Michigan

Solar Eclipse, Loveable Baby Hippo Warmed Hearts in 2017

It wasn't all doom and gloom in 2017

It wasn't all doom and gloom in 2017. The year was also filled with awe-inspiring moments that united us and warmed the heart.

The first total solar eclipse to cross the U.S. in a century bought millions together in what some could only describe as a primal experience. Thousands of immigrants took the oath of citizenship, realizing their dreams of becoming Americans. And one adorable baby, Fiona the hippopotamus, became a story of survival as she overcame the odds and tumbled into the world's heart.

The stories provided some lighthearted moments amid a series of deadly mass shootings, terrorist attacks, hurricanes, wildfires, sexual harassment scandals and other tragic news in 2017.

Here's a look at a few of the moving, unifying and just plain fun moments of 2017:

YAY, SCIENCE!
It seems nothing brought Americans together more than the first total solar eclipse to move across the U.S. in a century.

A time-lapse video shows the solar eclipse as seen in Los Angeles, Calif.

For one moment in the middle of an August day, millions of people stopped what they were doing and gazed upward in wonder as the moon slipped over the sun — leaving a path of total darkness that stretched from Oregon to South Carolina. Some eclipse watchers sang, some danced and some were moved to tears. Kids thought it was pure magic, and people traveled to remote sections of the country to get the best glimpse.

A study by the University of Michigan, requested by NASA, estimated that 215 million American adults — or 88 percent of the country's adult population — viewed the eclipse either directly or electronically. That's 104 million more than the 2017 Super Bowl.

"People were really just about nature, about this phenomenon that was happening," said Mamta Patel Nagaraja, who works on public engagement for NASA. "It didn't matter what color, creed, race, economic ladder you were on, people just went out and enjoyed it.

"It transcended all the other things," she said.

#TEAMFIONA
This little one wasn't expected to make it.

[NATL-LA]Fiona the Premature Hippo Healing at Zoo's NICU

Fiona, a Nile hippopotamus, was just 29 pounds (13 kilograms) when she was born prematurely in January. After early health scares, she's now thriving at more than 600 pounds (272 kilograms). This sassy girl has become a symbol of survival — and the star attraction at the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden.

Fiona has captivated the masses and the Team Fiona craze isn't slowing down. She stars in her own internet video series. Tens of millions have gone online to watch her take a bottle, splash in the pool or learn to run.

T-shirts bear her image. She's the subject of children's books. An ice cream flavor and local brew are named in her honor. She gets so many cards and letters that she has her own mail bin. Grown men will lean over the pool in their suits and ties to get close to her, said zoo director Thane Maynard.

"It's Fiona's world, and we're just living in it," Maynard said.

In her early, most vulnerable days, Fiona received letters and pictures from kids who were preemies themselves, urging her to stay strong. After nurses at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center helped care for the hippo, the zoo sent Fiona-themed onesies to the preemies there.

"We are working with Fiona and her story to spread a number of messages — one is a message of not giving up," Maynard said.

INSPIRING GENEROSITY
Out of cash and out of gas on an interstate exit ramp in Philadelphia, Kate McClure found help from an unlikely source: a homeless man who told her to stay put, then used his last $20 to buy her gas.

Instagram on Tuesday announced a feature called "face filters," the latest effort to steal the thunder from upstart Snap, which is the parent company of Snapchat. Instagram's face filters allows users to add graphics to a selfie, then it can be added to a video or photo and sent through direct messaging or added to a public story — much like Snapchat's Lenses. In addition to face filters, Instagram featured editing tools for video and photo.

Johnny Bobbitt Jr.'s selflessness was not lost on McClure. She set up a GoFundMe page for the military veteran and former paramedic, and raised more than $400,000.

Now Bobbitt has enough money to buy a home and his dream truck — a 1999 Ford Ranger. An attorney and financial adviser helped create a plan that will allow him to collect a small monthly salary and have some money for retirement.

Bobbitt has said he's overwhelmed. He told "Good Morning America" he plans to pay the generosity forward by donating some of the money to organizations that will help others.

"Everybody out there is facing some kind of struggle, so if I can touch their life, the way mine was touched, (it'd be) an amazing feeling," he told "Good Morning America."

"YES!" OVER ROAST CHICKEN
From a simple proposal over roast chicken to plans for a royal wedding, news that Prince Harry is engaged to American actress Meghan Markle has many cheering.

Prince Harry and American actress Meghan Markle talk about the night he proposed to his now-fiancee. The two are slated to wed in 2018.

The story drew people in for many reasons. For one, it's fun. The happiness exuded by the couple as they announced their engagement was contagious, while details of their courtship read like a fairy tale.

Harry, an army veteran who had a one-time bad-boy image but is now devoted to wounded veterans and charitable causes, met Markle on a blind date. The prince later said that's when he realized he needed to up his game to win her heart. They grew closer while camping in Botswana, and now there is talk of starting a family.

But for some black women the engagement offered more than entertainment. It gave them a Cinderella story they could picture themselves in. Markle, who is divorced, is bi-racial and will be the first woman of color in modern history to join the British royal family.

"We all have this fantasy of being swept off our feet by the prince. It's validation that, of course, we can be princesses," Essence Magazine Editor-in-Chief Vanessa K. DeLuca said at the time.

PROUD AMERICANS
Manny Macias came to America when he was just 3 months old. Three decades later, he became a citizen of the only place he's called home.

"The U.S. has always been home for me," said Macias. "Now it's official."

The federal government says more than 600,000 people became naturalized U.S. citizens in the first nine months of 2017.

The ceremonies can be huge moments for those involved. Many times they are family affairs, complete with proud smiles or tears of joy as the newest Americans realize dreams that were years in the making. Many dress in their best and pose for photos while clutching American flags.

Macias, 31, said he's now glad to be able to vote, have more stability and live without fear of being deported.

"It was important to me to get the documentation saying I was a citizen," he said. "I did get a little emotional, because finally for me, the journey was done."

Copyright AP - Associated Press
Contact Us