When David Russo discovered he had precancerous polyps after fighting for a colonoscopy, he uncovered a family secret: colorectal cancer had silently killed his grandfather and two cousins. Nobody had talked about it. Nobody wanted to admit it. The stigma was so strong that his own father, who’d been getting polyps removed since his forties, never connected his condition to the disease that took his father’s life.
That moment of realization sparked a question: What if people could talk about colorectal cancer without shame? What if, instead of whispering about it in the dark, we celebrated our butts proudly and openly? Out of that spark came Cheeky Charity, a nonprofit that uses humor, vulnerability, and creative activism to do something radical: make colorectal and anal cancer impossible to ignore. Five years later, David has built a movement that’s proving sometimes the cheekiest approach is also the most effective.
The Origin Story: From COVID Van to Cancer Advocacy
David’s journey to founding Cheeky Charity began, improbably, in a converted Sprinter van during a pandemic-era “Eat, Pray, Love” adventure across America. While traveling solo through national parks, he had limited resources—a camera and a social media account. But he had something more valuable: a clear purpose.
Five or six years earlier, he’d fought with his primary care physician for a colonoscopy. It took months. When he finally got one, doctors found precancerous polyps. Had he waited much longer, those polyps might have become cancer. The experience triggered a deeper investigation into his family history, revealing the cancer deaths that had been whispered about and hidden away.
Around that same time, David read alarming research from Yale University showing an uptick in colorectal cancer diagnoses among young adults. The pieces clicked together: this disease was serious, it was getting worse, and it lived under a thick blanket of stigma that prevented people from talking about it, getting screened, or seeking help.
“What can I do about it?” became the driving question. And David’s answer was distinctly creative: what if people posted photos of their butts on Instagram with public health messages attached?
Thus was born Cheeky Charity, an Instagram profile dedicated to “cheeky” photos with a purpose. At the most extreme, David would find stunning vistas in national parks and photograph his own backside against beautiful landscapes. At the more modest level, he’d post with varying degrees of cheekiness, always paired with messaging about colorectal cancer awareness, screening, and prevention.
“I would go into the most beautiful areas of national parks and more or less take butt picks,” David explains. The goal was simple but ambitious: gain a following, build an audience, and create space to educate people about a disease they’d rather not think about.
It worked. Within a year, Cheeky Charity had 5,000 followers. The concept was novel, the tone was irreverent, and people were paying attention.
From Idea to Organization: The Power of Collaboration
What happened next illustrates a crucial principle of successful advocacy: surround yourself with talented people who believe in the mission.
When David decided to expand beyond solo social media posts, he reached out to his network. A friend named Taylor who worked in design at Google created the logo—and when David’s first instinct was to dismiss it as “too basic,” Taylor pushed back. That logo became foundational to Cheeky Charity’s brand identity. Jake helped build out graphic design and social media infrastructure. Andrew Wartman became director of development, graphic designer, and website developer all in one, creating the visual ecosystem that makes Cheeky Charity instantly recognizable.
“I had some of the most incredible people in the world come on to help me,” David reflects. “They weren’t necessarily people that had a connection to colorectal cancer, they were just people that were passionate.”
With this team in place, David launched the Cheeky Challenge, asking people to post their own cheeky content on social media. The campaign resonated. It led to connections with organizations like the Prevent Cancer Foundation, secured the organization’s first grant for local work in Palm Springs, and eventually earned Cheeky Charity an invitation to present at the American Cancer Society’s National Colorectal Cancer Roundtable (NCCRT).
David remembers walking into that first major advocacy conference as an outsider—”this random kid who’s posting wacky stuff”—terrified of judgment. Instead, he found an entire community of passionate advocates dedicated to colorectal cancer awareness. “I was completely embraced,” he recalls. “Everybody was incredibly wonderful.” More than that, he discovered a landscape of programs and initiatives he never knew existed, organizations doing incredible work to raise awareness and support patients.
The experience taught him something essential: in advocacy, you’re not alone. And collaboration amplifies impact exponentially.
