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- Kim Kardashian told "Call Her Daddy" host Alex Cooper that her dating preferences have changed.
- She said she's interested in "lawyers and longevity scientists that can give me all their secrets."
- Last year, Kardashian dined with Bryan Johnson, who's known for his extensive antiaging efforts.
She's open to marriage again, but this time, Kim Kardashian wants a partner withantiaging benefits.
During a recent interview onthe podcast "Call Her Daddy,"Kardashian, whofinalized her divorce from Ye,formally known as Kanye West, in 2022, told Alex Cooper that she's over dating rappers and athletes.
"I think we're going, like, lawyers and longevity scientists that can give me all their secrets," she said, adding that she's no longer attracted to "big and flashy" personalities.
For anyone paying attention to Kardashian's professional arc, this answer makes perfect sense. Six years ago, the reality star embarked on an unconventional path tobecome a lawyer, and told Cooper she finally took the Bar Exam in July — but she's arguably been on a longevity quest for her entire career in the spotlight.
Kardashian has openly admitted she's obsessed with staying young, or, at least, with looking young. In 2022, while promoting her since-folded skincare line,SKKN by Kim, Kardashian said she would "try anything" to be freed from the effects of aging.
"If you told me that I literally had to eat poop every single day and I would look younger, I might," she told The New York Times. "I just might."
Kardashian, 44, shares this passion withBryan Johnson, the 48-year-old tech entrepreneur who has famously spent millions on astrict health regimenin an attempt toreverse his biological age.
In June of last year, Kardashian attended one ofJohnson's "Don't Die" dinnersin New York City. The guest list also included Kardashian's sister Khloé, her momager Kris Jenner, and neuroscientist Andrew Huberman.
The group posed for photos and filmed their interactions, whichJohnson shared on TikTok.
Asked how Johnson assembled "such an eclectic group of high-profile,"he told Fortune, "They organically form among friends of friends."
Johnson declined to tell the publication what the group discussed; however, he did say that he begins every "Don't Die" dinner with the same question.
"I say, if you had access to an algorithm that can give you the best physical, mental, and spiritual health of your life, but in exchange for access to the algorithm, you would have to go to bed when it said, and you would exercise in the way it said, would you say yes or would you say no?"