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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Cop a Feel - new advert

139 replies

50sandFabulous · 05/06/2026 10:37

"Hey guys and gals, and non binary pals..... remember to check your chest"

If you can't manage to say the word BREAST, when you are urging women to check their breasts, then quite frankly, you can Fuck Off.

New radio advert - GAH.

OP posts:
noctilucentcloud · 05/06/2026 21:28

SleepyLittleDoggo · 05/06/2026 21:04

Why did the colour being pink matter?

I think because a lot of the setup for breast cancer is geared up around women, which makes sense in a lot of respects as it's mainly women affected. But as a male who's diagnosed you might feel out of place and possibly like the service isn't for you - going in to a pink room underlines that and might make you feel like an after thought or oddity.

Treetopssofee · 05/06/2026 21:32

noctilucentcloud · 05/06/2026 21:28

I think because a lot of the setup for breast cancer is geared up around women, which makes sense in a lot of respects as it's mainly women affected. But as a male who's diagnosed you might feel out of place and possibly like the service isn't for you - going in to a pink room underlines that and might make you feel like an after thought or oddity.

TBF toddler pink and bubble writing and watering down adult health topics into cartoons, doesn't feel like it's for grown ass women either!

KeepDancing1 · 05/06/2026 23:41

smallglassbottle · 05/06/2026 13:10

The chest is a completely different part of the anatomy. If you were 'checking your chest' you would be ensuring that your breathing is okay, no wheezing, no coughing up sputum, no difficulties getting a breath, including on exertion and no continuous cough.

If you were checking the area on the outside of the chest that would be checking for rashes, inflammation, no sucking in of the area around the ribs, no deformities, no dodgy moles on the skin.

The breasts are a totally different thing, different tissue, different functions, different anatomy.

We're back to the 'front hole' language aren't we? I thought all this had been sorted out.

Wtf do they call the ovaries? Internalised golf balls? Spherical blobules? Egg boxes?

The Pouch of Douglas is a bloody handbag no doubt 🙄

I have asthma, and you’ve summed up exactly what I think about when I hear ‘check your chest’ - thank you

OtterlyAstounding · 05/06/2026 23:44

Yellowing · 05/06/2026 19:52

Coppafeel has saved countless lives and spread huge awareness.

Their aim is to promote the message of checking and self advocating to young people. This follows the founders early diagnosis, at 23. The language used is aimed at young people- who are at risk of either not having the knowledge to empower themselves and check their chests (yes, chests) or are sadly more likely to be fobbed off as being too young for breast cancer.

Like many things, as science evolves, more is known and sometimes the initially used language no longer works as well. Breast cancer can be found in the armpits and neck too. Stating check your breasts would not cover the full area required to check. Listing areas would not be a slogan but a sentence.

The founder, Kris, died 15 years after her diagnosis and in that time created huge awareness in the general and medical fields of how young people of any gender/race can have a cancer diagnosis. Not only that, she created communities of support, friendships and mutual understanding and wanted to ensure that people seek early treatment…so they can live.

I hope that regardless of your opinion on the language used, this thread serves as a reminder to check your cheats regularly, to become familiar with your normal and to seek help if you notice any changes. Oh and maybe even sign up to Coppafeel ‘s free monthly text reminder to ‘feel it on the first’ 😉

Is their sister cervical smear charity 'You need a good poke"?

I love how misogyny just pervades every inch of our society. Even when people are talking about cancer, they're reminding women that they're just sexual objects to be groped. It's offensive.

Treetopssofee · 06/06/2026 00:04

OtterlyAstounding · 05/06/2026 23:44

Is their sister cervical smear charity 'You need a good poke"?

I love how misogyny just pervades every inch of our society. Even when people are talking about cancer, they're reminding women that they're just sexual objects to be groped. It's offensive.

Yes

The cervix cancer sister charity suggest going to the doctor if you have "hip" pain after "special cuddles" and gives you a sticker that says "I 'ad a good ol' poke on the doctors bench" for after your smear test

You know, for inclusive awareness...
Because that's the catch all excuse now for talking down to women about women's health issues

OtterlyAstounding · 06/06/2026 00:29

Treetopssofee · 06/06/2026 00:04

Yes

The cervix cancer sister charity suggest going to the doctor if you have "hip" pain after "special cuddles" and gives you a sticker that says "I 'ad a good ol' poke on the doctors bench" for after your smear test

You know, for inclusive awareness...
Because that's the catch all excuse now for talking down to women about women's health issues

Ugh, yes. I can imagine a charity doing just that, sadly. I hate the infantilisation and pinkification of women's issues – it's demeaning. I don't understand why people are defending 'cop a feel', and Gen Z don't find that kind of language funny, in my experience. My teenager and her friends would think it was distasteful and be less likely to engage.

