Sept. 3, 2007 issue - Two summers ago a
group of Philadelphia-area women who were
preparing for the Breast Cancer 3-Day charity
walk met to decide their team name. Kelly
Rooney, then a 42-year-old with five children
and stage-three breast cancer, tossed out an
idea: how about "Save 2nd Base," a playful
allusion to that quaint high-school system in
which the bases signify the progression from
kissing to sex? Rooney designed a T shirt,
drawing two baseballs at breast level above the
slogan. By the time of the fund-raiser Rooney
was too sick to walk, but her teammates wore the
shirts—and many spectators commented on how much
they loved the idea. So Rooney's sister Erin
O'Brien Dugery and friend Kelly Day spent close
to $10,000 to trademark the Save 2nd Base
tagline and began selling the T shirts online
and in boutiques (total sales so far: 1,000).
"We can't keep them in stock—they're catching on
like fire," says Jen Dailey at People People, a
boutique in Stone Harbor, N.J. The women selling
the shirts have pledged that after they earn
back the money they've invested, 50 percent of
profits will go to a breast cancer foundation
set up in memory of Rooney, who died last
summer.
The 2nd Base shirts aren't the only edgy
brand of breast-cancer apparel out there. Since
2004, Los Angeles designer Julie Fikse has sold
more than 80,000 shirts carrying variations on
the message "Save the Ta-Tas"—and donated
$80,000 of her profits to breast-cancer
charities. Both slogans garner mostly chuckles
and enthusiasm, though a few people have reacted
negatively, criticizing them as too crude. (To
counter that, Dugery and Day launched a more
demure line carrying the slogan "S2B.")
Most people under 60 understand what
"second base" means, but the motto creates
occasional confusion: Dailey recalls watching an
American teenager use pantomime to explain the
concept to a Japanese foreign-exchange student,
and Dailey had to provide a definition for her
sixtysomething mother. But usually, "when
someone reads it, they get it, they start
laughing," says Dugery, co-owner of the company
behind the shirts. And in the face of a
devastating disease, a little laughter can feel
like a home run.