D-Queued said:Hi FF,
You inadvertently mentioned funding for research in the context of discussing Livestrong.
Probably a slip. As we know, Livestrong is the scam that infers or otherwise has alluded to some alignment with research in the past but not a dime has ever been sent that way.
Dave.
pmcg76 said:Have steered clear of the whole Lance polemica since he was busted but finally watched The Armstrong Lie tonight. Think the funniest moment was Johan's reaction to Contador attacking, hilarious.
A personal highlight for me too. Also Yohan & Lance peering out the window at contador giving interviews to the press. Like school boys not invited to the cools kids party. Contador is a boss.pmcg76 said:Have steered clear of the whole Lance polemica since he was busted but finally watched The Armstrong Lie tonight. Think the funniest moment was Johan's reaction to Contador attacking, hilarious.
frenchfry said:Sorry I don't get your point.
mewmewmew13 said:frenchfry knows the ropes here...
D-Queued said:Hi FF,
You inadvertently mentioned funding for research in the context of discussing Livestrong.
Probably a slip. As we know, Livestrong is the scam that infers or otherwise has alluded to some alignment with research in the past but not a dime has ever been sent that way.
Dave.
Exactly, the article on Ulman’s job change says that Pelotonia has raised 61m over 5 years for cancer research. That is what I was referring to.Bluenote said:I think FF is refering to Ulman's new employer, not Livestrong.
Unfortunately, frenchfry knows far too much for his own good. Nothing pi$$es me off more than exploiting cancer for personal gain. Nothing.mewmewmew13 said:frenchfry knows the ropes here...
That's your opinion; many, including NCI and Charity Navigator acknowledge Livestrong's good work as a cancer charity.DirtyWorks said:The charity (.org) always had the vaguest mission of "raising awareness" and somehow offering resources.
That's dang humane of you, big guy, ... in a disengenuous kinda way ... but with 7/8 watching your comments, you gotta line to toe. Fair enough.DirtyWorks said:... but I'll be fair and say someone somewhere was assisted somehow.
By research ... do you mean, 'THE CURE' ... for each of the 200+ types of cancer? What's your party's line on $ being used to 'somehow' help those who have, will get, will survive for a bit with, (will die with) ... one or more of those 200 different types of cancer while playing solitaire and waiting for 'THE CURE.'DirtyWorks said:There was talk about funding research, but somehow that just never happened.
Race Radio said:http://www.dallasnews.com/news/stat...t-helm-of-lance-armstrong-founded-charity.ece
Livestrong CEO Doug Ullman leaving. Going to run Pelotonia......One of the many fundraising rides that paid Lance to attend
I was thinking the same thing. That's a quite a downsize for him. But then again, Livestrong may be capsized.Glenn_Wilson said:Dude quit to run a ride. Times must be rough.
Alpe73 said:That's your opinion; many, including NCI and Charity Navigator acknowledge Livestrong's good work as a cancer charity.
'
"This blurs the lines between the foundation and its charitable mission, and the personal gain of its founder,'' said Ken Berger, president and executive director of Charity Navigator. "It's mixing two purposes in a way that smells of a conflict of interest. The most precious thing a charitable organization has is the public's trust, and things like this put a ***** in that.''
frenchfry said:The "research" mention was relative to Pelotonia, and was in quotation marks to indicate my suspicion that any funds actually are used for this purpose.
Since it appears from the article that Pelotonia uses cycling events for collecting funds, I am wondering if the receipts mentioned in the article are gross amounts, from which expenses must be deducted (including outrageous speech fees) leaving a net that is approx equal to the salary of the charity's director.
Cancer, the gift that just keeps giving.
Race Radio said:Charity Navigator did not cover them until they had been around for 10 years.
Race Radio said:Not exactly. NCI receives $$$$ from Livestrong so they are hardly unbiased. Charity Navigator did not cover them until they had been around for 10 years. What would they have thought about the early years when only 50% of money went to "Programs"? Charity Navigator looks at raw numbers, they make zero judgement on the value of a charity's programs. If they did I wonder what they would think of spending $6 million on one party?
They certainly questioned the Demand deal.
Alpe73 said:Today, as a cancer charity, is Livestrong doing a good, decent or terrible job?
Bluenote said:I'm no fan of Livestrong, or many of the things that occurred under Ulman's watch.
However, I don't think it's fair to cast aspersions on Pelotonia without at least doing a little research.
According to Peletonia
1) sponsors offset their overhead, so all donations go to programs
2) they support cancer research, mostly at Ohio State and other Ohio Universities
http://cancer.osu.edu/SiteCollectionImages/pelotonia/Pelotonia Investment Report 2013.pdf
http://pelotonia.org/about/money/
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pelotonia
I have no idea if Pelotonia is a great charity or whatever, but according to their documents, they raise $$$ to support research.
Profile / salary wise, it seems like a step down for Ulman. I can't imagine that the rank and file Livestrong employees feel too good right now.
Bluenote said:Personally, I find it impossible to tell.
They break down their spending by 'overhead, 'programs,' etc... But there is no way to know how much of the money to 'programs,' are awareness programs and how much are direct services to survivors. Further, they don't break out what these programs are, how much each ones get, how many they serve, etc...
When directly asked this in a Reddit AMA, Livestrong didn't answer.
The Outside Magazine article painted a pretty unflattering image - lots of money on awareness, which seems to be Livestrong marketing, little on direct services.
It would be nice if Livestrong would release a detailed rebuttal to the Outside article. Make it easier to understand what they do with the $$.
Alpe73 said:Today, as a cancer charity, is Livestrong doing a good, decent or terrible job?
Alpe73 said:Is Livestrong's donation/partnership to/with Dell Medical School at University of Texas (50 Million USD over 10 years) a good, decent or terrible idea, in your opinion?
Alpe73 said:By research ... do you mean, 'THE CURE' ... for each of the 200+ types of cancer? What's your party's line on $ being used to 'somehow' help those who have, will get, will survive for a bit with, (will die with) ... one or more of those 200 different types of cancer while playing solitaire and waiting for 'THE CURE.'
 
		
		 
		
		 
		
		
 
				
		