[Jimmy Fallon gets people to share their most epic prom fails]( Ah, prom. A quintessential teen experience that somehow manages to take every single one of those high octane, conflicting emotions felt during the entire school year and condense them into one solitary evening. All while everyone is dressed in elegant evening wear. Though prom began as early as the 1800s as a simple cotillion, it has evolved over the years to become more extravagantâwhat with âpromposalsâ and limousines and celebrity appearances. But, it has also evolved to become more LGBTQ inclusive and challenging of old gender rules. Prom is (and continues to be) such an integral part of teen culture that itâs the central plot of many well loved rites-of-passage movies like âPretty in Pink,â âSheâs All That,â and âThe Perks of Being a Wallflower.â Hopefully, your own prom was more like these movies, and less like âCarrie.â But the truth is: for many of us, prom really was somewhere between a romantic comedy and a horror movie. For every romantic slow dance and first kiss there were also plenty of fashion disasters, alcohol experiments gone wrong and relationship drama. Lots and lots of relationship drama. Successes and failures, if you will. In honor of prom season, Jimmy Fallon asked his âTonight Showâ audience to share some of their most memorable prom fails on Twitter. Here are 20 that were just too hilarious and/or relatable not to share. Hopefully it will help you love your own #PromFail. [Read the Story]( [Touting the benefits of breast milk during a formula shortage isn't helping anyone]( By now, you've likely seen news stories about the baby formula shortage in the U.S. According to CBS News, the formula shortage has been coming for months, with supply chain issues, labor shortages, product recalls and inflation creating a perfect storm and hampering manufacturers' ability to keep up with demand. The shortage is causing intense stress for families that rely on formula as retailers resort to rationing purchases and customers find store shelves empty of major brands. It's genuinely a crisis. And unfortunately, some breastfeeding advocates are using the shortage to tout the benefits of breastfeeding: This isn't a problem if you breastfeed! It's "free!" It's "readily available!" It's nature's perfect food! It's "what God intended!" It'll never be recalled! Folks? Now is not the time or the place. To be clear, I'm an enormous fan of breastfeeding. My mother is a retired lactation consultant and I was raised in La Leche League meetings. I breastfed my own three kids through toddlerhood and pumped breastmilk to feed my adopted nephew. I've written articles and made videos defending breastfeeding in public. I am enamored with the miraculous way our bodies can grow a whole person and also create food for that person. It's amazing. Breastfeeding is awesome in my book. [Read the Story]( [Through a historic storm and a global pandemic, this nurse embraces the true meaning of âIowa niceâ]( From the time she was a little girl, Abby Recker loved helping people. Her parents kept her stocked up with first-aid supplies so she could spend hours playing with her dolls, making up stories of ballet injuries and carefully wrapping âbrokenâ arms and legs. Recker fondly describes her hometown of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, as a simple place where people are kind to one another. Thereâs even a term for itââIowa niceââdescribing an overall sense of agreeableness and emotional trust shown by people who are otherwise strangers. Driven by passion and the encouragement of her parents, Recker attended nursing school, graduating just one year before the unthinkable happened: a global pandemic. One year into her career as an emergency and labor and delivery nurse, everything she thought she knew about the medical field got turned upside down. That period of time was tough on everyone, and Nurse Recker was no exception. âYou had patients that were here one minute and gone the next and the emotional impact took a toll, but we stuck together,â said Nurse Recker. She and her unit eventually found their footing and learned how to work as a team to adapt to the overwhelming influx of COVID-19 patients. Right as they got into a groove, on August 10, 2020, with nearly no time to prepare, a historic âderechoâ storm hit the city of Cedar Rapids, Iowa. [Read the Story]( [How Marvel's 'Moon Knight' teaches us to embrace all our selves]( The great thing about Marvel is: even if you're exhausted with superhero movies (itâs okay, I am too) the franchise often sprinkles their mega fights and formulaic plots with thought provoking, empathetic character studies. In the recent limited (or maybe not so limited) series âMoon Knightâ, the hero Marc Spector has Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID), a mental condition where a person has at least two or more distinct personalities. As with any piece of art made public, there has been criticism of the show, in particular of the accuracy of its portrayal of DID. However, the negative feedback misses Moon Knightâs ultimate success: Marcâs story not only inspires compassion for mental illness, it also shows us that sometimes the biggest battle we face is simply loving ourselves entirely. [Read the Story]( [These tiny, beautiful blue 'dragons' are showing up on beaches around the world]( Have you seen this tiny, yet gorgeous creature washing up along shores and in TikTok feeds? No, itâs not a Pokemon, as some people on the internet will try to convince you. But with its mystical appearance and hidden (yet dangerous) powers, it might as well be. This little guy is technically called a Glaucus atlanticus, which is already incredibly fun to say. But you can also call him a blue dragon. Pretty cool right? But how does such a delicate looking creature earn such a powerful name? According to One Earth, a blue dragon isâbelieve it or notâpart of the nudibranch family, aka mollusks and slugs. Yes, we live in a world where slugs are also dragons. Dare to dream! It's found on the surface of multiple oceans throughout the world, in both temperate and tropical waters. Which explains why theyâve been seen everywhere recently, even Texas. 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