Couverture de The LIVING Room Podcast | Inside The WNDR Lab

The LIVING Room Podcast | Inside The WNDR Lab

The LIVING Room Podcast | Inside The WNDR Lab

De : Chris Wharton
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What if longevity wasn’t owned by a single voice—but shaped by many?


Our host, Chris Wharton, brings together the world’s leading scientists, doctors, performers, and cultural icons—each offering a distinct perspective on the art of living better, longer.


From cutting-edge, data-backed research to lived experience, we explore the habits, mindsets, and breakthroughs that truly move the needle when it comes to elevating both the quality and length of your life.


Built on collective expertise, not individual opinion, The Living Room is where science, experience, and insight come together—bringing the most trusted thinking in longevity to your living room, whether that’s your couch or your commute…


This is not about shortcuts. It’s not about hype. It’s about understanding the full picture—
and giving you the clarity to act on it.


Because a long life, well lived, is never one-dimensional—and neither is the path to getting there.


Step into The LIVING Room, where the future of LIVING comes alive.



© 2026 The LIVING Room Podcast | Inside The WNDR Lab
Hygiène et vie saine
Épisodes
  • Anti-Aging Myths Most Believe: Mayo Clinic MD on Retinol, SPF, Skinspan, Peptides & Red Light
    May 27 2026

    Most anti-aging skincare is focused on the surface — but the real story of skin aging starts much deeper. Mayo Clinic dermatologist Dr. Saranya Wyles breaks down what’s actually happening beneath your skin, why up to 75% of skin aging may be modifiable, and what science really says about retinol, SPF, red light therapy, collagen, peptides, GLP-1s, and more.

    Saranya Wyles, MD, PhD, is the Director of the Regenerative Dermatology and the Skin Longevity Laboratory at Mayo Clinic whose work focuses on skin aging, wound healing, cellular senescence, and regenerative medicine. In this episode of The LIVING Room Podcast, she joins Chris Wharton to explain why your skin is often a reflection of what’s happening inside your body — from brain health to heart health and overall aging, what SPF, retinol, red light therapy, collagen, and peptides actually do, and why the future of skincare will include 3D-bioprinted skin tissue and regenerative therapies.

    What we cover in this conversation:

    • Why 75% of skin aging is modifiable — and what that actually means
    • The skincare routine a Mayo Clinic dermatologist actually recommends
    • Why oral collagen supplements may be a waste of money
    • Whether retinol, red light therapy, and peptides live up to the hype
    • What sunscreen actually protects you from (and how it impacts vitamin D)
    • Why weight-loss drugs like GLP-1s may be aging your face
    • The future of regenerative skin repair — from exosomes to 3D-bioprinted skin

    For science-backed clarity on what really protects your skin, free from the noise of anti-aging marketing — this episode delivers true value around powerful anti-aging practices that you can apply to your life.

    Learn more about Dr. Saranya Wyles https://www.instagram.com/drwyles.derm

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    1 h et 18 min
  • Robert Downey Jr. On Living With Intention, Discipline & What Happiness Really Means
    May 21 2026


    What does it really look like to evolve into the best version of yourself? Robert Downey Jr. sits down with Chris Wharton for an honest conversation about discipline, self-awareness, taking control of one’s health, and what happiness truly means after living one of Hollywood’s most extraordinary lives.

    In this episode, Robert Downey Jr. opens up about the daily rituals that keep him grounded, why he was the very first "patient zero" for Chris's wellness program, and what he learned from years of burning the candle at both ends. From preparing for Broadway to suiting up for Marvel, this is a masterclass in intentional living from a man who's seen it all.

    Connect with Robert Downey Jr. at https://www.instagram.com/robertdowneyjr

    Want more? Each month, we send a newsletter curated by our scientific council on what's actually advancing the science of human longevity — and what isn't. Subscribe at https://www.thewndrlab.com/mailing-list.

    The WNDR Lab: https://www.thewndrlab.com/



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    59 min
  • Harvard Intermittent Fasting Researcher Reveals the Clinical Truth Behind Fasting and Real Results
    May 13 2026

    Dr. Courtney Peterson runs one of the world's largest labs studying intermittent fasting in humans at Harvard, and her research shows most people are fasting at the wrong time of day. Here's what the clinical data actually says.

    Chris Wharton sits down with Dr. Peterson — Harvard researcher and member of the international scientific committee that formally defined intermittent fasting — to break down what rigorous clinical trial data actually says about fasting, meal timing, blood sugar, and weight loss. Not what the headlines say, but what the science says.

    In this episode, you'll discover:

    → Why fasting doesn't work by burning more calories — and what it's actually doing inside your body instead

    → The single most important variable in your fasting protocol — and why most people are getting it completely wrong

    → Why the timing of your eating window matters more than the window itself — and how shifting it can dramatically improve blood sugar and blood pressure

    → What 27 out of 28 clinical diabetes studies showed about intermittent fasting — and why this finding changes everything

    → The weight loss results you can realistically expect — what the data shows for both short-term and long-term outcomes

    → How fasting affects hunger hormones — and why people who do it right stop feeling deprived → The specific populations who benefit most from time-restricted eating — and the ones who should not fast at all

    → How to make fasting sustainable long-term — practical strategies backed by clinical research, not wellness trends

    → Why intermittent fasting may support women’s metabolic health and healthy aging — and why extreme fasting is not one-size-fits-all.


    Dr. Peterson has spent years running controlled clinical trials on intermittent fasting. This episode isn't wellness hype, it’s the science.


    Courtney Peterson, PhD | Harvard University

    Dr. Courtney Peterson is Associate Professor of Nutrition at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, with appointments in the Department of Nutrition and the Department of Molecular Metabolism. Her research examines how meal timing, intermittent fasting, and circadian rhythms shape metabolic health, with the goal of developing dietary strategies to prevent and reverse type 2 diabetes and obesity. She led the first human clinical trial of early time-restricted eating, an approach that aligns the daily eating window with the body's internal clock, and her work has helped establish meal timing as a distinct variable in metabolic health, alongside diet composition and total caloric intake. Dr. Peterson holds a PhD in physics from Harvard, where she studied the early universe before turning to nutrition science, along with master's degrees from Tulane in clinical research, Imperial College London in science communication, and the University of Cambridge in applied mathematics and theoretical physics. She previously served on the faculty at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.


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    1 h et 37 min
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