Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Take shower selfie challenge to fight AIDS

Darpan News Desk IANS, 25 Nov, 2014 10:53 AM
    If you are done with the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge, pull up your shirts for the HIV Shower Selfie Challenge.
     
    Reality TV star and AIDS activist Jack Mackenroth has launched the HIV Shower Selfie Challenge to help raise money for Housing Works, a New York-based non-profit organisation fighting to end AIDS and homelessness globally by 2030.
     
    Mackenroth has partnered up with social media app Moovz, a leading global gay social app, to launch the project.
     
    He has set up a page on the Housing Works website where you can donate directly to the campaign, which Mackenroth hopes will raise $1 million.
     
    "I was inspired by the use of the word 'clean', especially common in gay culture, to describe oneself as STI/STD free. Indirectly this implies that HIV-positive people are somehow 'dirty'," Mackenroth was quoted as saying in a www.towleroad.com report.
     
    "I thought shower selfie (no explicit nudity please) would be a fun way that everyone could easily show their support for finding a cure by using social media and by using the hashtag #weareALLclean when they post their photo with the link," he added.
     
    Once done, they can challenge three other people to participate and hopefully donate to the project as well, he added.
     
    An American swimmer, model and fashion designer who competed in the fourth season of American reality show titled "Project Runway", Mackenroth was the first openly HIV-positive contestant in the show's history.
     
    The World AIDS Day is observed Dec 1.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    How birds learnt to fly

    How birds learnt to fly
    Birds have an innate ability to maneuver in mid-air, a talent that could have helped their ancestors learn to fly rather than fall from a perch, says a study...

    How birds learnt to fly

    Engage with babbling infants to improve language learning

    Engage with babbling infants to improve language learning
    "Parents may not understand a baby's prattling, but by listening and responding, they let their infants know they can communicate which leads to children...

    Engage with babbling infants to improve language learning

    Over-confident workers can put firms at risk

    Over-confident workers can put firms at risk
    Over-confident people can fool others into believing they are more talented than they actually are, claim two Indian-origin researchers, adding that these...

    Over-confident workers can put firms at risk

    How positive memories can replace negative experiences

    How positive memories can replace negative experiences
    By manipulating neural circuits in the brain of mice, scientists have found that memories and experiences - stored in two different parts of the brain...

    How positive memories can replace negative experiences

    Yawning contagious in wolves too

    Yawning contagious in wolves too
    A new study has suggested that wolves tend to yawn when they see one of their brethren indulging in the act -- just like the humans...

    Yawning contagious in wolves too

    Couples' play with doll predicts parenting behaviour

    Couples' play with doll predicts parenting behaviour
    Parents who are ready to welcome a baby show a lot about their future co-parenting behaviour during pregnancy, reveals a new study...

    Couples' play with doll predicts parenting behaviour