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Stop the insanity 2.0: ’90s icon Susan Powter’s tech comeback

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Stop the insanity 2.0: ’90s icon Susan Powter’s tech comeback

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There was a time when you could not turn on the TV without seeing Susan Powter. Platinum buzz cut. Barefoot. Fierce. Unfiltered. And that battle cry that still lives in pop culture: “Stop the Insanity!”

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In the 1990s, Powter built a massive wellness brand by pushing back on diet culture and talking about real life. Then the spotlight went dark. The part most people missed was brutal: financial collapse, isolation and crushing hopelessness.

Powter says the years after fame were not a quick fall. They were a long grind. She describes driving for Uber Eats for nine years, working “eight to 10 hours every day, seven days a week, trying to make my $80 to $100 a day so I could pay my damn bills.” Then comes the twist that makes this story feel very 2026. Tech did not break her. Tech helped her rebuild.

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Susan Powter attends the “Stop the Insanity: Finding Susan Powter” NYC screening at Village East Cinema on November 21, 2025, in New York City. (Santiago Felipe/Getty Images)

How Susan Powter built her original wellness empire

When Susan Powter sat down with me in my Los Angeles studio for my Beyond Connected podcast, she began by rewinding the story to where it all started. Powter’s story begins far from Hollywood. She took me back to 1982 in Garland, Texas. She had two babies a year apart. After her divorce, she gained more than 130 pounds. She says she didn’t recognize herself physically. She felt financially doomed and emotionally overwhelmed.

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Then she figured something out. “I would go to the grocery store, Piggly Wiggly. This is the truth,” she says. Other moms would stop her and tell her she looked great. Powter would answer, “No, no, you don’t understand. I figured out with modification you could be fit,” and she says, “a crowd would gather in the grocery store.”

That moment was not a marketing plan. It was a single mother talking to other women who were struggling too. That voice and that honesty turned into classes, then a studio, then a media machine. Powter never liked the labels people gave her. “They always used to call me a fitness guru. I’ve never used that term,” she says. Her version is simpler and more relatable: “I said, I’m just a housewife who figured it out and started talking to other housewives.”

But the business side got ugly. “It became a monster,” she says. “It started generating so much money, and then they started producing me out of me.”

Why Susan Powter lost her fortune and disappeared

This is where her story hits a nerve for anyone who has ever felt trapped in a system that profits from them. Powter describes management chaos, lawyers and huge legal bills. She says, “My last legal bill was $6.5 million.”

But the real breaking point came the day she decided to walk away. She was living in Beverly Hills when she says she discovered what was happening behind the scenes with unscrupulous management and bad-faith actors. She says that the very empire she built no longer felt like it belonged to her. As a result, her response was swift and absolute. “I sent one paragraph to everyone; Simon & Schuster, Time Warner, all management, literary agents. And I said, so-and-so no longer represents Susan Powter. Stop the Insanity. One paragraph.” That was it. She fired everyone. Then she left. “I moved to Seattle, and I started teaching classes in basements,” she says. “I left it all.”

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She also pushes back on the tidy narrative people prefer about her downfall. “I did not go from Hollywood to Harbor Island, which is the welfare hotel that I lived in for far too long in Las Vegas. I didn’t go there in three years. That’s not what happened.” 

Instead, she describes years of work, shifting family dynamics and what she calls “quiet poverty.” And she names the part people tend to skip because it makes them uncomfortable: what poverty does to your identity. “It’s soul-sucking, dehumanizing,” she says.

At one point, she recalls walking eight miles in brutal Las Vegas heat. “My dollar store flip-flops literally melted under my feet. It was 120 degrees.” She adds, “That’s when you feel dehumanized.” 

During that period, she drew strength from the late Joan Rivers, who had faced her own trials. “She said to me, ‘You hang on, kid. This is a tough game,’” Powter recalls of meeting her earlier in her career. Years later, when her own world unraveled, Susan says she often asked herself, “What would Joan Rivers do?”

‘STOP THE INSANITY’ SUSAN POWTER EXPOSES TRUTH BEHIND FITNESS EMPIRE’S COLLAPSE AND LIFE DRIVING FOR UBER EATS

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When 1990s fitness icon Susan Powter sat down in Kurt’s Los Angeles studio for getbeyondconnected.com, she opened up about the collapse few people saw coming. (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson )

The moment tech went from a distraction to Susan Powter’s lifeline

Powter does not talk about technology like a cute productivity hack. She talks about it like survival. She used a phone, an app, digital platforms and a decision to use the same tools many of us blame for distraction as a way to climb back. Powter says the internet helped her see a path forward. “I’m internet obsessed, and I’m proud to say it,” she says. She also shows self-awareness about the darker side. “I know the darkness of it. I get it, I get it, but it is such a power.”

