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The 2025 version of the challenge is focused on mental health awareness, called the #SpeakYourMIND Ice Bucket Challenge. And it's going viral. Here's what to know.
The 2025 version of the challenge is focused on mental health awareness, called the #SpeakYourMIND Ice Bucket Challenge. And it's going viral. Here's what to know.
Over a decade after the viral "ALS Ice Bucket Challenge," these college students sparked a new trend in support of mental health. Reactions are mixed.
Over a decade after the viral "ALS Ice Bucket Challenge," these college students sparked a new trend in support of mental health. Reactions are mixed.
The rules of the 2025 Ice Bucket Challenge are listed on the USC Mind's official instructions, and include how to nominate the next participant after you are nominated: Nominate 2-5 people to join ...
The Ice Bucket Challenge is back for a new cause in 2025 01:55. After more than 10 years, the Ice Bucket Challenge is back. But this time, it's for a different cause.
A challenge that took social media by storm over a decade ago is back, except this time around it's in support of another cause. The ice bucket challenge has been reimagined with donations going ...
The original Ice Bucket Challenge, which grew out of other online fads but was popularized as an A.L.S. fund-raiser by the activists Pat Quinn and Pete Frates, was a campaign that began in 2014 to ...
The 2025 version of the challenge is focused on mental health awareness, called the #SpeakYourMIND Ice Bucket Challenge. And it's going viral. Here's what to know.
The #SpeakYourMIND ice bucket challenge was started by USC students in the MIND (Mental Illness Needs Discussion) club last month, as a way to honor a student who died by suicide.
The Ice Bucket Challenge, famous for ALS awareness, has been revived to raise funds for the mental health organization Active Minds, sparking controversy among the ALS community.
The 2025 rendition of the Ice Bucket Challenge, this time called the #SpeakYourMIND Challenge, was started by students at the University of South Carolina in the Mental Illness Needs Discussion club.