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Posts with tag nude
Posted Dec 29th 2006 1:22PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Books

Two-time breast cancer survivor Tania Katan was first diagnosed with breast cancer at the age of 21, and then again ten years later. With gutsy humor in an outlandishly candid expose, she faced cancer twice, dealt with a "supportive but neurotic family," swore off toxic girlfriends, wrote about her experiences in a book and performed a one-woman play, both called
My One-Night Stand With Cancer.
Katan, who underwent a mastectomy each time she was diagnosed with breast cancer, and who appears naked above the waist in her back-of-the-book photo, ran a race to raise breast cancer awareness in the best form she thought possible -- topless. "People were racing for something very specific, to cure breast cancer, but they didn't want to see what breast cancer looks like."
On the Amazon webpage for her book, the description of My One-Night Stand With Cancer
reads, "A Jewish lesbian's memoir loaded with humor. She survived to prove, perhaps, that laughter is in fact the best medicine. With lymph nodes negative and outlook positive despite lightning striking twice, this 10K runner shows great spirit and strength."
Posted Dec 20th 2006 1:36PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Celebrity fundraisers, All Cancers, Books, Products

Looking for a cartoonishly risqué way to keep track of the days in 2007? Fifteen webcomic artists have created the
Tastefully Done: 2007 Nude Webcomic Calendar featuring nude versions of webcomic characters, with all proceeds going to cancer research.
The calendar showcases the work of Ivan Pope, Ali Graham, Gordon McAlpin, Charles Woolbright, Chris Jones, Bryan Chojnowski, Pontus Madsen & Christian Fundin, Chris Simmons, Philip Spence, Rich Dachtera, Robert Koch, Ramón Pérez, Rob Coughler, Ryan Estrada, and of course, webcomic characters appearing in various scenarios of nudity.
From geriatric strip poker to nude bus rides, the artists realize that the calendar might not be for everyone, but it was only a matter of time before webcomic cartoon characters joined the ranks of the nude in benefiting cancer research. It's not
naked librarians, hunky firefighters,
naked rugby players,
naked day traders,
nude village women (who started the nude calendar for cancer charity phenomenon) or
topless models (who decided in being different they would remain fully-clothed), but it is a one-of-a-kind calendar in the webcomic category.
You can take a peek and purchase the
Tastefully Done: 2007 Nude Webcomic Calendar through Lulu's
here.
Posted Dec 18th 2006 1:33PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Skin Cancer, Melanoma, Celebrity spokesperson, Environment, Cancer Survivors

Strip, Search and Save spokesperson and former surfer girl Kathy Lette shared a story of how her melanoma came to be named Bruce in the Village Voice
It's Time to get Naked feature as part of an effort to raise skin cancer awareness.
A self-confessed slathered in baby oil bake in the sun tanner, Lette told the reporter, "I would say my boyfriend used to get me to cut his name out of paper and sticky-tape it to my stomach so that I would get a tan tattoo in his name. The joke was, if I ever get cancer I'll have a melanoma called Bruce.''
It was a not-so-funny joke when Lette had skin cancer surgically removed from her neck earlier this year. It was then that she remembered, in a bit of irony, the suntan tattoo joke she had told years ago.
As a skin cancer survivor, Lette has joined the Cancer Council's Strip, Search and Save campaign. The premise of the campaign is that couples sans clothing and visually check each other's body for unusual changes. With a nudge and a wink, Lette said, "Not only is it important that they do it, but it could be fun," suggesting that this exam might add spice to the couple's sex lives.
Who said cancer awareness and prevention cannot be fun? Lette certainly is not taking the stodgy position that the attitude and approach need be dreary.
In addition to the Strip, Search and Save campaign,
Puberty Blues author Lette's latest novel is called
How To Kill Your Husband – and other handy household hints. Of course, as she says, if you are still fond of your spouse (and I would say most of us are quite fond of our spouse) have him join you in scanning each other's skin. "The peeling is mutual," states Lette. To learn more about skin cancer and how to prevent and detect melanoma, visit Lette's
Strip, Search and Save section at the Cancer Council of Australia.
Posted Dec 14th 2006 6:18PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Celebrity fundraisers, Products