Then she says the line that sums up her whole strategy, “I’m going to digitalize everything. I’m going to sell it myself. I’m going to own everything.” That is her new business plan. And it is the part a lot of creators, freelancers and founders will recognize right away: when you stop waiting for permission, you start building assets you control.

How Susan Powter is taking back control with the help of tech

Powter talks about ownership like someone who has learned the cost of not having it. This time, she wants to see everything. “I’ll be checking the bank balance every 12 seconds,” she says. “I’ll be checking the analytics every second.” There is no confusion in her voice. She is not handing control to anyone else again.

For nine years, she drove for Uber Eats, eight to 10 hours a day, chasing $80 to $100 just to cover bills. There was no cushion and no mystery revenue. Everything depended on what she could see and control. After that, data feels like protection.

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She calls gig work and the internet “literally life-saving,” and says, “access to what is happening now matters, especially for 68-year-olds.” For anyone who thinks technology belongs to the young, her story argues the opposite. A phone and apps can drain your time. They can also rebuild your life.

Now, Powter is rebuilding on her own terms, using technology to reclaim her voice, her brand and her future. (Obscured Pictures)

How Susan Powter uses Instagram and TikTok today

Powter is not tiptoeing back into the public eye. She is going full speed. She says she is “obsessed with TikTok, Insta,” and she is experimenting with TikTok Shop. Powter also draws a bright line around how she wants to show up.

“I’ll recommend show and tell, not sell what I want to be,” she says. Her style is classic Susan. Big energy. Big honesty. Zero patience for fake polish. At one point, she laughs and describes her approach like this: “It’s kind of like affiliate marketing on acid.”

And she is thinking bigger than social media posts. She talks about doing “vertical actual reality TV,” showing people the brand rebuild in real time, filming gatherings and owning the content. “I’ll film it, I’ll own the content, I’ll put it up live. We’re done,” she says.

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The book, the movie and the part that matters most

Powter’s memoir is titled “And Then EM Died: Stop the Insanity, A Memoir,” available on Amazon. She calls it “a letter to my dead dog,” and says, “This is the first product I have owned out of all the products, all the years, all the work, and I get to see every sale.”

The documentary, “Stop the Insanity: Finding Susan Powter,” executive-produced by Jamie Lee Curtis and directed by Zeb Newman, is available on Amazon and Apple TV. But if you take one thing from this conversation, make it this: Powter refuses the tidy inspirational story arc. “The only reason I survived anything… No, I died a million deaths,” she says. Then she says what actually fueled her: “A lot of it was rage. I wasn’t going down like that.”

And yet she does not end there. “It doesn’t matter what happened. To hell with that. My being survived.” That honesty lands because it sounds like real life, not a poster. And maybe that is the real message now. Survival is not always pretty. Sometimes it is loud, messy and powered by the simple refusal to disappear.

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Kurt’s key takeaways

Susan Powter’s story resonates because it feels familiar, even now. First, a public identity collapses. Then private life grows heavier than anyone sees. Yet that is not where her story ends. Instead, she finds leverage where few people think to look: in a phone, in an app, in a platform and in the power to publish without gatekeepers. Of course, she is not pretending technology fixes everything. She sees the darkness. At the same time, she sees the power. Now, she is using that power the way she always has: loudly, honestly and on her own terms.

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So here’s the question to sit with: If your life fell apart tomorrow, would your tech habits help you rebuild, or would they pull you deeper?  Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.

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'90s fitness icon Susan Powter admits 'frightening' reality after losing multimillion-dollar empire

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Trump’s surgeon general nominee is running the wellness grifter playbook perfectly

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Trump’s surgeon general nominee is running the wellness grifter playbook perfectly

This is Optimizer, a weekly newsletter sent every Friday from Verge senior reviewer Victoria Song that dissects and discusses the latest gizmos and potions that swear they’re going to change your life. We’ll be taking a break next week and will back March 20th. Opt in for Optimizer here.

On the surface, the wellness to MAHA pipeline can appear baffling. How does one get from wanting to be healthy to eschewing vaccines, drinking raw milk, and opting for beef tallow over sunscreen? The simple answer would be: widespread misinformation on online platforms, particularly from influencers.

