Brian Johnson, a social media influencer in the fitness industry, goes by the name Liver King online. He is also known for advocating what he refers to as a “ancestral lifestyle,” which calls for eating a lot of raw meat and organs, and he suggests eating liver every day. Nutritionists have condemned his diet as potentially hazardous. The nine “ancestral tenets” that Johnson espouses are: sleep, eat, move, shield, connect, cold, sun, fight, and bind.
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Who is Liver King?
Austin, Texas welcomed Brian Johnson into the world on April 7, 1977. He went to Leon Valley, Texas’ John Marshall High School. Brian experienced bullying as a child because of his awkward demeanor and diminutive stature. When Brian was a baby, his father passed away. He therefore lacked a reliable father figure to serve as his role model. As a child, Brian, his mother, and his older brother frequently changed residences.
Since middle school, his stepfather Mark has given him a bench press machine. He has been using it to exercise and has subsequently gained the sense of control, discipline, and confidence he had sorely been lacking. He was a physically fit 16-year-old who was starting to be accepted and even looked up to by the other students.
Brian Johnson eventually earned a chemistry degree from Texas Tech University. After that, he started working as a sales representative for a pharmaceutical company, earning between $100K and $125K annually. He earned enough money to indulge in pricey pastimes like snowboarding.
Brian Johnson’s career
Johnson makes a living through bodybuilding, creating digital content, and counseling people in their health. He runs his own business as well.
The maker of digital content is active on a number of social media sites, such as Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube. The majority of his internet output is focused on his lifestyle and bodybuilding.
The Height of Liver King
Brian Johnson, aka The Liver King, is 5″7 tall.
Liver King steroids controversy
In spite of his repeated denials, it was discovered in late 2022 that he habitually utilized a variety of medications, including testosterone and a synthetic protein, as well as $11,000 worth of anabolic steroids per month. Johnson made a video where he admitted to taking about 120 mg of testosterone weekly and apologized for misleading his viewers about his “pharmacological intervention” after emails revealing his use of steroids and hormones surfaced. He also added that there is “a time and place” for such interventions to be made.