AG1: The Lazarus of supplements, part 2
8 June 2026
Jonathan Milne's Powder Keg podcast about AG1 and its founder, Chris Ashenden, is equal parts frustrating and fascinating. Fascinating with regards to the depth and breadth of his investigation, and frustrating to hear about how he was allegedly scooped by Scott Carney in May 2024. Carney re-broke the story about Ashenden's criminal charges, information Milne says that Carney would not have possessed if Milne hadn't shared that information first. But them's the breaks when you're a professional journalist in a lawsuit-phobic country, and maybe the October 2024 release of Powder Keg ultimately worked in its favour as it would be Carney who would bear the brunt of AG1's initial legal posturing, while Milne's work down under continued to be underestimated. Audio clips are played throughout the podcast in which Ashenden downplays the seriousness of the charges he faced. As Milne notes, Ashenden allegedly misleads his audiences about the extent to which reparations were and were not paid, and frames the whole real estate debacle as something he persevered without any remorse about the victims. Milne, for his part, interviewed Ashenden's former employees, investors, and ex-tenants with minimal interference.