I’d argue the real answer is slightly more nuanced — and something that I’ve been ruminating over since last week’s confirmation hearing for Casey Means.

Means is President Trump’s controversial nominee for surgeon general, a role often described as the “nation’s doctor.” It entails being America’s foremost spokesperson on public health, as well as educating the public using the best scientific information available. You’re probably most familiar with the surgeon general’s warning on cigarette packs and alcohol labels.

Some of the backlash is because Means currently doesn’t hold an active medical license, is not currently practicing, and never finished her surgical residency — all of which are generally considered prerequisites for the post. She’s primarily known for being a wellness influencer with, as many of her detractors point out, dubious beliefs and inconsistent record of disclosing financial relationships with brands. For example, Trump’s former Surgeon General Jerome Adams has penned an opinion piece directly criticizing her stance on vaccines and history as a tech entrepreneur who recommends supplements. As the cofounder of Levels, a continuous glucose monitor (CGM) startup that’s aimed toward non-diabetics, Means has frequently used her platform to promote CGM use. That’s not inherently bad, but there’s a lack of evidence for its use in non-diabetic populations. There’s also no consensus among experts on how to interpret CGM data in non-diabetics. Aside from a lack of qualifications, Means’ influencer background presents several ethical red flags.

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Means tempered her beliefs during her confirmation hearing, despite having previously challenged vaccines, railed against birth control, and endorsed raw milk. I could probably write a separate Optimizer about each of those stances. But what I want to focus on here is the wellness to MAHA pipeline. Not only is it wildly profitable, but it’s got a very specific playbook.

Step one: establish credibility with selective science

If there’s one thing wellness influencers do well, it’s mixing actual science-based facts with emotional truths to lead their audience to potentially misleading conclusions. This is the most important part of any wellness influencer’s game.

Take Means’ book Good Energy, a New York Times bestseller cowritten with her brother Calley Means. The latter is a key figure in the MAHA movement, and serves as a senior adviser to RFK Jr. The book’s primary thesis is that metabolic dysfunction is at the root of every ailment you can think of, from acne to cancer. The front half of the book cites many true things about metabolism. For example, it goes into how mitochondria — the ol’ “powerhouse of the cell” — turns nutrients into cellular energy. She explains in digestible terms how mitochondria produce ATP, what ATP is used for in various bodily processes, and then goes into how certain factors of modern life may lead to “mitochondrial dysfunction.” She also goes into concepts like insulin resistance — when your body, over time, gets less responsive to the hormone leading to a less efficient use of blood sugar — and how it is heavily tied to conditions like diabetes, obesity, cardiovascular disease, and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. If you remember high school biology, or even searched these basic claims on Google, much of the information passes the smell check.

Good Energy is full of basic health facts placed next to less proven theories. Sen. Susan Collins questioned Means on passages in the book relating to psychedelic use during her confirmation hearing.
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Throughout the book, Means also dispenses some solid, common-sense health advice. Things like sleeping eight hours a day, exercising, and opting for whole, unprocessed foods whenever possible. At the end of each chapter, Means includes a link to her references. Combined with Casey Means’ background as a graduate from Stanford School of Medicine, this can easily give the impression of a well-researched book by an expert with ample scientific backing.

The problem is those facts are interspersed with less convincing assertions, which all get tied together in service of questionable or misleading conclusions. For example, the book’s premise is that metabolic issues are often the culprit behind many ailments. That means, so long as you practice “good energy” habits that keep your mitochondria functioning, you can prevent cancer and a long list of other illnesses. The reality is scientists find combating mitochondrial dysfunction extremely challenging.

Here’s another example: erectile dysfunction. According to Means, erectile dysfunction is “generally rooted in metabolic disease, with reduced blood flow to the capillaries and nerves of the penis being a key factor, driven by the impact of insulin resistance on forming arterial blockages (called atherosclerosis) and blood vessel dilation.” She quotes another doctor, Sara Gottfried, as saying that erectile dysfunction is a “neon sign” for metabolic disorders. In the scientific references for the chapter, Means quotes her own blog for Levels on the subject as well as some other studies supporting some of the claims.

It is true that metabolic issues can lead to erectile dysfunction. But there are many other causes too. Many a standup comedian has opined about how performance anxiety, stress, or even too much alcohol can impact sexual performance on a given night. Certain medications or conditions like Parkinson’s disease can also contribute to it. Meanwhile, Gottfried is another doctor/wellness influencer who practices functional medicine like Means. Functional medicine is a controversial healthcare approach that attempts to take a holistic look at treatment, focusing on the root cause of a health problem instead of managing symptoms. There’s nothing inherently wrong with that, and some medical institutions like Cleveland Clinic have come to embrace it in recent years. But its critics have accused functional medicine of being a thinly disguised type of alternative medicine that depends on unnecessary blood testing, restrictive diets, and a ton of expensive supplements.

