Celebrity health, fact-checked.
We take what a famous person says about living longer, then check it against the evidence. Each claim gets a Science Score and a plain verdict. Filter by what you care about.
Arnold Schwarzenegger said“Eat enough protein and keep lifting, and you hold on to your muscle as you age.”
The science saysStrongly supported. Protein plus resistance training is one of the best-proven ways to protect aging muscle.
Verdict: Real, and worth copying.
Jane Fonda said“Stay strong and keep moving as you get older, or you end up dependent on everyone else.”
The science saysWell supported. Large population studies tie lifelong activity to a longer, more independent life.
Verdict: Forty years on, the data still agrees with Jane.
Chris Hemsworth said“I carry a high-risk Alzheimer's gene, so I lean on exercise, sleep, and stress control to fight back.”
The science saysSupported. Big studies link regular exercise to meaningfully lower dementia risk, though they cannot promise it for any one person.
Verdict: He can't out-run his genes, but he can make them sweat.
Jennifer Aniston said“A daily scoop of collagen peptides keeps your skin, hair, and joints younger.”
The science saysPartly true. Trials show collagen can help skin, but the strongest results come from industry-funded studies, and the hair and joint case is thin.
Verdict: It works on skin. It also works for the company she runs.
Halle Berry said“The ketogenic diet reversed my health problems and slows down my aging.”
The science saysHalf right. Keto can lower blood sugar in the short term, but 'reversed it' is a louder claim than the trials will sign off on.
Verdict: Keto earns a B. 'Reversed it' is grading on a curve.
Gwyneth Paltrow said“A long daily intermittent fast, coffee then bone broth, keeps me well and detoxed.”
The science saysOverstated. Intermittent fasting works about as well as simply eating less, with no special detox or longevity magic.
Verdict: Skipping breakfast is a tool, not a detox spell.
Joe Rogan said“Regular sauna sessions can cut your risk of dying and add years to your life.”
The science saysReal but observational. Frequent sauna use is tied to lower mortality in large cohorts, but that is correlation, not proof, and the cold plunge is along for the ride.
Verdict: The sauna science is real. The coffin-dodging guarantee is not.
Jennifer Lopez said“I don't drink alcohol or caffeine, and that is why my skin doesn't age.”
The science saysMostly backwards. Skipping heavy alcohol may help your skin, but blaming coffee runs against the evidence, and she now sells a cocktail line.
Verdict: Skip the wine if you like. Keep the coffee.
David Sinclair said“Taking resveratrol every day helps slow down human aging.”
The science saysNot established in people. Resveratrol extended life in mice on a rich diet, but human trials and a failed drug program never showed the benefit.
Verdict: Spectacular in a mouse, unproven in a professor.
Tom Brady said“Avoiding nightshade vegetables like tomatoes and peppers lowers inflammation.”
The science saysNo good evidence supports cutting nightshades for inflammation in healthy people. They are nutrient dense, and the TB12 method itself later added them back.
Verdict: Tomatoes are fine. Eat the tomatoes.
Bryan Johnson said“A strict protocol of food, sleep, exercise, and more than one hundred daily supplements can measurably slow how fast you age.”
The science saysNot established. The basics help, but slowing human aging with a large supplement stack is unproven, and a routine of one person cannot prove it works for anyone else.
Verdict: Measure all you want. The anti-aging headline is running ahead of the evidence.