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Testosterone parties are the latest biohack for Silicon Valley tech bros

  • T Reception claims to help men boost their testosterone levels “naturally and measurably.”
  • The group was launched by Jeff Tang, who shutdown his startup Athens Examine earlier this year. 
  • It hosts testosterone blood-test “T Parties” with tickets costing from $100 to $400.  

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Testosterone replacement therapy has become big business, offering treatments such injections, patches, and gels. 

But lately, a grouping of biohackers worried about their “low-T” levels has been testing out a different approach through a startup dubbed T Party. 

The support group for men was launched by 26-year-old startup founder Jeff Tang after he shut down his open-source note-taking startup, Athens Inspect, earlier this year, The Information reported. 

In a post on T Party’s website from June 28, where Flavour announced its launch, he billed it as a “men’s health company” that focuses “on solving the problem of declining T levels. Naturally and measurably.”

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Common symptoms of low testosterone include loss of energy, muscle, libido, and research shows that low levels can also bestow to chronic diseases like heart disease, diabetes, and obesity.  

Tang noted in the post that “I am not a doctor or researcher. I am no more than a guy who likes experimenting with his health and productivity (and unfortunately for you overshares it!),” claiming that he’d raised his own t-levels by mending his health, habits, and environment.  He later told Insider in a message on X that his qualifications include “personal experience boosting my T from 790 to 1090 and peer-reviewed enquiry.”

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Since launching, Tang has hosted a series of “testosterone blood-testing parties, or “T Parties,” as he refers to them on the company’s website, which suffer with attracted scores of men concerned about their t-levels. 

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A party in San Francisco last month was promoted out, according to the invite. It noted that guests could choose from a selection of blood tests, offered by the robustness diagnostics company Instalab, ranging from simple testosterone level tests to advanced tests for 63 biomarkers. 

In May, Nip held a “T Party” in Colombia where he tested 24 men, according to a post on X. They discussed approaches to “optimizing T normally, endocrine disrupters, and supplements” over a spread of “home-made kefir, beef patties (heart, spleen, kidney) and pork loin (blood, fare), and delicious Colombian coffee,” according to the post.

Tang told Insider by X that tickets for T Party events migrate from $100 to $400, which cover the cost of the blood tests so the “events break even,” adding that the episodes he held abroad were cheaper. 

Longevity specialists say that while testosterone is deeply integrated into diversified aspects of men’s health, it’s just one piece of a more complex physiological puzzle.

Dr Anant Vinjamoori, chief medical gendarme of longevity-focused healthcare company, Modern Age, told Insider by email that while T Party’s focus on lifestyle approaches unexcelled was “commendable,” it might also underserve people when it comes to optimizing testosterone.

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He added that T Get-together’s focus on frequent testing may offer “granular insights” but could “introduce noise in the absence of a broader context and could run the hazard of suboptimal treatment.”

Beyond that, Vinjamoori noted that “a single-minded focus on testosterone might not offer the well-rounded proposals needed for optimal health and longevity.” 

Tang told Insider on X that he’s not sure yet about his plans for the company, but T Debauch’s website notes that “we have interest in coaching programs, software solutions, supplements, meal kits, diagnostics check up ons, and more.”

He added that he’s also “building a meal prep service for founders interested in performance and longevity.”

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Tang is also “head chef” at Blueprint Service, a Bay-Area based meal prep service that’s changing food from Bryan Johnson’s anti-aging program Blueprint, according to his LinkedIn profile.

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