Human Interest Real People Real People Parenting Record Executive Emmanuel Zunz Needs a Kidney – and He'll Donate $1 Every Time This Story Is Shared Emmanuel Zunz became a first-time father via surrogate last week. Now he needs a kidney so he can watch his son grow up By Cindy Watts Cindy Watts Cindy Watts is a CMA Award-winning journalist who has spent more than 20 years reporting on country music from Nashville, Tennessee. The bulk of her career was spent with The USA Today Network. She has a degree in recording industry from Middle Tennessee State University, where she recently spent a semester teaching journalism. She currently co-hosts 52-The Podcast alongside Sugarland singer/songwriter Kristian Bush. She adores baking, The Golden Girls and Dolly Parton, but not as much as she loves her two children. People Editorial Guidelines Published on August 24, 2022 01:50PM EDT Emmanuel Zunz with his son and dog. Photo: Courtesy Emmanuel Zunz Emmanuel Zunz is a 49-year-old bachelor and CEO who just became a first-time father. Zunz, CEO and Founder of digital distribution and record label ONErpm, runs a successful business, has multiple homes and is joyful at the thought of his son's arrival. The baby was born via surrogate on Aug. 15. Being a dad is heart-softening for the hustling entrepreneur, but there are other ways he's hoping to change his life now that his son is here. Zunz needs a kidney transplant. It will be his third — and his last. The executive suffers from IgA nephropathy, an autoimmune disease that affects the kidneys' filters. Zunz learned he had the disease when he was 23, and his kidneys failed six years later. His first kidney transplant came through his sister's generosity four months later. The kidney worked perfectly for several years but eventually declined, and Zunz's father donated one of his kidneys in an emergency situation. Now that organ has failed, and Zunz is on frequent dialysis while he balances first-time fatherhood. "I really had wanted to get a transplant before, and I thought for sure I was going to get one, and it just didn't work out," he says as the dialysis machine beeps in the background. "That's part of the reason I want to be more open about it in public and do a campaign because I can't wait anymore." Zunz has a voucher through the National Kidney Registry. He was assured the wait for a new kidney wouldn't be longer than six months, but that deadline has passed. Zunz was told of two kidneys in the last month that were potential matches, but neither worked out. In a desperate attempt to find a healthy kidney for himself — and raise awareness about kidney donation in general — Zunz launched eztransplant.org, where people can sign up to be a kidney donor for the executive. Potential donors must be healthy, under 50 years old, and have an O blood type to qualify. In addition, Zunz will donate $1 for every share of this story up to $100,000 to the National Kidney Foundation. "I'm a person that likes to take action," he says. "I'm an entrepreneur. I get things done. I want to use my situation to raise awareness because I don't want it just to be about me." Emmanuel Zunz with his dog. Courtesy Emmanuel Zunz It isn't just about him – the search is also about being the best father he can be to his infant son. Zunz always knew he wanted to be a father but had a failed marriage, set aside his personal life and invested himself entirely into his business. Then he realized he was getting older rapidly and feared his time was running out to become an active father. He was healthy when he reached out to an agency and spent months searching for a compatible egg donor and a surrogate. By the time he found the donor and a surrogate in early 2020, Zunz was starting to get sick. COVID-19 was creeping into the news cycle, but he was still confident he would get a transplant and didn't want to stop the process. He told the agency the truth about his health condition, and they replied that as long as he knew how to manage it, he could move forward. Within weeks, Zunz received his diagnosis, a Nashville tornado heavily damaged his home, and the pandemic triggered sweeping shutdowns. Zunz spent the downtime in Virginia. By February of 2021, he thought he found a donor, and the transplant was scheduled. The surgery fell through, and he got a stomach virus that, due to his immunocompromised state, took him six months from which to recover. He was well from the virus by the fall of 2021, when the National Kidney Registry activated him. "I'm not looking for people to feel sorry for me," he says. "I just need a kidney. Disease doesn't discriminate. And donors have a much more fruitful life. You're saving somebody's life." While Zunz lives with the anxiety of not knowing what health struggles tomorrow will bring, he's confident in the future. "I have a ton of hope that I know my life is going to improve," he says. To help Zunz find a kidney, visit eztransplant.org. Close