As you say, it seems like the edgy, internalised misogyny of a 90s ladette.

PencilsInSpace · 06/06/2026 00:53

OtterlyAstounding · 05/06/2026 23:44

Is their sister cervical smear charity 'You need a good poke"?

I love how misogyny just pervades every inch of our society. Even when people are talking about cancer, they're reminding women that they're just sexual objects to be groped. It's offensive.

There was one called Drop Your Pants in 2021

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-guernsey-57398345

And in 2023 one called Don't Keep 'Em Crossed

https://www.dailymail.com/news/article-12769993/cervical-cancer-awareness-advertisement-airbrushes-women-out.html

Utterly grim.

PencilsInSpace · 06/06/2026 00:57

'It's aimed at young people' is a shitty excuse.

Why is it more OK to objectify women if they are young?

BeardOToots · 06/06/2026 00:58

Gladystheimpaler · 05/06/2026 11:06

Why can't they say breasts chests and pecs? That would cover everyone. I agree men don't like the idea of having breasts, so using positive language like pecs might help encourage them and direct them to the right kind of area

The ad I heard yesterday literally did say breasts, chests and pecs.

OtterlyAstounding · 06/06/2026 01:13

PencilsInSpace · 06/06/2026 00:57

'It's aimed at young people' is a shitty excuse.

Why is it more OK to objectify women if they are young?

Wow. Those campaigns really are grim. I see the Daily Mail article on 'Don't keep 'em crossed' mentions Mumsnet users' ire, and also 'Coppafeel'.

Do they really not realise how off-putting it is for women to have medical procedures conflated with being sexual?? What's next? Comparing transvaginal ultrasounds to getting a good shag? "Get a proper seeing to at your next TVU"?

I can't imagine any charity saying 'We're bringing back buggery' or similar for a prostate cancer check.

As for why it's 'more acceptable' with young people, I imagine that's because it's when society wants them to sexualise and objectify themselves. No one cares if 49-year-old, dried-up old Karen objectifies herself 😕

Viviienne · 06/06/2026 09:24

'I can't imagine any charity saying 'We're bringing back buggery' or similar for a prostate cancer check'

Exactly. 'Up yer arse' for being prostate cancer aware or 'grope me' for other self examination advice. Just grim and inappropriate.

SleepyLittleDoggo · 06/06/2026 16:54

noctilucentcloud · 05/06/2026 21:28

I think because a lot of the setup for breast cancer is geared up around women, which makes sense in a lot of respects as it's mainly women affected. But as a male who's diagnosed you might feel out of place and possibly like the service isn't for you - going in to a pink room underlines that and might make you feel like an after thought or oddity.

Only if you buy into the gender nonsense about pink being for girls and blue being for boys I suppose.

Littlecaf · 07/06/2026 19:48

Coppafeel has been around for donkeys years. It’s a charity just to get people to check their chests for changes. That’s it.

There are many campaigns to get people to do this. Some are very polite and refined “Please check your breasts every month” messaging from the NHS and Breast Cancer Now and so if you find the coppafeel tag lines offensive then you can just adhere to the advice in those other types of campaign. You will be checking the same breasts in the same way as the Coppafeel suggests that you do.

Coppafeel has a monthly text or email messaging service that reminds you to check yourself. Do sign up. That service literally saved my life. Cancer doesn’t care if you copped a feel or examined your breasts. It will still try to kill you.

VaultandSinagain · 07/06/2026 22:14

SleepyLittleDoggo · 06/06/2026 16:54

Only if you buy into the gender nonsense about pink being for girls and blue being for boys I suppose.

Pinkification in the breast cancer world is specifically to do with companies and sometimes the charities themselves that latch onto Breast Cancer Awareness month every October and offer products, services, events etc. The worst make only a minimal or even no donation to breast cancer charities. It’s a very good way for charities to raise funds and many breast cancer survivors will want to take part for that reason. It’s a good way also for unscrupulous companies to jump on the bandwagon and produce something in pink and claim they are “raising awareness”. The naysayers will say that pink and fluffy fun is not what a breast cancer is like. It’s a brutal and ugly disease with brutal and ugly treatments that will eventually kill about a third of people who discover it at an early “curable” stage.

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