Excerpt from Good Energy reading: “My mom’s doctor insisted on a cesarean birth due to my size. But because I didn’t pass through her vaginal canal, I didn’t ingest the organisms from her microbiome that would have helped seed mine. Breastfeeding is more challenging for mothers after c-section and my mother couldn’t breastfeed. she was also told not to lift more than ten pounds while her C-section scar healed, and I was nearly”

An excerpt from Good Energy. I was not kidding about the vaginal organisms thing.
Screenshot: Good Energy, Casey Means

This is a lot of nuance that could easily fly over a reader’s head if they’re not familiar with the subjects at hand. There are some scientific truths in the mix, which give credence to other suspicious assertions that Means will make down the line.

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By the end of the book, you might not blink twice that oral antibiotics, birth control, ibuprofen, fluoride toothpaste, scented candles, and perfume are listed as toxins. You might even find yourself at a dinner party, sharing a “factoid” that C-sections are suboptimal for a baby’s gut microbiome, because the infant doesn’t get the chance to ingest the mother’s vaginal organisms. (The truth is more nuanced). Heck, you might just heed Means’ advice and rehome your pet if they keep interrupting your sleep by daring to sleep on the bed. All of that is “bad energy.”

Step two: cast doubt on institutions

In her book and across her platforms, Means has touted the same origin story. After becoming disillusioned with the medical establishment, Means left to find a better way. To tell that story, she uses powerful anecdotes of her mother’s frustrating experience with the traditional medical establishment — as well as her own experiences as a surgical resident.

Means then pairs those emotional stories with other truths. Like the fact that pharmaceutical companies are greedy and do lobby legislators in Washington. Doctors have said they feel pressured to “overtreat” patients due to a number of factors, including financial incentives. From there, she makes the assertion that conventional medicine might be alright for treating acute ailments (e.g., saving your life after a car accident), but you should ignore doctors for chronic illnesses. Chapter three of Means’ book Good Energy is literally titled “Trust yourself, not your doctor.”

This is a potent narrative. Nevermind that Means hedges in her book, saying that she “deeply respects doctors.” The seed of doubt has been planted. It’s not a huge logical leap to This is the secret the establishment is not telling you. Or, You don’t need all those medications because the real profit is in keeping you sick. It’s right there on Means’ website. In a section detailing her controversies, Means asserts that she’s considered controversial because in part “she criticizes ‘sick care’ medicine for profiting from disease management, calls for reform of the Farm Bill, pharmaceutical incentives, food culture, and industrial agriculture.” Here, she’s painted herself as a warrior for health, someone who challenges the status quo because she couldn’t bring herself to participate in the system.

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The Los Angeles Times reported on apparent holes in Means’ origin story, including that her former department chair said she quit her residency because of anxiety, not a disillusionment with the system.

But again, this requires the average person to dig deep on their own. All the influencer has to do is present themselves as a more genuine truthteller, exhort you to “do your own research” from links they provide, and offer up a product that will empower you to “take your health into your own hands” — a narrative RFK Jr. has used as well.

Conveniently, there’s an easy built-in counter for anyone who tries to refute these claims with information from reputable institutions: They are corrupt and lying to you.

Step three: offer ‘simple’ solutions that lead to profit

At this point, Means has established that she does research (even if the conclusions are at times questionable) and has a medical background. She’s consistently messaged that medical institutions aren’t trustworthy. The last step is to tell her audience she has the real answer to why everyone is sick (metabolic dysfunction) and how to fix it (several products).

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As a wellness influencer, Means sells a lot of things. First and foremost, her philosophy of “good energy” and metabolic health, which has spawned a book and newsletter, complete with affiliate links for the “clean” products and supplements she recommends. In one of her “Good Energy” newsletters, Means recommends blood tests from Function Health — a standard part of her methodology — plus supplements like WeNatal and ENERGYBits, a form of spirulina algae and chlorella. (Nevermind that ENERGYBits was eviscerated on both Shark Tank and by the American Council of Science and Health as allegedly citing junk science and misleading product marketing. Studies have also not conclusively found health benefits to spirulina supplements.)

