Never mind formal wear and high heels: For Minneapolis South High School students, Saturday's prom is all about Crocs.
Cornelia Lutz is a huge fan of the brightly colored, clog-like shoes, but she never dreamed she'd get 300 of her classmates to wear them at the big event Saturday at the Commons Hotel on the University of Minnesota campus.
All it took was a Facebook page, an article in the school newspaper and the magic of Google alerts. A donation of 41 boxes of the footwear arrived this week from the Boulder, Colo.-based company.
"This could be our legacy: Crocs to prom," a beaming Lutz said Friday afternoon. "It's crazy. I'm just pumped."
It all started with a conversation Lutz had with longtime friend Lilly McLaughlin about wearing Crocs to prom "because I like to be comfortable when I dance." The two started a public Facebook page to promote the idea, where they lightheartedly encouraged those who don't own Crocs to crochet their own or just poke holes in their shoes.
Things were slow to take off and drew more scoffers than supporters. A reporter at the student newspaper, the Southerner, didn't think much of the idea but wrote a column about it anyway.
"I thought it was kind of tacky, but also outside of the box and social prom norm of heels and dresses tuxes and Oxfords," said senior Sera Mugeta. "I thought it was really funny, and it was just an article about wearing Crocs."
Little did she know that the online article triggered a Google alert that went to Crocs' chief marketing officer, who was traveling in Bangkok. He sent word back to headquarters, and Katy Michael, vice president of communications, took it from there.