『The Cancer Mavericks: A History of Survivorship』のカバーアート

The Cancer Mavericks: A History of Survivorship

The Cancer Mavericks: A History of Survivorship

著者: Matthew Zachary Worldwide
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Before cancer was a hashtag. Before survivorship was a talking point. Before anyone rang a damn bell—there were Mavericks.

They didn’t look like heroes. They weren’t trying to go viral. They were patients, parents, doctors, punks, poets, and misfits who got sick, got angry, and got loud. They questioned authority, rewrote the rules, and turned personal trauma into public transformation. They didn’t wait to be invited into the room—they built new rooms.

The Cancer Mavericks is a documentary podcast series about the people who made survivorship matter—before it had a name. From the National Cancer Act to the birth of the AYA movement, from grassroots organizing to celebrity activism, from chemo brain to the cancer Moonshot—this is the untold history of how patients forced the system to care.

Created and hosted by 30-year brain cancer survivor and healthcare rebel Matthew Zachary, this isn’t a story about cancer. It’s a story about what people do after.

Bold. Human. Unapologetically real.

© 2024 Matthew Zachary Worldwide
世界 社会科学 衛生・健康的な生活 身体的病い・疾患
エピソード
  • Introducing: The Cancer Mavericks
    2021/05/07

    Before survivorship was a word, it was a fight. In this special preview, host Matthew Zachary lays the groundwork for The Cancer Mavericks—a documentary series about the people who refused to be statistics and built a movement instead. If you think you know the story of cancer, think again.

    See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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    4 分
  • EP1: The Big C Wasn’t Always on TV
    2021/06/04

    Back when doctors didn’t even say the word “cancer” out loud, let alone tell patients they had it, survivorship wasn’t a movement. It wasn’t even an idea. It was shame, silence, and stigma.

    In this premiere episode, host Matthew Zachary kicks off The Cancer Mavericks with a gut-punch history of how cancer was once portrayed in media—if it was portrayed at all. From 1940s radio dramas and Bette Davis deathbed scenes to 1990s network TV and Hollywood’s “clean cancer” obsession, this episode unpacks how pop culture shaped what people thought cancer looked like, who was allowed to survive, and how little patients were told about their own disease.

    We meet the pioneers who broke the silence. People like Sidney Farber, the “father of chemotherapy,” and Mary Lasker, the ad-world power broker who dragged Congress kicking and screaming into the War on Cancer. These aren’t textbook characters. They’re real people who changed the future—while the present was still in the dark.

    And we hear directly from Matthew himself, who was diagnosed with brain cancer at 21 while studying to be a film composer. His life and his advocacy began not in a lab, but in a college dorm room with a numb hand, a blinking answering machine, and an appointment with a neurosurgeon who canceled Shabbos to deliver the news.

    This episode sets the tone for the entire series: honest, human, angry, smart, and necessary. Whether you’re a survivor, caregiver, researcher, student, or just someone who’s tired of sugarcoated stories—this is the podcast that tells it like it was, and why it still matters.


    KEY TAKEAWAYS

    • Cancer was once so feared and misunderstood that doctors routinely hid diagnoses from patients
    • Hollywood sanitized cancer stories with “clean” illnesses like brain tumors, avoiding the visual reality of chemo, surgeries, and suffering
    • Sidney Farber’s leukemia trials with chemical warfare agents sparked the first real breakthroughs in treatment
    • Mary Lasker leveraged her advertising savvy to turn cancer into a political priority, helping launch the National Cancer Act of 1971
    • Matthew Zachary’s own diagnosis in 1995 shows how survivorship is deeply personal, and deeply influenced by who tells your story—and how


    FEEDBACK

    Like this episode? Rate and review The Cancer Mavericks on your favorite podcast platform. Explore more at https://cancermavericks.com

    See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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    42 分
  • The Alumni Association
    2021/07/01

    By the 1980s, cancer was no longer a death sentence. But the question of what surviving actually meant was unanswered. Cancer survivors had to navigate issues around employment, relationships, and the emotional and physical side effects of treatment in a world that largely didn’t know what to do with them. (and they were still called “victims.”) In 1985, a young doctor named Fitzhugh Mullan wrote an essay called “Seasons of Survival” about his own experience with cancer. His piece helped popularize the term “cancer survivor” and resonated with a growing number of survivors, who were starting to form support groups around the country. Among them was Catherine Logan Carrillo, the founder of People Living Through Cancer in New Mexico, who asked Fitzhugh to help her convene an “alumni association” for cancer survivors. And they did, during one monumental weekend in Albuquerque. For more information about this series, visit https://CancerMavericks.com

    See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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    39 分

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