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Jesse Eisenberg reveals he plans to become a kidney donor

Started by Clark, November 01, 2025, 09:07:47 PM

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Clark

Unrelated directed kidney donor in 2003, my recipient and I are well!
650 time blood and platelet donor since 1976 and still giving!
Elected to the OPTN/UNOS Boards of Directors & Executive, Kidney Transplantation, and Ad Hoc Public Solicitation of Organ Donors Committees, 2005-11 & OPTN 2025-29.

Clark

https://www.comicsands.com/eisenberg-kidney-donation-stranger

Jesse Eisenberg Opens Up About 'No Brainer' Choice To Donate Kidney To Total Stranger

In a recent TODAY appearance, the Now You See Me star explained why he felt moved to do an "altruistic" organ donation, and fans are cheering him on.
American playwright, filmmaker, actor, and now literal lifesaver Jesse Eisenberg is taking his holiday giving to a whole new level. The Now You See Me star revealed on the TODAY show that he's donating one of his kidneys to a total stranger.
The man isn't conjuring a disappearing organ act. He's actually doing it.
Eisenberg, ever the soft-spoken overachiever, dropped the announcement casually on live TV:
"I'm actually donating my kidney in six weeks... I really am."
And no, this isn't a promo stunt for Now You See Me: Now You Don't.
Asked what inspired the decision, the Social Network star replied with peak Eisenberg energy:
"I don't know why. I got bitten by the blood donation bug. I'm doing an altruistic donation mid-December. I'm so excited to do it."
In the U.S., roughly 27,759 kidney transplants were performed in 2024, about a quarter of them from living donors. Eisenberg is now joining that rare and generous club. His kidney, like one of his Now You See Me tricks, will vanish from one person and reappear in another, saving a life in the process.
For anyone unfamiliar with the term, an "altruistic donor" gives a kidney to someone they've never met. No family ties, no personal connection—just pure, organ-level kindness. As RWJ Barnabas Health puts it, these are "non-directed" donors who step up for strangers with advanced kidney disease.
Eisenberg explained it in his own words:
"It's essentially risk-free and so needed. I think people will realize that it's a no-brainer if you have the time and the inclination."
While "risk-free" might be a touch of magician's optimism, experts say the odds are overwhelmingly in donors' favor: over 95% recover fully and go on to live everyday, healthy lives with just one kidney. The surgery itself carries about the same risk as any routine laparoscopic procedure—more "disappearing appendix" than death-defying illusion.
He also broke down how the kidney exchange process works, in a way that sounds suspiciously like a jewelry heist diagram:
"Let's say person X needs a kidney in Kansas City, and their child was going to donate, but isn't a match—but somehow I am. That person gets my kidney, and their child still donates to someone else. It's a chain reaction—but it only works if there's an altruistic donor to start it."
Apparently, Eisenberg first considered donating a decade ago, but the organization he contacted never responded. Could you imagine ghosting Zack Snyder's Lex Luthor of all people?
This time, a doctor friend pointed him toward NYU Langone Health in New York City. After a few tests, the magician-slash-humanitarian was cleared for surgery in mid-December.
He also wanted to clarify a common concern: what if a family member needs a kidney later?
According to Eisenberg, that's covered thanks to the National Kidney Registry's family voucher program:
"The way it works now is you can put a list of whoever you'd like to be first at the top of the list. So it's risk-free for my family as well."

You can view the interview clip here: 

Eisenberg credited his wife, Anna Strout, a teacher and longtime charity worker, for inspiring his sense of activism. Her late mother ran a domestic violence shelter, which the couple continues to support.
Of course, Eisenberg, being Eisenberg, couldn't resist adding a self-deprecating quip about his ongoing blood donations:
"I just have so much blood in me, and I feel like I should spill it. I really like doing it, and I don't know why."
Between blood drives, altruistic kidney surgery, and fatherhood, Eisenberg's pulling off the ultimate vanishing act—ego, gone; empathy, revealed.
And naturally, the internet pulled a rabbit out of that hat, transforming Eisenberg's generosity into a viral act of modern magic.
Unrelated directed kidney donor in 2003, my recipient and I are well!
650 time blood and platelet donor since 1976 and still giving!
Elected to the OPTN/UNOS Boards of Directors & Executive, Kidney Transplantation, and Ad Hoc Public Solicitation of Organ Donors Committees, 2005-11 & OPTN 2025-29.

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