Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The Ice Bucket Challenge is back. The challenge that splashed through social media in 2014 as people all over the world dumped ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. No, you didn't accidentally time travel to 2014 — the Ice Bucket Challenge is actually back. And once again, it highlights an ...
Natalie Reynolds participates in the USC #SpeakYourMIND Ice Bucket Challenge ; James Charles participates in the USC #SpeakYourMIND Ice Bucket Challenge. But like all trends come and go, it seemed as ...
This spring, social media is once again full of people dumping buckets of water on their heads. The famed Ice Bucket Challenge has returned — and while it may look the same as it did at the height of ...
A decade-old social media trend was broadly revived on TikTok this week, as users are challenging one another to dump an ice bucket on their head for mental health awareness, mirroring the original ...
The Ice Bucket Challenge is back! In 2014, Americans were asked to pour buckets of ice water on themselves and post the video to social media in order to raise awareness for ALS, or Amyotrophic ...
Students from the University of South Carolina started a recent campaign using the ice bucket challenge to raise mental health awareness Brooke Eby; Amelia Privv/ TikTok The Ice Bucket Challenge was ...
The Ice Bucket Challenge is making a new splash with a new cause in mind, nearly a decade after it first went viral to raise awareness for ALS. In the summer of 2014, a media frenzy ensued with ...
The Ice Bucket Challenge is back. The challenge that splashed through social media in 2014 as people all over the world dumped buckets of ice water on their head to raise money and awareness for ALS ...
Ice Bucket Challenge has returned in 2025, this time focusing on mental health awareness and suicide prevention. University of South Carolina students started the #SpeakYourMIND challenge, raising ...
The Ice Bucket Challenge, which first went viral in 2014 to raise awareness for ALS, has resurfaced with a new mission Jordana Comiter is an Associate Editor on the Evergreen team at PEOPLE. She has ...