Airestech CEO Josh Brunie recently appeared on Gary Brecka’s Ultimate Human Podcast, where he tried to explain the science behind the company’s EMF-protection amulet.
During the conversation, Brunie leaned heavily on technical-sounding concepts like silicon resonator chips, fractal antennas, and what he described as a misunderstood area of physics.
He framed Airestech’s product not as something that simply blocks signals, but as a tool designed to help athletes and everyday users manage the “noise” of modern electromagnetic environments.
That message has become central to Airestech’s marketing push, especially as the company has entered the UFC sponsorship ecosystem. The amulet is being positioned as protection against the supposed dangers of WiFi, 5G, and electromagnetic radiation.
According to Brunie, the problem with most of the EMF conversation is that people misunderstand what “protection” actually means. He argues it isn’t about shielding yourself or trying to block exposure entirely.
“The fundamental problem with the EMF conversation,” Brunie explains, isn’t about blocking electromagnetic fields or wrapping yourself in tinfoil. In fact, those approaches make exposure worse.
“Blocking is binary,” he states. “You’re either blocking or you’re not. If you are blocking, then nothing’s working. If you are blocking and stuff still getting signal, you’ve actually compounded the original problem you’re trying to solve.”
Brunie claims the human body is constantly conducting EMF, interpreting these signals as biological interference that disrupts ion channels, calcium gating, and ATP production at the cellular level.
“Everything within that field becomes part of the field,” Brunie explains. “Humans, buildings, plants, animals, you all become everything becomes part of the field.”
This idea matters, he says, because the body is fundamentally electrical. The heart generates power, the brain uses it, and nearly every biological process depends on electrical signaling and precise timing.
According to Brunie, introducing unpredictable electromagnetic fields into this system causes calcium ion gates to get stuck open or become sluggish, forcing mitochondria to expend extra energy just to maintain balance.
The Airestech amulet, he argues, doesn’t block these fields. Instead, it supposedly creates what he calls a “structured field,” something predictable and stable that the body can adapt to.
The technology relies on a fractal antenna, made up of millions of tiny etchings tuned to interact with ambient electromagnetic fields.
“It gives your body a reference point that it does tune to,” Brunie says, comparing the effect to how tuning forks synchronize waves around them.
But while Brunie presents the amulet as science-forward, the reality is far less convincing.
A look at Airestech’s own website shows grand claims, including a patent for a ‘Method for Protecting Biological Objects from the Negative Influence of Technogenic Electromagnetic Radiation.’
However, a closer examination makes it clear the company’s explanations aren’t built to withstand scrutiny. Much of the language reads like gibberish dressed up in scientific terminology.
In other words, it borrows the vocabulary of science without delivering anything scientifically meaningful.
That gap was highlighted in a recent investigation by Linus Tech Tips, which took a deep dive into the Airestech Life Tune amulet.
“I’ve been wearing this amulet and I’ve got to say I’ve never felt more at peace,” Linus began sarcastically, before quickly dropping the act.
However, Linus couldn’t maintain the facade. “Okay no I can’t do this anymore,” he admitted.
When Linus tested the amulet using an RF meter, the advertised 32-foot protection range quickly fell apart. “Obviously the Airestech didn’t do anything,” he concluded.
Inside a professional EMF chamber, he added: “Being in here does not magically make you feel better even though this is really what they’re trying to achieve with nonsense devices like the life tune.”
A CT scan of the amulet revealed an even bigger issue. “There is no physical connection between their silicon processor and the rest of the scam late,” Linus reported, intentionally mispronouncing “amulet.”
More testing with an RF spectrum analyzer produced the same result. Even after breaking open the device and testing the internal “silicon resonator” directly, the outcome didn’t change.
“Are my Harmony chakras aligned,” Linus joked sarcastically.
His final verdict was blunt: “If you genuinely believe that 5G or Wi-Fi radiation is bad for you I’m probably not going to win that argument right now but what I can do is I can tell you that this and anything short of this,” gesturing to the professional EMC chamber, “is complete horse snake oil.”
Despite this, Airestech has continued leaning on celebrity endorsements. For example, Russell Brand promoted the Lifetune Mini to his followers as a solution against what he called “evil energies” in the modern world.
This story is completely bonkers pic.twitter.com/yECFLHiFW8
— calfkicker (@calfkickercom) October 16, 2024
The company had also partnered with UFC star Maycee Barber, but that choice has only raised more uncomfortable questions.

In late June 2024, Barber revealed a serious list of health issues that have potentially derailed her career. She described being hospitalized for nine days after her last match, developing pneumonia, and later struggling with fatigue, body aches, and worsening symptoms tied to an Epstein-Barr virus infection.
Ultimately, she was forced to pause her UFC career while seeking answers from medical specialists.
There is no credible evidence that wearing a pendant can “structure” WiFi fields in a way that meaningfully improves biology. The language sounds technical, but it isn’t grounded in established physics or medicine.