EXCLUSIVEFamily stunned to learn their son is behind the world's first sperm race

The family of a teenager behind a unique 'sperm race' has told DailyMail.com they had no idea about the contest until last week.

Eric Zhu teamed up with other teenage tech enthusiasts to create the spectacle that will take place on April 25 in a downtown Los Angeles space that's normally used as an interior set for Hollywood movies.

Their plan is to live race sperm in order to raise awareness of male infertility. They're using $1.4million in funds raised from Silicon Valley investors to throw the event.

Family: Eric is seen with father Sam, mom Yan and brother Eddy

Family: Eric is seen with father Sam, mom Yan and brother Eddy

Big news: Eric Zhu teamed up with other teenage tech overachievers

Big news: Eric Zhu teamed up with other teenage tech overachievers

Eric's parents had no clue he was behind it.

‘I had no idea what was going on until my international friends called me last Wednesday,’ Eric’s father, Sam, 49, recalled. 'They said they saw some news about it on a website.’

His wife, Yan, 47, and younger son, Eddy, an accomplished competitive swimmer, will be attending the race in person while Sam livestreams it at home.

Despite a last-minute change of venue, spectators are expected to cheer on two college students who will have their spermatozoa battle it out to the finish line in a microscopic talent competition.

Tickets for the event are listed as $20 for students and $40 for general admission. VIP tickets are priced at $999.99.

A description of the event on the Dice ticket platform boasts with fanfare: 'Witness the world’s first live sperm race - where science meets sport.

'Two college students, featuring Tristan Mykel and Asher Proeger, will compete in the ultimate battle of fertility and fitness, racing their own sperm under the microscope.'

It states there will be 'live visuals and epic commentary' or the ‘historic showdown.'

The event was originally to be held at the Hollywood Palladium, a famed Los Angeles concert location, but venue bosses 'didn’t like the press they were getting' and canceled the contract last week.

'Palladium ended up kicking us out of the venue, Eric told Daily Mail. ‘They didn't like the press at all.'

Eric and his team of entrepreneurs, including former Mr Beast content strategist Garrett Niconienko, scrambled to find a new venue and now the show is being held at the LA Center Studios in downtown Los Angeles.

'I feel that this kind of idea is crazy, but I think about it, it makes sense as well,’ Sam, a biological scientist for a large agricultural company, said.

'Initially I was very surprised but now I think it's a good idea.'

Sam first heard about his son's scheme from a friend across the other side of the globe on April 16.

His eldest son started his first money-making business when he was 13 from the bathroom of Carmel High School in the Indiana town (pop: 100,000) where the family live.

Eric began creating and scaling business models in lockdown during the covid pandemic, helping companies, including venture capital firms, manage their data systems.

He told DailyMail.com he was kicked out of Carmel High School after starting his first business, Aviato, in the bathroom while skipping classes.

'I was stuck at home during covid and just started speaking with as many people as possible in business and finance.

Eventually, with his first business flourishing, Eric moved to San Francisco when he was 15, opened an office and began connecting with tech gurus such as Sam Altman, CEO of Open AI.

Another tech wunderkind, 16-year-old Nick Small, head of business manager consulting firm Stealth, is also a co-founder of the sperm start-up.

The event will feature stats, leaderboards and instant replays. play-by-play commentary, instant replays and leaderboard.

The 'race track' being used is 8 inches long and is modelled on the female reproductive system.

'Faster sperm is healthier sperm,' Eric told Daily Mail. 'And no one has really paid attention to sperm health recently. Like if you look at it, like 50 years ago, sperm count has declined by half.'

Two students from rival universities, the University of Southern California and the University of California, Los Angeles, were found to have ‘matching biomarkers’ and selected to take part.

The company’s manifesto, Eric wrote online, states: 'Sperm racing isn't just about racing sperm (although, let's be honest, that's hilarious). it's about turning health into a competition. it's about making male fertility something people actually want to talk about, track, and improve.

'We're taking a topic no one wants to touch and making it interesting, measurable, and weirdly changing this paradigm. Because health is a race and everyone deserves a shot at the starting line.

'We've put together a team of researchers and operators who's built things people said couldn't work- and made them massive.'

Eric commented that the goal was to have fun while raising awareness about male fertility.

'We want to turn health into competition,’ he told DailyMail.com.

'Sperm is surprising as a biomarker. The healthier you are, the faster sperm moves.'

Once the fresh sperm samples have been retrieved - shortly before the race - they will be placed in a pipette and injected into a 'microfluid device'.

A live video feed, magnified 40 times to display the 0.05mm sperm, will track their progress to the finish line.

'We’re taking a topic no one wants to touch and making it interesting, measurable and weirdly changing this paradigm,' Eric said.

His parents moved to the States China 25 years ago to attend graduate school and were living in New Jersey when they started a family before moving to Indiana.

'My wife and I, we are quite open-minded,' said Sam of his approach to parenting.

'We don’t like other Asian parents - they put on too much pressure for the study of mathematics or other activities to ask a lot of work from kids.

'We just let them do what they are interested in.'

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