Naked librarians. Naked folk singers. Middle-aged village women posing nude. As for the anything goes as long as it's going to charity, thirteen of Britain's top topless models have said enough is enough. With tongue in cheek humor, the models hold that modeling nude should be left to the professionals.
So, in a classic tipping of a sacred cow, the models have decided to put out a calendar of their own, only no one will be taking off their clothes. Instead, the models, who will be bucking the current calendar charity trend of scantily-clad amateurs, strike a professional pose fully-clothed in
Calendar Girls Get Dressed For Breakthrough Breast Cancer.
Referred to as
glamour girls, the women appear in layered garments of woolen jumpers, scarves, stockings, coats, hats and gloves and go domestic, as opposed to the normal nightlife lifestyle most often associated to the models in the land of model-dom.
According to photographer Stuart White, "I wanted to let the glamour girls make fun of themselves. Their normal image is all to do with partying and the high life, which is why all the portraits show them finding their housework difficult."
A portion of the proceeds from the sale of the calendar will go to UK's Breakthrough Breast Cancer. As stated on the product page, "
Calendar Girls Get Dressed For Breakthrough Breast Cancer is an affectionate tribute to the many recent calendars in which unglamorous amateurs have stripped off for worthy causes. It is NOT endorsed by the makers of the 2003 film Calendar Girls or previous films of the same name or those portrayed in them." Without endorsement, it is sure to get a chuckle. Going in the opposite direction and poking fun at yourself is a refreshing turn.
Copies of the calendar can be purchased
here.
Posted Oct 16th 2006 1:22PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Events, Fundraisers, Blogs

During the first week of October, bloggers submit photos of breasts as part of a blogging breast cancer fundraiser to raise money for the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation.
Launched five years ago by Robyn Pollman, a stay-at-home mother of two toddlers who blogs Shutterbug, and is webmistress of Wholly Matrimony!, the Boobie-Thon has raised over $35,000 dollars in total. This year, the 152 bloggers participating and donors of the Boobie-Thon raised over $9,000 dollars.
According to the Boobie-Thon, "Boobies. Although they come in all shapes and sizes (large, small, saggy and perky), they have one thing in common: The ability to develop cancer."
Over 1500 people have contributed photos of breasts to the blog, and the website is designed to be
workplace safe -- in other words, the main page of the website does not display photos of breasts. You can view photos by visiting one of the
galleries of breasts.
A personal note from Boobie-Thon founder Pollman regarding the history and controversy of this event can be read
here -- because apparently, there are some who have objected to the Boobie-Thon and resorted to name-calling and other
criticisms.
Hate the pink? In an effort to raise money for breast cancer organizations with diverse philosophies but common goals in stopping breast cancer, Pollman posted, "If you don't believe in pink. If you don't believe in what we're doing here. Well then for goodness sake, believe in something and donate to
Breast Cancer Action."
To be inspired in how the blogging community can create a grassroots fundraiser based on one blogger's post of an idea, visit
Boobie-Thon.
Posted Oct 7th 2006 2:36PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Chemotherapy, Celebrity cancer diagnosis, All Cancers, Opinion, Celebrity news, Cancer Survivors

The power of positivity is subjective when it comes to cancer survival. There are those who argue that keeping up a positive attitude puts too much pressure on cancer patients. I think it depends on who you are at the time of cancer diagnosis, and what your individual personality style is in facing adversity, that is far more relevant to being a survivor.
Last Wednesday, when the news broke that Farrah Fawcett had been diagnosed with cancer, she asked that her privacy be respected. As is the case with most celebrities, it was not likely to happen. We have seen almost constant coverage in the details of her cancer diagnosis and treatment, and the paparazzi have captured in photographs her every movement.
Continue reading Farrah Fawcett: Positivity is a necessity in cancer fight
Posted Oct 4th 2006 12:18PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Colon and Rectal Cancer, Celebrity cancer diagnosis, Television, Daily news

Before the sun sets on this day, you are going to hear that Farrah Fawcett has been treated for colorectal cancer. Currently being reported in London newspapers --
here,
here, and
here -- the
National Enquirer is running an exclusive story that Fawcett, famous poster sex symbol from the days of Charlie's Angels fame in the 70s, has already undergone radiation and surgery for a tumor found by doctors after her appearance at the Emmy Awards with Charlie's Angels co-stars Jaclyn Smith and Kate Jackson.
It might be true, and if so, we hope only the best for Farrah Fawcett. But we should hold out for something more substantial than the news being reported now, because we all remember the
Whitney Houston brain tumor news, and
Steven Tyler's throat cancer news. Which is why I am mentioning it here -- for a little cautionary perspective.
Update 4:30 (PST): Unfortunately, it appears this might be more than a rumor.
Entertainment Tonight has published this report:
"ET confirms that Farrah Fawcett is battling cancer. Just minutes ago, the Charlie's Angels star released a statement to ET, saying, "Please respect my privacy at this challenging time."
The 59-year-old actress was last seen on the big screen in 2004 in The Cookout and has guest-starred on numerous TV shows in the past decade, including Ally McBeal, The Guardian, and Spin City."
Related post: Farrah Fawcett: Positivity is a necessity in cancer fight.Posted Sep 27th 2006 11:43AM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Celebrity fundraisers, Opinion, Products

