American Airlines stands up with team members in fight against cancer

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American Airlines and nearly 60 of their cancer fighting, surviving and co-surviving team members came together to film a campaign as part of its collaboration with Stand Up To Cancer and (SU2C) Ambassador Bradley Cooper.

Last year, American Airlines launched a multi-year, multi-million-dollar collaboration with Stand Up To Cancer because of their groundbreaking approach to cancer research and commitment to fighting this terrible disease by getting new therapies to patients quickly.

โ€œStanding up is a powerful thing,โ€ said Bradley Cooper, Stand Up To Cancer Ambassador. โ€œBut itโ€™s never meant more than it does now. It was an honor to meet the employees of American and hear their personal stories โ€“ itโ€™s stories like theirs that continue to motivate me to Stand Up To Cancer.โ€

Each participating team member in this new campaign has been personally affected by cancer, and several are still undergoing treatment or caring for a loved one fighting the disease.

โ€œIt was an honor and privilege to participate in the Stand Up To Cancer campaign and my wife, Dana an LAX-based flight attendant, and I were inspired by being around so many fellow survivors. It has a great theme, something that has been ingrained in me since childhood; when you get knocked down, you stand up, dust yourself off and try again,โ€ commented John Biegel, an LAX-based Captain who is currently undergoing treatment for pancreatic cancer. โ€œFighting cancer embodies that same theme and it has served me well not only in this present fight but throughout life: never give up.โ€

Team members from 24 locations around the system, representing pilots, flight attendants, mechanics, gate and reservation agents, fleet service clerks and more, who either personally experienced (or have a loved one who did), participated. In all, they dealt with 18 different types of cancer including; breast, melanoma, lymphoma, pancreatic cancer and more. The campaign was shot in the airlineโ€™s hangar at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX).

โ€œGoing through this horrible diagnosis I often feel very alone, but meeting everyone helped me regain confidence that there is a life after cancer,โ€ said Erica Lacasse, a 28-year-old Gate Agent based in Portland, Maine who is currently undergoing treatment for breast cancer. โ€œParticipating in the campaign also helped me accept the fact that I am bald, and I am now rocking the bald head with confidence.โ€

Six of Americanโ€™s team members, including John and Erica, as well as PHL-based flight attendant Katherine Samiljan, DFW-Res agent Dondie Risinger, LAX-based technical crew chief aircraft maintenance David Mansker, and PHX-based lead fleet service Steven Goff, will be prominently featured in the spot and related materials starting today.

The campaign will support Stand Up To Cancerโ€™s collaborative cancer research. During the month of June, American will donate $1 to Stand Up To Cancer for every flight purchased on aa.com, up to $1,000,000. Visit aa.com/standup to learn more about American and Stand Up To Cancerโ€™s unique collaboration.

WHAT TO TAKE AWAY FROM THIS ARTICLE:

  • โ€œIt was an honor and privilege to participate in the Stand Up To Cancer campaign and my wife, Dana an LAX-based flight attendant, and I were inspired by being around so many fellow survivors.
  • โ€œParticipating in the campaign also helped me accept the fact that I am bald, and I am now rocking the bald head with confidence.
  • It was an honor to meet the employees of American and hear their personal stories โ€“ it's stories like theirs that continue to motivate me to Stand Up To Cancer.

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Chief Assignment Editor

Chief Assignment editor is Oleg Siziakov

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