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This is the sign for the 2025 New year's in Times Square, New York City. TikTok trends in 2025 were dominated by nostalgia-driven, high-engagement content like the Bugatti Challenge.
This is the sign for the 2025 New year’s in Times Square, New York City. TikTok trends in 2025 were dominated by nostalgia-driven, high-engagement content like the Bugatti Challenge.
Photo Credit: Via Wikipedia Commons under Creative Commons License
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Looking back at the wildest year yet

From raging wildfires in Los Angeles to viral moments that reshaped social media culture 2025 brought a year of chaos. Causing the lines to blur between real-world crises and digital reactions.
Palisades and Eaton Fires seen from Downtown Los Angeles. (Photo Credit: PTZ Camera/VMS system via Wik)

January—The year explodes into flames

We see the year open up into flames at the beginning of 2025. One of the most devastating natural disasters in recent California history was the Palisades and Eaton Fires. On January 7, the fires erupt into flames near Los Angeles, fueled by the extreme Santa Ana winds, scorching tens of thousands of acres of land. This killed dozens, and destroying thousands of homes and animals. While both fires burned for weeks on end, reporters prompted mass evacuations and a state of emergency across Los Angeles County.
 January 19th, 2025, major digital dramas unfolded as TikTok faced a potential ban. This was  because of the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act, signed in April 2024. A law requiring Bytedance, TikTok’s parent company, to divest or face a ban, leading to widespread controversy. Major tech companies like  Apple and Google removed TikTok from their app stores briefly before a federal extension kept it operating.
Gabriel Domench, a student at Colonia High recalls the moment of the TikTok banned saying “The ban of the app truly made me realize how much I use the app” even going as far to say  “I felt like quenlin Blackwell screaming on live.”
In the opening, we see Trump release a US trade war, hitting multiple countries. These include  Canada hit with a 25% tariff and a 10% tariff on energy imports, Mexico with a 25% tariff on all of their imports, and China with a 10% tariff on imports, causing the prices to surge and national outrage.

Spring

As the weather gets warmer and the trees bloom, the world continues to feel the effects of climate change. The Mediterranean and Europe saw a record-breaking wildfire season fueled by a historic heat wave. This affected countries  from Spain to Greece. Many Europeans to turn to social media, sharing footage and stories of smoke-filled skies and evacuated towns. This  gave the world visibility to climate change disorders.

Summer to fall

This summer had to be one of the hottest years by far. Scientists confirmed that 2025 ranked among the three hottest years on record. Millions of  global citizens witnessed prolonged heat, droughts, heat waves, and climate-induced migration firsthand. Citizens in Europe, South America, and parts of America sharing stories and community responses online to bring awareness.
October truly brought the chaos, with Hurricane Melissa storming the Caribbean and South America. This was  a Category 5 hurricane that  dominated mainstream media. Thiis caused major damages to countries like Jamaica, becoming the strongest hurricane to hit the land. Hurricane Melisaa even surpassed 1988’s Hurricane Gilbert which was one of Jamaica’s worst hurricanes.  The storm caused emergency evacuations, houses gone, and flights canceled.

A Reflective Close to the Year

As the year ends, 2025 will become the year defined by its extreme events, climate record, wildfires, tech upheavals, and community solidarity. Social media, where it all often played out, helped protest hashtags, fundraising, campaigns, and scientific explanations, bringing a collective celebration to humanity.  In the end, 2025 helped us realize that our world is changing faster than ever and that you should never take your life for granted because both challenges and resilience can emerge from the same months.

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About the Contributor
Kaima Okonkwo
Kaima Okonkwo, Reporter
Kaimaluchukwu Okonkwo is currently a 16-year-old  junior  attending Colonia High School. She was born and raised in a Nigerian household in New Jersey. Since she was a toddler she’s always been involved in soccer even being coached by her dad when she was little. Currently, she is participating in girl’s soccer & track and field. Her dream is to study finace or accounting coming from a family of bankers and lawyers in the past. One of her main ambitions is to play college soccer after high school. She enjoys listening to R&B/Soul music in her free time like artists such as Rihanna, The Weeknd, Bryson Tiller, Partynextdoor, and many more. Although it’s her second year writing for the Declaration she hopes to continue her writing passion and find joy in little things throughout her high school career.