out for death; no, I’m not actually planning to die.

If all goes well, Brin won’t age, either, or not past a certain point. Slowing or stopping that process is the current focus of biochemist Ned David, co-founder of Unity Biotechnology, who is 49 but, according to Friend, looks 30. The scientist’s youthfulness is part of his appeal, writes Friend.

Last fall, Unity raised a hundred and sixteen million dollars from such investors as Jeff Bezos and Peter Thiel, billionaires eager to stretch our lives, or at least their own, to a span that Thiel has pinpointed as “forever.” In a field rife with charlatans, Ned David’s Dorian Gray affect has factored into his fund-raising. “One class of investor, like Fidelity, finds my youthful appearance alarming,” he said. “Another class — the Silicon Valley type, a Peter Thiel — finds anyone who looks over 40 alarming.”

Investing in bio-tech breakthroughs is one way the super rich are trying to stay young and healthy indefinitely. Others in the community are settling for cryogenic freezing, in the hopes that they can be thawed once regenerative science has sufficiently advanced.

Alcor CEO Max More poses in front of the dewars that house his 147 cryopreserved patients.

Qin Chen
Alcor CEO Max More poses in front of the dewars that house his 147 cryopreserved patients.

CNBC reported in 2016 that “thousands of people around the world have put their trust, lives and fortunes into the promise of cryonics.” At that point, at Alcor’s center in Scottsdale, Ariz., nearly 150 individuals had elected to preserve either their heads ($80,000) or their entire bodies ($200,000) in liquid nitrogen.

Some wealthy individuals are covering their bases: Thiel has invested in both Unity and Alcor.

If there is a way to “solve death,” as Friend puts it, whether through cryonics or gene therapies, a kind of vampirism in which Silicon Valley billionaires “end up being sustained by young blood” or more wholesome methods such as good nutrition and medicine, some combination of the above or perhaps an actual sorcerer’s stone, the next generation of well-funded alchemists is determined to find it.

As a 30-year-old start-up founder confidently tells Friend, “The proposition that we can live forever is obvious. It doesn’t violate the laws of physics, so we will achieve it.”

Source:http://www.cnbc.com

Audiences are lining up to watch this guy play video games badly


Michael Jones from Rooster Teeth.

Michael Jones from Rooster Teeth.

When Michael Jones takes the stage, he doesn’t hold a mic or a musical instrument. His main tools to entertain are his video game controller and the words that come out of his mouth.

“I certainly didn’t think I’d find myself in this situation,” said Jones, 29.

After graduating high school, Jones apprenticed as an electrician. He bought a camera to film family moments, and decided to film himself playing video games for fun.

 In July 2010, he posted an expletive-laden video of him chasing of one of the impossible-to-catch orbs in “Crackdown 2.” It went viral and suddenly people noticed.

“I realized, ‘Oh, people like it when I’m pissed?'” Jones said. “I’m from New Jersey. I do that all the time.”

Six months later, production company Rooster Teeth asked him to join its team, and in January 2011 he launched his online show “Rage Quit,”a series featuring him playing difficult levels or challenges in video games. Spoiler alert: It usually ends in him quitting with an epic tantrum. It’s gotten more than 350 million views to date on YouTube.

“Anybody can play a video game,” said Jones. “You don’t have to be good. I consider myself okay. I’m better than the average person, but compared to people on the Internet I’m horrible.”

The youngest of three brothers, Jones grew up in Woodbridge, NJ, playing video games. He fondly remembers his brothers saving money to buy him a Nintendo 64 for his tenth birthday…then his middle brother claimed he didn’t mean to give it as a gift and took it for himself.

“There was not a lot of controller sharing going on in the household,” he said.

Jones is now about to embark on the four-city “Let’s Play Live” tour with the other stars of production company Rooster Teeth’s “Achievement Hunter” channel, where they will perform for his online — and now offline — fans. First up will be a stop on April 24 in Jones’ home state of New Jersey at the 2,900-seat New Jersey Performance Arts Center in Newark.

“Now my Mom is asking for tickets for my Aunt and Uncle, my cousin — so many tickets,” he said joking. “Mom, leave some for the audience.”

Then, they’ll pack up the tour bus and head to Baltimore, MD, Orlando, FL, and Tampa, FL. Previously, Jones and the rest of the “Achievement Hunter” crew sold out venues in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and Austin, bringing their brand of rowdy commentary and hijinks to a live audience.

He’s also done other projects with Rooster Teeth, including starring in “Lazer Team,” one of the top fundraised Indiegogo film campaigns of all time. He also is a voice actor in the company’s anime series “RWBY,” in which his wife Lindsay Jones voices the main role.

People may not see the appeal of watching someone else play a video game, but it’s the same as watching someone else play basketball on TV which is why it easily translates live, Jones points out. On top of that, the guys on the “Let’s Play Live” tour chat about things you talk about with your friends, turning it from a voyeur sport to a comedy show, he said.

“Video games give us this amazing platform,” said Jones. “We could walk into the office and go into a room, and we would have this exact same conversation.”

He admits audience members who expect to see well-executed gameplay will be disappointed, but that’s not stopping him.

“I wouldn’t put us on the same level as musicians or superstars,” Jones said. “For some reason we fooled them (our fans), and they just want to consume our content in any possible way.”

Watch the video doctumentary. URL:

Source:http://www.cnbc.com