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Livestrong wristband

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The Livestrong wristband

The LIVESTRONG Bracelet is a yellow silicone gel bracelet launched in May 2004 as a fund-raising item for the Lance Armstrong Foundation, founded by cyclist and cancer survivor Lance Armstrong. The bracelet itself was developed by Nike and their ad agency Wieden+Kennedy.

Purpose

The bracelet is part of the "Wear Yellow Live Strong" educational program. The program is intended to raise money for cancer research, raise cancer awareness, and encourage people to live life to the fullest. The bracelet sells individually, as well as in packs of 10, 100, and 1,200 as part of an effort to raise $25.1 million for the Lance Armstrong Foundation in cooperation with Nike who manufactures the bracelets in Austin, Texas the home of Lance Armstrong and other world wide manufacturing plants and sells the bracelets through their Nike outlets worldwide. This target was achieved within 6 months, and there have now been 70 million LIVESTRONG bracelets sold to date. Individual bands sell for US$1 each.

Yellow was chosen for its importance in professional cycling, as it is the color of the yellow jersey worn by the leader of the Tour de France, which Armstrong won seven consecutive times. Other charities were inspired by the success of the LIVESTRONG band, and many charities have developed their own bracelets for raising money and awareness.

Popularity

United States Presidential candidate John Edwards wears a LIVESTRONG wristband while campaigning in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on Labor Day 2007.

The band became a popular fashion item in the United States by the end of the summer of 2004, especially among those following Armstrong's Tour de France effort. They soon gained popularity worldwide. It first appeared on a majority of the contenders at the 2004 Tour de France. Personalities such as 2004 Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry, news anchor Katie Couric, actor Matt Damon, and several athletes at the Athens Olympic Games[1] wore the band. Appearances on and endorsements by popular TV shows such as Oprah, also raised its profile enormously.[citation needed]

On an August 2007 edition of the satirical television show The Colbert Report (where Armstrong made a guest appearance), Stephen Colbert parodied the wristband, creating the "Wriststrong" wristband, in his growing campaign against "Wrist violence".[1]

In The Office episode "Michael's Birthday," Michael creates a makeshift Livestrong wristband out of yellow paper upon finding out that Kevin is at risk for skin cancer.

In December of 2009, Ben Stiller parodied the Livestrong bracelets with the introduction of STILLERSTRONG headbands to raise money to build a school in Haiti in partnership with Save the Children.[2]

Hospitals

Some hospitals have reportedly cut the Livestrong wristbands from patients' wrists because they resemble the yellow "Do Not Resuscitate" bands used by some medical facilities.[3]

eBay controversy

A rush to purchase the bands resulted in profiteering through such venues as eBay, angering Armstrong. eBay refused to ban the sale of Livestrong bands, saying it was an online marketplace where buyers and sellers meet and determine their own prices. As a result of the bands becoming fashion items, counterfeit wristbands also became available in places such as fleamarkets—potentially detracting from the cause.

Other similar wristbands

The Livestrong Wristbands have inspired numerous other wristbands for charities, and various political causes. (See gel bracelet.)

Following the Floyd Landis Tour de France incident, The Onion released a spinoff bracelet with the words "Cheat To Win."

References

  1. ^ "Wrist Watch - WristStrong". Comedy Central. 2007-08-08. Retrieved 2007-08-10.
  2. ^ "Ben Stiller wants to 'save the children' by stealing from Lance Armstrong...well, sort of". USA Today. 2009-12-08. Retrieved 2010-05-11.
  3. ^ St. Petersburg Times, Wristbands called patient safety risk, December 10, 2004