Another screenshot of an excerpt from Good Energy reading: “Depression, anxiety, acne, infertility, insomnia, heart disease, erectile dysfunction, type 2 diabetes, Alzheimer’s disease, cancer, and most other conditions that torture and shorten our lives are actually rooted in the same thing. And the ability to prevent and reverse these conditions—and feel incredibly today—is under your control and simpler than you think.”

And there’s the playbook’s final sales pitch. This passage comes directly from the Good Energy book.
Screenshot: Good Energy, Casey Means

Means has financial relationships with all three brands, including newsletter sponsorships and partnerships fees. It’s expected that influencers are usually selling something, but the problem is there were no disclosures for any of those three brands in that newsletter.

That’s not an outlier either. While reading the Good Energy book, the only brand relationship I saw Means disclose was that she cofounded Levels. Once in the text itself, and once in the acknowledgements. Conversely, she recommended Function Health three times in the book and not once does she disclose that she’s an investor. Other brands she promotes but doesn’t disclose relationships to in the book include, once again, WeNatal and Daily Harvest, a health food delivery service.

Energybits cofounder on SharkTank standing next to a table displaying the supplement.

ENERGYBits, an algae supplement that Means partners with and promotes, was roasted on Shark Tank for misleading marketing.
Michael Desmond/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images

An Associated Press investigation claimed that while Means did disclose newsletter sponsors, she failed to disclose affiliate links in a buying guide on her site. Meanwhile, Public Citizen, a nonprofit consumer advocacy organization, wrote a letter to the FTC calling on the agency to investigate Means for allegedly failing to follow advertising disclosure standards. The nonprofit found that, with regard to affiliate links, Means neglected to disclose financial relationships 56 percent of the time.

The problem with wellness trends

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It’s not guaranteed that Means will become surgeon general, but you can already see the impact of this common influencer playbook shifting public health. This strategy is why gray market peptides are popular. It’s why you see people starting to doubt vaccines and other medical treatments with decades of evidence.

It has an impact on health tech too. It’s why we’re starting to see gadgets that seem to spring directly from wellness trends. Hormone balancing and inflammation are two dubious wellness trends that are likely why I saw so many urine, blood, and saliva testing kits pop up at CES. Metabolism and nutrition are two areas where wearable and fitness tech makers are diving into with AI coaches.

The scariest thing about Casey Means and other wellness influencers is that some of what they say is true. They are rightfully honing in on genuine frustrations people have with our broken healthcare system and the overwhelming amount of contradictory information online. But where science says “the truth is complicated,” wellness influencers propose a simple solution: All you have to do is take out your wallet.

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AI T-shirt could detect hidden heart risks

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AI T-shirt could detect hidden heart risks

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Your next heart test might not happen in a hospital. It could start with something you pull from your dresser. Researchers at Imperial College London are developing an artificial intelligence (AI)-powered T-shirt that monitors the heart for days at a time. The mission is straightforward: detect inherited heart rhythm disorders that often remain hidden until it is too late.

These conditions can sit quietly for years. Then they strike without warning. That unpredictability is what makes them so dangerous.

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A member of the Imperial College London cardiology team and a research volunteer hold the AI-powered T-shirt designed for long-term heart rhythm monitoring. (British Heart Foundation)

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Why traditional heart tests miss warning signs

Most people who receive an electrocardiogram spend only a few minutes connected to sensors in a clinic. The test captures a brief snapshot of the heart’s electrical activity. That snapshot works well for many common heart issues. It creates blind spots when it comes to inherited rhythm disorders.

Cardiologists understand that these abnormalities can be intermittent. A dangerous pattern may surface for a short period, then disappear. If your ECG happens during a calm phase, the results can appear completely normal.

Current home ECG monitors rely on adhesive electrodes placed precisely on the chest, with leads connected to a waist-worn monitor. Patients must carefully remove and reattach the system to shower. That process can make extended monitoring inconvenient and difficult to maintain.

Extended monitoring changes that equation. When doctors review days or weeks of heart rhythm data, they gain context. Subtle irregularities become visible. Patterns emerge. Risks that once slipped through the cracks can come into focus.

How the AI T-shirt works

This project combines medical science with wearable design. The shirt uses soft sportswear-style fabric with up to 50 ECG-style sensors woven into the material. You can wear it under everyday clothing. You can sleep in it. You can wash it and put it back on. Instead of collecting a quick reading, the shirt records continuous electrical signals from your heart. Artificial intelligence then analyzes that data for patterns linked to inherited conditions such as Brugada syndrome.