Amplifying the Message: From Solo Creator to Movement
One of the most powerful moments in Cheeky Charity’s evolution came when David received photos from a Pride Festival he wasn’t attending. A group of volunteers had set up a Cheeky Charity booth, complete with the branded tent, backdrop, and table, and were representing the organization independently.
“That was one of the most amazing feelings that I feel like I might’ve ever had in my life,” David says. “This thing that was nothing, that kind of went from being an idea into reality, is now being amplified through people that are also passionate.”
Today, Cheeky Charity’s primary activation happens at Pride Festivals across the country. The organization maintains at least 10 by 10 booths at Pride events where volunteers and community members show up to represent the brand, engage visitors, and spread the message about screening and prevention.
But David is honest about a gap in the organization’s infrastructure: they don’t yet have a formal system for empowering, onboarding, and supporting these ambassadors. “I feel like I could do a much better job of making people feel more connected,” he admits. “There’s no formal, we honestly don’t really have a formal system for helping empower and onboard and educate and making people feel like they’re part of the cheeky charity community, even though I know of hundreds of people who are.”
This vulnerability, acknowledging the gap while recognizing the reality of what’s already happening organically, is characteristic of David’s leadership. He’s building something real, recognizing its power, and being honest about where it needs to grow.
Butts and Badges: Making Healthcare Providers Part of the Solution
Cheeky Charity’s newest initiative reveals how the organization is scaling its impact through creative, accessible strategies. The Butts and Badges program is elegantly simple: send cheeky pins to healthcare providers, who wear them next to their name badges in clinical settings.
The theory is straightforward but powerful: when a provider wears a Cheeky Charity pin, it starts conversations. Patients see it and ask about it. That opens a dialogue about colorectal cancer screening and prevention. The nudge becomes a conversation; the conversation becomes a screening; the screening saves a life.
Cheeky Charity sent out 15,000 of these pins to healthcare providers across the country in the program’s initial rollout. But David’s vision goes much bigger.
“The Butts and Badges program implies that it’s a person wearing a badge, but I think there’s opportunity to basically empower anybody,” he explains. “Any individual who’s out there to wear our pin or share our logo or share our message, they can become what I’m currently tossing around as a cheeky champion.”
A cheeky champion isn’t a formal role. It’s simply someone—provider, patient, survivor, advocate, friend—who believes in the mission enough to wear the pin, share the message, or start the conversation. By lowering the barrier to entry, Cheeky Charity can scale beyond what any single person or organization could accomplish alone.
The Introvert’s Dilemma: Pushing to Show Up
One of David’s most striking revelations comes late in the conversation: he’s an introvert. A very large introvert. “Being in crowds is very draining to me,” he admits. “I’m constantly pushing myself to put myself out there.”
Yet every time someone encounters David at a cancer advocacy event, they see a person fully present, engaged, and energized. How does an introvert become the face of a growing national movement?
David explains that in college, he became an RA to force himself to engage. He joined the Ambulance Corps for the same reason. He pursued an MBA specifically to improve his communication skills despite an engineering background. “I’ve kind of always been doing these kind of masochistic things to kind of torture myself, but I absolutely love it,” he says with self-aware humor.
This is an important lesson for anyone in advocacy: you don’t have to be an extrovert to do this work. You just have to be willing to push yourself beyond comfort for a cause you believe in. And when you do, you meet extraordinary people and expand your life exponentially.
“I’m so grateful for pushing myself because I’ve met such unbelievable people and it’s expanded the quality of my life exponentially,” David reflects. The relationships formed through Cheeky Charity. with fellow advocates, with people in the cancer community, with collaborators, have enriched his life in ways he couldn’t have anticipated.
The Dream: Celebrity, Vulnerability, and Museum Exhibits
If resources were unlimited, what would David want to do with Cheeky Charity?
His answer is ambitious and artistically compelling: a professional photography campaign featuring celebrities—modeled on ESPN’s famous “ESPN Bodies” issue that showcased nude photography of elite athletes. But instead of celebrating athletic achievement, David’s vision would celebrate vulnerability and human connection through the lens of colorectal and anal cancer.
