A Montana man is suing a cryonics company to get back his dad’s head — saying he can never fulfill his sci-fi-like dream of coming back to life because they burned the rest of his body. Kurt Pilgeram, ...
Since the age of 13, Joseph Kowalsky has harbored a fascination with life after death, pondering ways to extend his existence indefinitely. Today, Kowalsky, now 59, is among some 2,000 individuals who ...
A lawsuit filed by a Montana man against a cryonics company is asking for $1 million -- and the return of his dad's frozen head after the business cremated the remainder of the man's body. The dad, ...
Cryonics companies cryogenically freeze people after death, hoping they will one day be revived. Critics say it is fantastical. Proponents say the possibility is better than accepting death. The idea ...
The cryonics company that froze Boston Red Sox left fielder Ted Williams after his death, the Alcor Life Extension Foundation, is embroiled in a nasty legal dispute. A man claims that, instead of ...
The series finale of HBO docuseries "How To with John Wilson" explores cryopreservation. Everyday people are increasingly seeking out a frozen fate and cryonics companies are making it a chilling ...
Max More, CEO of the cryonics company Alcor, has produced a video in response to physicist Michio Kaku’s surprisingly weak critique of cryonics. In all fairness to Kaku, he kinda had this coming.
Meet Kai Micah Mills, a 24-year-old entrepreneur from Utah, who dropped out of high school and spent his teenage years running Minecraft servers from his basement with his long-haired tabby cat named ...
Two of the co-founders of a Russian cryonics company called KrioRus are fighting over the ownership of dozens of frozen brains, The Daily Beast reports, a confounding disagreement that could end in ...
The 2000s was a weird time for movies. Absurd plot twists, annoying rich men played by Tom Cruise, and manic pixie dream girlfriends abounded in cinema— and Vanilla Sky contains all three in spades.