That control is starting to fray as Mr. Johnson, a longevity guru known for performing experiments on his body, faces a backlash over the agreements.
Eternal life
Mr. Johnson founded the payments company Braintree in 2007 and became a multimillionaire when PayPal bought the start-up in 2013. He soon shed his Mormon roots and began a phase of exploration.
Mr. Johnson divorced his wife, with whom he has three children, and left the Mormon Church. He hired prostitutes, according to friends, former employees and court documents, and took drugs including acid, Ibogaine and DMT.
Mr. Johnson has not publicly addressed his use of acid, but is a proponent of psychedelics like DMT and has the shape of its chemical structure tattooed on his arm.
He also started using confidentiality agreements. The terms mandated that people could not speak publicly about his escapades, or talk to their friends or family about him.
In 2016, Mr. Johnson founded Kernel, a brain technology start-up. He had turned down the chance to establish a similar company with Elon Musk, who created his own such firm, Neuralink.
Mr. Johnson increasingly fixated on his reputation, according to former friends and employees, and wondered why he was not getting as much publicity as Mr. Musk. He turned more to confidentiality agreements. In 2020, he required a date to sign one before the two used acid together, two former friends said. She signed but left early, incensed by the agreement.
The confidentiality terms were typically attached to broader employment agreements at Mr. Johnson’s business. At the time, a Kernel employee agreement with confidentiality clauses was four and a half pages long, with few specifics about what workers could not talk about.
But as Mr. Johnson transitioned into the longevity industry and focused on his health, losing more than 50 pounds, the terms mushroomed. The change was driven partly by the founding of Blueprint, a start-up at Mr. Johnson’s Los Angeles home, in 2021 to sell health products to his legions of death-averse fans. (He stepped down from Kernel in 2023 but remains on the board.)
Blueprint’s brand is tied to Mr. Johnson’s image, with pop-ups of his face promoting the Netflix documentary and supplements called “Bryan’s favorites” listed for sale on the website. “He is the healthiest person on the planet,” Blueprint’s site claims.
By last year, a Blueprint employment agreement with confidentiality terms was 20 pages long and listed dozens of restrictions.
Among them: Workers must keep confidential “any nonpublic information regarding Bryan’s home, office, personal effects in his home or office, any spaces rented or owned by Bryan, any vehicles/planes/automobiles/boats/other methods of transportation that are not publicly accessible, or areas of his home or such space that are not publicly accessible,” according to a copy.
In his X post, Mr. Johnson said the agreements “have evolved, just like everything else I iterate & improve upon.” He added, “The goal is precision.”
Employees at Blueprint, which has a staff of about 30, sometimes had to sign as many as three separate agreements. That is atypical for employee agreements, according to legal experts.
One was an unusual “opt-in” document, which is not a confidentiality contract but aims to protect the company from potential lawsuits over what employees might witness in the workplace.
Under that agreement, employees had to attest that they were OK with Mr. Johnson’s wearing “little and sometimes no clothing/no underwear” and with hearing “discussions of sexual activities, including erections,” according to a copy. They also had to agree that Mr. Johnson’s behavior was not “unwelcome, offensive, humiliating, hostile, triggering, unprofessional or abusive.”
The opt-in agreement was “fair to all concerned and is in everyone’s best interest,” Mr. Johnson posted on X.
Many wealthy individuals and companies use confidentiality agreements. But Cliff Palefsky, an employment lawyer in San Francisco, said some aspects of Mr. Johnson’s agreements were overly broad and unenforceable.
Mr. Johnson and his company are “counting on people being afraid and not violating it because they’re afraid,” said Mr. Palefsky, who reviewed the documents for The Times.
Longevity mix
By early last year, some Blueprint employees were growing frustrated with the confidentiality agreements as the company experienced problems, people who have worked there said.
Among them were questions about Blueprint’s health supplements. The company sells about a dozen different proprietary supplements, including a $49 “longevity mix,” according to its website. Supplements are subject to lighter regulation than medicines.
At the time, Mr. Johnson and his leadership team, including Dr. Zolman, asked for volunteers to join a study of the supplements and meals called “The Blueprint Stack.” The goal was to examine the effects of the products on people’s health, according to the people and internal documents viewed by The Times.
Some executives, including Dr. Zolman, wanted to follow standard clinical testing procedures for the study and choose users to test at random, the people said. But Mr. Johnson had customers pay more than $2,100 to participate, they said. He promised them he would release the results by the summer of 2024.
Of the roughly 1,700 participants in the study, about 60 percent experienced at least one side effect, according to internal emails, spreadsheets and other documents. Blood tests revealed that participants saw their testosterone levels drop and became prediabetic after following Mr. Johnson’s diet plan. It’s unclear how severe the side effects were.
“Longevity mix: A lot of comments about hating this as it is making them sick, vomit, have heartburn, etc.,” one Blueprint employee wrote to a colleague in February 2024.