In the land down under tongues are wagging over the new Naked Rugby League calendar being sold to raise money for breast cancer charity. Seems the boys are baring it all and one of the players left little to the imagination in the position of hand to -- well -- private parts.
The NRL has gone very public over the fact they do not want to be associated with the nude shenanigans of players Johnathan Thurston, Justin Hodges, Paul Whatuira, Brent Webb, Ben Ross, Amos Roberts, Ashley Harrison, Riley Brown, Stuart Webb, Greg Bird, Michael Witt, Liam Fulton and Nick Youngquest.
Although all the players are nude, Youngquest has stirred the pot and is taking most of the heat, as he draped his hand in such a way as to reveal more than some consider good taste in nudity. The calendar's photographer Pedro Virgil insists the shots are provocative but tastefully done.
The Naked Rugby League calendar went on sale yesterday. The spokeswoman for the breast cancer foundation that the calendar will benefit has said they had nothing to do with the making of the calendar. I visited the online store, where many pink products are featured, and the Naked Rugby League calendar is not one of the featured items. If the charity does include the calendar in its online store, I will retract and update that last observation. In my opinion, seems they could have come out a wee bit stronger in their support for the calendar if they are the primary -- and only -- benefactors.
This story almost reminds me of
another story earlier this year, when a woman died from breast cancer and her coworkers got together to honor her memory by raising money for breast cancer charity. Because they worked as exotic dancers, the first year they held a fundraiser they could not find a breast cancer charity who would accept the donation unless the dancers agreed to donate anonymously. The women had enough self-respect to decline the conditions for donation. The second year, a national breast cancer organization told the dancers they would proudly accept the donation from the fundraiser, and publicly announce affiliation with this group of women wanting to help with breast cancer research.
Posted Aug 31st 2006 3:00PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Prevention, Celebrity spokesperson, Testicular Cancer, Events, Services

We are all adults here. I am assuming we are all adults here. If not, before you follow the link to this video, you might want to do it when the kids are not in the room. Not because there is anything they should not see, but because knowing kids the way I do, they might ask what the lady in the video is doing with the plum.
There are times when you just don't feel like being creative enough to explain innuendo in a way that prevents the school calling the next day to discuss what your child is discussing in class about daddy watching the
lady with the plum video. The translation of double entendre can take interesting detours when repeated during graham crackers and milk time.
After all, as a parent, you are already explaining away the sexual innuendo of children's shows like Cow and Chicken, Dexter's Laboratory, Ed, Edd n Eddy, The Fairly OddParents, Johnny Bravo, The Ren and Stimpy Show, Rocko's Modern Life, and SpongeBob SquarePants.
Back to the lady with the plum. It's a bit of genius if you ask me.
Rachel Gets Fruity! is part of the Everyman campaign to raise awareness on the ease and simplicity of a testicular self exam. It's short, sweet and to the point. Starring pop star Rachel Stevens, the video is sexual suggestive in a soft porn kind of way. There is no nudity. It's likely to grab attention of the audience it is aimed at and effectively raise awareness. Because awareness needs to be raised.
According to a survey, only 28 percent of men check their testicles regularly for signs of testicular cancer. The Everyman campaign is attempting to change that in innovative and creative ways. Here's the
Rachel Gets Fruity! video. To find out more information on the Everyman campaign and other efforts Everyman is involved in to raise awareness, go
here.
Posted Aug 19th 2006 5:08PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Colon and Rectal Cancer, Cancer events, Fundraisers, Products

