EP8: The Future Was Listening
This is the finale—but it’s not the end.
In this final chapter of The Cancer Mavericks, we connect the past to the present—and hand the mic to the next generation. The episode weaves together legacy and momentum, spotlighting the bridge between the trailblazers who fought to be heard and the advocates now rising with new tools, new platforms, and a louder voice than ever before.
We hear from Dr. Lisa Richardson at the CDC, Dr. Catharine Young from the White House Cancer Moonshot, and leaders like Deanna Darlington and Dr. John Carpten who are reshaping the narrative of survivorship, equity, and community power. From TikTok to town halls, Instagram Lives to the halls of Congress, cancer advocacy no longer looks like it used to—and that’s the point.
This isn’t a victory lap. It’s a relay race. And the baton is being passed, intentionally, urgently, and loudly.
Host Matthew Zachary reflects on 30 years of survivorship and what it means to witness your life’s work echo into the voices of Gen Z, digital-first disruptors, and advocates who aren’t waiting for permission.
From Mary Lasker to Mary J. Blige, from mimeograph machines to social media movements—this episode asks a simple question: what happens after the Mavericks?
The answer: more Mavericks.
KEY TAKEAWAYSAdvocacy is no longer top-down—it’s grassroots, digital, and community-ledThe Cancer Moonshot continues the work of past pioneers with billions in research investmentsOrganizations like Tigerlily, links2equity, and others are reframing advocacy through intersectionality and media fluencyGen Z and millennial advocates are using new platforms (TikTok, Instagram, podcasting) to build trust and visibilityThe fight for equity, access, and empathy in cancer care is being led by people who’ve lived it—and who won’t settle for performative changeThe voices of the past were never lost—they were amplifiedThis series isn’t about nostalgia. It’s about what happens next
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.
This is the finale—but it’s not the end.
In this final chapter of The Cancer Mavericks, we connect the past to the present—and hand the mic to the next generation. The episode weaves together legacy and momentum, spotlighting the bridge between the trailblazers who fought to be heard and the advocates now rising with new tools, new platforms, and a louder voice than ever before.
We hear from Dr. Lisa Richardson at the CDC, Dr. Catharine Young from the White House Cancer Moonshot, and leaders like Deanna Darlington and Dr. John Carpten who are reshaping the narrative of survivorship, equity, and community power. From TikTok to town halls, Instagram Lives to the halls of Congress, cancer advocacy no longer looks like it used to—and that’s the point.
This isn’t a victory lap. It’s a relay race. And the baton is being passed, intentionally, urgently, and loudly.
Host Matthew Zachary reflects on 30 years of survivorship and what it means to witness your life’s work echo into the voices of Gen Z, digital-first disruptors, and advocates who aren’t waiting for permission.
From Mary Lasker to Mary J. Blige, from mimeograph machines to social media movements—this episode asks a simple question: what happens after the Mavericks?
The answer: more Mavericks.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
- Advocacy is no longer top-down—it’s grassroots, digital, and community-led
- The Cancer Moonshot continues the work of past pioneers with billions in research investments
- Organizations like Tigerlily, links2equity, and others are reframing advocacy through intersectionality and media fluency
- Gen Z and millennial advocates are using new platforms (TikTok, Instagram, podcasting) to build trust and visibility
- The fight for equity, access, and empathy in cancer care is being led by people who’ve lived it—and who won’t settle for performative change
- The voices of the past were never lost—they were amplified
- This series isn’t about nostalgia. It’s about what happens next
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.