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The Cancer Mavericks: A History of Survivorship
Matthew Zachary Worldwide
10 episodes
5 months ago

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.

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Documentary
Society & Culture,
History,
Health & Fitness,
Medicine
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All content for The Cancer Mavericks: A History of Survivorship is the property of Matthew Zachary Worldwide and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.

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.

Show more...
Documentary
Society & Culture,
History,
Health & Fitness,
Medicine
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EP5: The Young Adult Cancer Revolution: When the Next Generation Got Loud
The Cancer Mavericks: A History of Survivorship
42 minutes 17 seconds
4 years ago
EP5: The Young Adult Cancer Revolution: When the Next Generation Got Loud
For decades, cancer care had a massive blind spot: young adults. If you were diagnosed between the ages of 15 and 39, you were basically invisible—too old for pediatrics, too young for geriatrics, and completely off the radar of clinical trials, support systems, and survivorship planning. In this episode, Matthew Zachary introduces the origin story of the AYA (Adolescent and Young Adult) cancer movement—and how a pissed-off generation of young survivors said enough is enough. We hear from advocates like Tamika Felder and Lindsay Norbeck, who survived cancer in their 20s and were left to deal with infertility, dating trauma, career detours, and the brutal realities of trying to “just be normal” when your body, future, and finances were blown apart. We dive into fertility preservation battles, post-cancer sex lives that no one talked about, and the social isolation of being a survivor with no peers—because, until the mid-2000s, there wasn’t even a name for this group. Also featured: the rise of Planet Cancer and Stupid Cancer, online hubs that became lifelines. Communities forged in dark humor, rage, resilience, and inside jokes only survivors could understand. And of course, the brief but meteoric LIVESTRONG era—when yellow wristbands made survivorship cool, if only for a moment. This episode captures a time when young adults with cancer stopped asking to be noticed and started demanding change. KEY TAKEAWAYSAYA (Adolescent and Young Adult) cancer patients were ignored by the medical system for decadesSurvivors like Tamika Felder and Lindsay Norbeck spotlight the lasting toll: infertility, mental health, sex, and financial ruinNo fertility coverage? Survivors had to fight insurers just to freeze eggs before chemo1 in 3 AYA survivors experience sexual dysfunction; most never get told it might happenPlanet Cancer and Stupid Cancer built the first digital communities for young adult patientsThe LIVESTRONG boom gave AYA cancer visibility, but the movement was built long before the wristbands 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.
The Cancer Mavericks: A History of Survivorship

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.