The Borneo Post

Miss America pageant loses the swimsuits – but fails to gain relevance

- By Monica Hesse

I WATCHED 51 women march in high-heeled formation to the tune of Katy Perry’s “Roar,” while murmuring words such as “confident” and “strong” in unsettling unison.

I confused all the blonde ones, as usual. I sat through two hours of Vaseline-toothed pageantry, in which the sad contestant­s were expected to clap, and the happy contestant was expected to cry, and they were all expected to do it in high heels.

But not in swimsuits! For the first time in nearly a century, Sunday’s Miss America pageant did not require its contestant­s to wear swimsuits. This is progress, pageant-master Gretchen Carlson tells us.

Instead of swimsuits, we got three separate interview portions in which young women answered questions so softball they were more like beach balls: What has been your biggest challenge? How is Miss America relevant today? Quickly now, slip into your ballgown and tell us about a gadget you wish you’d invented.

Behold, women, we are liberated.

How I wanted to like Miss America 2.0.

Higher education is suffocatin­gly expensive – my God, I wanted to cheer for something that provides a US$ 50,000 scholarshi­p to savvy young players from Wyoming or Louisiana.

The pageant made sure, this time, to make us aware of contestant­s’ college majors and cum laudes.

The eliminatio­n of swimsuits should have made the competitio­n feel more feminist. Instead, without the distractin­g veneer of a nice beach sarong, the pageant felt more antiquated. Because its real issues have nothing to do with what anybody’s wearing.

This year, the Miss America pageant took place approximat­ely 24 hours after Serena Williams was penalised an entire game at the US Open. Her alleged crimes: smashing a racket, then calling the umpire a “thief” after he deducted a point for the racket infraction. Immediatel­y, tennis fans protested that the refereeing had been sexist, less about Williams’s behaviour and more about an umpire’s ego wounded by a rebuke from a woman.

Some of the most powerful testimonie­s came from men – pros such as Andy Roddick and James Blake, who confessed that they’d behaved much worse than Williams on the court and never received game penalties.

At first pass, these two competitio­ns have almost nothing in common: The US Open is a stunning display of physicalit­y and athleticis­m. The Miss America pageant had 51 women walking in circles while stage-whispering adjectives that sounded like they were lifted from a deodorant commercial.

But it’s hard not to think that the latter has affected the former. For decades, Miss America was a model for womanhood – not only who looked good in a bathing suit but also who projected the values of femininity at the core of our society.

Contestant­s are expected to smile through exhausting talent routines and relentless­ly project good cheer.

They are graded on poise, which on Sunday was represente­d by the ability to answer inane questions in 20 seconds or less while saying nothing that could offend anybody.

They must be self- effacing. The winning contestant should immediatel­y shake her head in disbelief, as if she doesn’t deserve it. The losers must assure her that she does – that they are happier for her than they would be for themselves.

For all the blather about how this year was going to be different, this year was not different. None of the three contestant­s who dared to be topical (“From the state with 84 percent of the US freshwater but none for its residents to drink,” said Miss Michigan’s Emily Sioma) made the finals. The ones who did make the final five would have looked tremendous in bathing suits.

Writing about Serena Williams, cultural critic Rebecca Traister argued that the debacle had nothing to do with tennis but rather with how, despite lots of work and progress, we’re still collective­ly uncomforta­ble with unladylike behaviour.

“It’s about the ways in which women’s – and especially nonwhite women’s – dress and bodies and behavior and expression and tone are still deemed unruly if they do not conform to the limited view of femininity,” Traister wrote.

 ??  ?? Miss America Nia Imani Franklin struggles to keep her tiara on her head in the wind as she poses for photos at the beach after she won Miss America in Atlantic City, New Jersey, on Sept 10. -— Reuters photo
Miss America Nia Imani Franklin struggles to keep her tiara on her head in the wind as she poses for photos at the beach after she won Miss America in Atlantic City, New Jersey, on Sept 10. -— Reuters photo

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