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With funding from the British Heart Foundation, researchers are training the algorithm using ECG data from more than 1,000 individuals. Some participants live with inherited heart rhythm disorders. Others do not. That mix helps the system distinguish between healthy variations and signals that suggest elevated risk.

Next, around 200 volunteers will wear the shirt for up to three months. Researchers will evaluate how effectively it detects abnormal rhythms outside a hospital environment.

SMART PILL CONFIRMS WHEN MEDICATION IS SWALLOWED

Dr. Keenan Saleh and Dr. Ahran Arnold hold the AI T-shirt which uses up to 50 built-in sensors to capture continuous ECG data while patients go about daily life. (Imperial College London)

Why this matters for families

Inherited heart conditions often run silently through generations. In the United States, millions of people live with congenital or inherited heart disorders that can increase the risk of sudden cardiac death. Since 1999, sudden cardiac death rates have risen among adults ages 25 to 44, a troubling trend for otherwise healthy young people. Some experience breathlessness or fainting during routine activities. Others have no symptoms at all. A normal heart test on a single day may not reveal an underlying rhythm disorder. For families, that uncertainty can weigh heavily.

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Carly Benge, one of the people involved in the research, was diagnosed with Brugada syndrome as an adult. Her children may have inherited the condition, but there is no clear answer yet. Families in the U.S. face similar questions when a genetic heart condition is discovered in one relative. Longer-term monitoring could provide clarity much earlier in life. When detection shifts from a short clinic visit to ongoing observation, it offers something powerful. Time. Time to intervene. Time to plan. Time to protect.

When could this AI T-shirt become available?

Researchers estimate the technology may reach clinical practice within five years. Before that happens, it must undergo rigorous trials and regulatory review.

Initial testing focuses on adults. If results are strong, the approach could eventually extend to children. The ultimate goal is clear. Equip doctors with better tools to identify inherited heart rhythm disorders before they become fatal.

Volunteer Carly Benge holds the washable monitoring AI T-shirt that could help detect inherited heart conditions earlier. (British Heart Foundation)

What this means for you

Even if you have no known family history of heart disease, this technology signals a broader shift in healthcare. A normal ECG result on a single day may not tell the full story. Continuous monitoring could uncover hidden risks that brief tests miss. AI systems can process vast amounts of heart data faster than any human reviewer. Comfortable wearable designs may also make long-term screening more practical for everyday people.

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If this T-shirt proves accurate, doctors could identify high-risk patients earlier. Early detection often leads to medication, closer follow-up or implanted devices that reduce the risk of sudden cardiac death. It also moves heart care closer to real life. Instead of repeated clinic visits, meaningful data collection could happen while you work, relax or sleep. That shift makes prevention more personal and potentially more effective.

Researchers also hope the technology could eventually help identify other rhythm disorders such as atrial fibrillation, expanding its impact beyond rare inherited conditions.

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Kurt’s key takeaways

Wearable technology already tracks steps, sleep and workouts. Medical-grade clothing could represent the next step forward. An AI-powered T-shirt will not replace cardiologists. It could give them a longer, clearer view of how the heart behaves in daily life. For families with a history of inherited heart conditions, that deeper view may offer earlier answers and fewer devastating surprises.

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If a simple shirt could quietly monitor your heart for weeks and help prevent sudden cardiac death, would you choose to wear it? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.

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Amazon.com says things are fixed after some issues with logging in and checking out

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Amazon.com says things are fixed after some issues with logging in and checking out

If you were having issues shopping on Amazon or loading your playlists on Amazon Music on Thursday, you weren’t alone. For over three hours today, Downdetector showed a sizable spike in people reporting issues with checkout, search, and logging in. The problem seemed to be affecting both the site and the mobile apps. But an Amazon spokesperson tells The Verge that the issues are now fixed.

“We’re sorry that some customers may have temporarily experienced issues while shopping,” Amazon spokesperson Jennie Bryant says in a statement. “We have resolved the issue, which was related to a software code deployment, and website and app are now running smoothly.”

Several Verge staffers experienced issues themselves when there were problems. Clicking through to many products produced a “sorry, something went wrong” error, and even pages that did load were not showing pricing. Users reported being repeatedly logged out of their accounts when trying to check out or load their cart. Even the parts of Amazon.com that were working seem to be loading slowly.

The company has been dealing with AWS outages in Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates due to drone strikes by the Iranian military, but there has not been any word of more widespread outages in the US or elsewhere.

Update March 5th: Added comment from Amazon saying that things are fixed.

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