Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The ALS Ice Bucket Challenge was one of the most viral trends of 2014. All over the internet, there were videos of celebrities, ...
Brooke Eby; Students at the University of South Carolina participate in the ice bucket challenge. Social media users first started dumping frigid water on themselves to call attention to a cause in ...
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 ...
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 ...
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 ...
More than a decade after the viral trend first got its start, thousands of people are dusting off their buckets and dumping ice water on their heads all over again—but this time, for mental health.
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 ...
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 ...
Remember the Ice Bucket Challenge? In 2014, people threw buckets of ice water on their hair to raise funds and awareness for Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis ALS (Lou Gehrig’s disease). The challenge ...
After more than 10 years, the Ice Bucket Challenge is back. But this time, it's for a different cause. The viral challenge that benefited ALS is returning in 2025 to raise money for Active Minds, a ...
The Ice Bucket Challenge is back, but this time for a new cause. The ALS Ice Bucket Challenge that went mega-viral in the summer of 2014 had more than 17 million people on social media, and even ...