The photos would become a rotating museum exhibit traveling to major museums worldwide. Alongside the photographs would be video documentation of the shoots, behind-the-scenes content, and audio of the participants’ stories—survivors, advocates, celebrities—sharing why they stepped forward.
“So as people are kind of walking around the exhibit, they’re hearing the message of people’s stories and feeling that impact,” David explains. The goal is to normalize conversations about these cancers by placing them in high-art contexts, to show vulnerability as strength, and to demonstrate that everyone—no matter how famous or accomplished—faces the same human fears and needs.
“It’s basically a pipe dream that is on the shelf that I’m, every once in a while I’ll be like, is this feasible? No. Okay, let’s keep going,” David says with a laugh. But the dream is there, fully formed, waiting for the day when resources align with vision.
Collaboration as Priority: The Real Secret to Scaling
Before the lightning round questions, David emphasizes something he realizes is equally important as the initiatives themselves: collaboration.
“One of the big things that I’m trying to focus on is building very, very strong collaborative relationships with all of the other organizations that are in the space. I feel like that’s so critical,” he stresses. Collaboration isn’t just nice-to-have; it’s foundational to maximizing impact.
This commitment to partnership is evident in how Cheeky Charity operates. The organization doesn’t see itself as competing with established advocacy groups. Instead, it sees itself as part of an ecosystem where each organization brings unique strengths. Cheeky Charity’s strength is breaking taboos and reaching young people through humor and vulnerability. Other organizations excel in different areas. Together, they can accomplish more than any single entity.
For newer organizations building advocacy programs, this is essential wisdom: the most sustainable path isn’t building a standalone empire. It’s finding your niche, excelling at your unique mission, and collaborating generously with others working toward the same goal.
Getting Involved: How to Become a Cheeky Champion
For anyone inspired by Cheeky Charity’s approach, the path to involvement is accessible:
Visit cheekycharity.org to learn about the organization’s work and programs. Follow them on Instagram at @CheekyCharity for ongoing awareness campaigns and community engagement. Check out ScreenYourButt.org, their new educational platform focused on making screening information accessible and approachable.
If you’re a healthcare provider interested in the Butts and Badges program, you can participate by wearing a pin and starting conversations with patients about screening. If you’re interested in volunteering at Pride events or other community activations, reach out to the organization about how to get involved.
Most importantly: if you believe in using humor, vulnerability, and creativity to break down stigma around colorectal and anal cancer, you can become a cheeky champion right now. Wear a pin if you have one. Share the message. Start the conversation. That’s what advocacy looks like at Cheeky Charity.
The Unseen Work: Building Movements Takes Time
What stands out about David’s story is how he’s managed to build something real—501(c)(3) nonprofit status, national reach, media partnerships, professional execution—while remaining humble about how much work remains.
He acknowledges the gaps in their ambassador program. He admits being an introvert pushing himself into crowds. He shares his “pipe dream” of a museum exhibit with the self-aware humor of someone who knows it’s a long shot. Yet he’s moving forward anyway, steadily amplifying the message through Pride events, the Butts and Badges program, and the collaborative relationships he’s nurturing across the advocacy landscape.
This is the real work of advocacy: showing up, being honest about limitations, celebrating small wins, collaborating generously, and always—always—keeping the mission front and center. Not everyone who does this work needs to be a natural extrovert or have all the answers. They just need to care enough to start, be willing to learn, and build with others who share the vision.
David Russo and Cheeky Charity prove that the cheekiest approach isn’t frivolous—it’s sometimes the most effective way to get people to pay attention to something that matters. And once you have their attention? That’s when the real advocacy begins.
Final Thoughts
In a healthcare landscape often defined by solemnity and medical jargon, Cheeky Charity dares to be different. By combining humor with genuine passion, vulnerability with professional execution, and individual initiative with collaborative partnership, David Russo has built something that might seem unlikely but is deeply necessary: a movement that makes it okay—even fun—to talk about colorectal cancer.
That’s not just creative advocacy. That’s cultural change.