Not all London traders are signing on to pose nude for a calendar to benefit the KatCanDo charity. While reported not to be a
shy and retiring group, an unnamed trader is quoted as saying he will not be publicly stripping down to the nude for a calendar. "I think I give the world enough amusement without taking my clothes off."
In 2004, the
KatCanDo charity was founded by Kate Coles, who was diagnosed with colon cancer three years ago and passed away this last March. Her husband Stephen Coles assures everyone that this is a serious project that will be done with the utmost taste. Each person appearing in the calendar will be discreetly covered in all the right places.
The KatCanDo has published two other calendars, the 2005 calendar,
Doctors Uncovered, and a 2006 calendar featuring drawings by children who have been treated for cancer and leukemia.
In addition, they have hosted a Charity Ball; they had runners in the Reading half-marathon and the London Marathon and five runners completed the Great North Run for the charity. KatCanDo has been chosen as the Novartis Pharmaceuticals UK Ltd Sports and Social Clubs Nominated Charity for the next year and they have been chosen as the British and Commonwealth Women's Club of Brussels British Charity for 2006. The efforts of the charity has assisted local cancer patients in a number of ways. For more information on the charity, visit
KatCanDo -- and if you are a trader in London -- they still have a few open months left in the upcoming calendar.
Posted Aug 8th 2006 7:00AM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Stress Reduction, Exercise, Cancer Survivors

For fitness, the practice of yoga promotes balance, flexibility and strength. America loves yoga, according to a
survey conducted by the Yoga Journal. The top four reasons given for the interest in yoga were: flexibility, stress reduction, strength, fitness and conditioning. As yoga grows in popularity, it is also becoming
Americanized, and there are a number of hybrid yoga practices springing up like: Acu-yoga, Yogilates, Disco Yoga, Hip-Hop Yoga, Punk Rock Yoga, Aqua Yoga, Doga (with your dog), Yoganetics, Soul FlowYoga, Freestyle Vinyasa Flow, Sonic Yoga, Yogic Arts (yoga combined with martial arts) and Nude Yoga -- which is a good thing, or a bad thing, depending on who you are asking.
Of the survey participants who were asked , these were the top four good/bad statements made to the increasing popularity of yoga in this country:
- "Americans need to recognize that practicing yoga doesn't conflict with mainstream religious values."
- "The commercialization of yoga is a good thing. It attracts many more people to the practice who otherwise wouldn't know about it."
- "Innovation is good for yoga. The many different styles that are evolving make the practice accessible to everyone."
- "Yoga in America is becoming too commercialized."
Is yoga the current fitness fad? Maybe. Will it fade in popularity? I suspect it will for those who flitter from one new trend to the next new trend. But, for example, there have been years of research into the potential benefit of yoga in improving the quality of life for cancer patients and survivors, and the National Cancer Institute has recently awarded M. D. Anderson a $2.4 million dollar grant to study the benefits of
Tibetan yoga for cancer patients and survivors.
According to M. D. Anderson researchers, cancer and its treatment are associated with considerable distress, impaired quality of life, poor mental health and reduced physical function. For thousands of years, Tibetans have been practicing a form of yoga that might help reduce treatment-related side effects that accumulate over time for cancer patients. As research continues, yoga may become an accepted alternative and complementary therapy incorporated into mainstream medical practice for the treatment of disease and improving health.
Realistically, I am not certain that some of the trendy hybrid forms of yoga will endure over time, but the yoga that has been around for thousands of years is here to stay.
Posted Jul 31st 2006 3:33PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Celebrity news, Cancer Survivors

I will be honest. After a double mastectomy left my chest mutilated and scarred, I worried if I would be physically attractive to a man after breast cancer surgery. It's not that I think men are shallow, it had more to do with all that cancer was taking away in my life, and I was not sure how much I would pay in the final cost of losses.
Worse yet, I wondered if simply being someone who had been diagnosed with cancer would make people run the other way. If the private conversations I have had with other women who have been diagnosed with breast cancer are a true indication, these are secret fears most of us share.
We each find our own inspiration back to feeling accepted and attractive in reclaiming the every day challenges and joys of relationships and life. For me, one of the ways I found that gave me hope was watching other breast cancer survivors enter new relationships or get married. As in -- obviously it doesn't seem to matter when it comes to love how imperfect you might be physically -- cancer surgery scars and all -- or that you were someone who had cancer.
I even find inspiration in Kylie Minogue being voted the number one desired traveling companion of men in a
poll conducted by British Airways. She beat out Rachel Stevens and actress Angelina Jolie for the top spot. Not bad.
Yes, I know, few of us have the attractive quality of fame, fortune and international celebrity status to carry us along, but that does not matter. The fact that Minogue was voted by men as the number one person they would most like to be seated next to on a flight just reaffirms one more time the hope factor for me.
Seriously, I am okay now, it's been a few years but I remember when this private fear hurt my heart and I wondered if cancer had stolen more from me than was obvious at the time of diagnosis. If you are newly-diagnosed and reading this, and worry and wonder privately what life will be like down the road, it only gets better and the fears and worry about sex appeal will be have been for naught. Few will run the other way.
Posted Jul 26th 2006 10:00PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Prevention, Celebrity fundraisers, Opinion

