ROCHESTER, N.Y (WROC, WJW) — Remember opening Instagram in 2014 and hoping you had been nominated for the ice bucket challenge? Well, now there’s another chance for a tag! The viral trend has returned ...
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 ...
In news that will make many of us feel old, the Ice Bucket Challenge is back, over a decade since the first iteration in 2014. We’ll try to not think about how much has happened in the world since ...
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 ...
(WJW) – Has your social media feed suddenly been full of people doing the Ice Bucket Challenge? No, you didn’t travel back in time 10 years — the trend is making a comeback, but this time with a new ...
Ten years ago this summer the social media world was overwhelmed with videos of movie stars, politicians, sports heroes and regular folks dousing themselves as part of the Ice Bucket Challenge. Even I ...
I still remember the cool rush of ice water splashing over my head in summer 2014, my body bracing itself for inevitable shivers. The original “ALS Ice Bucket Challenge” was inescapable — if you weren ...
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 ...
Students from the University of South Carolina started a recent campaign using the ice bucket challenge to raise mental health awareness Zoey Lyttle is a Society & Culture Writer-Reporter at PEOPLE.
The viral Ice Bucket Challenge is back, but this time it is not raising awareness for the neurodegenerative disease amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS. Instead, it is shining a light on mental ...
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. (WJW) – Has your social media feed suddenly ...