Back in June, when Pamela Anderson stood nude in the window of fashion designer Stella McCartney's London clothes shop to bring attention to PETA, she was making a statement she would rather go nude than wear fur. Anderson chose to deliver that message in a way certain to be heard. It was an outrageous stunt but it worked -- and whether you tsk-tsk or applaud her effort, Pamela Anderson and PETA made headlines around the globe that day.
It worked for the global cosmetics company Avon in Bulgaria this week, when in a continuing effort to raise awareness for breast cancer, they launched an eye-catching public campaign using three well-known sexy celebrities of Bulgaria. Posing in a larger-than-life banner hung outside the National Art Gallery in Sofia, the three beauties stared back at passers-by with a suggestion that when the large pink ribbon covering the women in the banner in just the right places came down, the public would be in for a nude shock.
As it turns out, when the pink ribbon was pulled down, the bare-shouldered bare-legged smiling women in the poster -- television star Natalia Simeonova, pop diva Maria Ilieva and film actress Koyna Rousseva -- were holding up pink tees with a breast cancer message printed on them.
Will the public or the paparazzi ever tire of sexy or the hint of nudity or actual nudity? No -- and I am not suggesting they do. Only that this type of campaign risks becoming cliche. If I were head of a large organization with a goal to raise awareness in eye-popping ways, I would hire the brightest, most innovative and creative minds in the advertising world, and let them create something intelligent and fresh and new. But for now, Pamela Anderson and Avon know what works -- and they work it.
Posted May 3rd 2006 12:45PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Leukemia, Breast Cancer, Alternative Therapies, Prevention

When John Richard Baker, Assistant
National Park Officer for the Yorkshire Dales, died in July 1998 from leukemia, his wife Annie and her best friend
Chris got the ladies of the local Women’s Institute together with the idea of producing a calendar to raise money
for cancer charity. Each month would feature a different woman in the women's group, doing ordinary things like making
jam, flower arranging, or knitting. The traditional idea had a radical twist -- the women would appear nude. The
calendar gained international attention which eventually led to the filming of the Calendar Girls movie.
When Baker was diagnosed with cancer, he began growing sunflowers and gave them to friends and family --hoping to
live long enough to see them fully-bloomed. Unfortunately, he lost his life to cancer before that happened. The
sunflower has become the cancer charity fundraising activities symbol for his family and friends.
Wearing
bras decorated in sunflowers, the
Calendar Girls,
together with friends and family, are now training for London's Playtex Moonwalk, a cancer charity fundraising event in
which thousands of women walk 26.2 miles through the night wearing elaborately decorated bras. While the past
efforts of the women's group have raised more than £1m total for leukemia research, this walk will be for breast
cancer charity. In addition, the Calendar Girls recently launched a 2007 calendar. Profits from the calendar will
continue to go to leukemia research.
Posted May 1st 2006 11:44AM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Skin Cancer, Melanoma, Prevention

In the majority of skin cancer cases, skin
cancer develops on a part of the body most exposed to the sun. However, that is not always the case, and dermatologists
suggest a regular self examination of your entire body skin surface.
To begin a self examination you will
need a full-length mirror; a handheld mirror; and a private well-lit room. The full-length mirror allows you to exam
the skin areas easily viewed and the handheld mirror gives you the chance to see skin areas not as easily seen, such as
the back, scalp, underarms, genitalia, palms, soles, and areas between the toes and fingers. When you visit the
Skin Care Physicians skin cancer self
examination webpage, you will find an illustrated step-by-step guide, complete with body positions, to carry out a
successful self examination.
The obvious danger signs of skin cancer are changes in the size, color, shape,
or texture of birthmarks, blemishes, or moles. More specific, signs that should catch your attention are a sore that
never fully heals; a translucent growth with rolled edges; brown or black streak underneath a nail; cluster of
slow-growing, shiny pink or red lesions; a waxy-feeling scar; flat or slightly depressed lesion that feels hard to the
touch or moles that bleed or itch. Photographs of suspicious looking skin growths and moles are also published on the
skin cancer self examination
webpage. To me, cancerous moles and lesions look nasty and seem easy to identify.
A final note from the
experts, and another reason to perform regular self examinations -- if detected early, skin cancer is highly curable --
and the earlier skin cancer is diagnosed, the less scarring from surgical procedures when removing a cancerous growth.
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