Albuquerque Journal

Miss USA pageant a perfect place for #MeToo conversati­on

- S.E. CUPP Columnist

Iwasn’t a pageant girl. I never competed in a pageant, and I didn’t grow up with anyone who did. But I imagine then, as is the case now, it was a way for young girls to socialize, perform, compete and have fun dressing up, and for young women to vie for valuable scholarshi­ps to which they might not have otherwise had access. It may not be for me, but who am I to judge how other women pursue their goals?

For some, this is all very problemati­c in 2018. The reason why? #MeToo.

Hours after this month’s Miss USA pageant crowned Miss Nebraska Sarah Rose Summers the winner, USA Today posted scathing commentary from Carly Mallenbaum, who called the event “a cringewort­hy contest that went, no joke, straight from a heels-and-bikini competitio­n into a montage of contestant­s talking about when they’ve experience­d assault.”

She continues, aghast: “Later, there was a video of contestant­s reciting Maya Angelou’s inspiratio­nal ‘Phenomenal Woman’ poem, all while appearing to pose for a glossy photo shoot, barefoot in a pond.”

And her final death blow: “It’s as if producers thought that the inclusion of questions about marches and sexual violence would translate into an empowering affair.” Actually, they thought correctly. Reciting the inspiratio­nal words of poets like Angelou, including questions about sexual violence — as well as a video montage of contestant­s sharing their sexual harassment and assault stories — all did, in fact, translate into an empowering affair.

It was the first time in the history of the pageant in which a question on sexual assault had its own segment. The responses on Twitter were largely effusive:

PBS NewsHour producer Courtney Norris wrote, “Wow. In what will be seen as a moment for beauty pageants, @MissUSA contestant­s are asked: Have you ever had a #MeToo moment? Their responses are devastatin­g and brutal. But a chorus of women speaking their truth is empowering and clearly contagious.”

And Cosmopolit­an writer Amanda Coyne: “This #MeToo segment is perfectly on pitch. Letting women tell their stories about what they experience­d and how they survived and persisted.”

But for Mallenbaum, the event wasn’t pitch-perfect, but “tone-deaf.” Is she suggesting that excluding a #MeToo reference would have been better? That seems illogical.

The problem appears to be that these women were addressing sexual harassment while in the midst of a “heels-and-bikini competitio­n.” For Mallenbaum, that is somehow incongruou­s.

To me, that’s a very dangerous assertion. The presumptio­n that women in heels and a bikini can’t also share their experience­s with sexual harassment is based on one of two things: they aren’t qualified to; or, they are ascribed some kind of complicity in their harassment for competing in beauty pageants, or dressing a certain way, or acting a certain way. Suggesting their message shouldn’t be taken seriously in the context of a beauty contest is not only absurd, it’s offensive.

This is, in fact, a perfect place to have this conversati­on. These are women who voluntaril­y participat­e in these competitio­ns that they, by most accounts, find rewarding, and are then subjected to dismissive criticisms by both men and women for cheaply objectifyi­ng themselves. Tell that to Diane Sawyer, a former “America’s Junior Miss.” Or Oprah Winfrey, 1971’s Miss Black Tennessee.

But more importantl­y, many of these women have themselves been victimized at this very pageant. A number of previous contestant­s have accused now-President Donald Trump and others of inappropri­ate behavior and harassment in prior years. Ignoring #MeToo would have meant ignoring a big part of the pageant’s own troubled past.

Instead it had the contestant­s tackle it head on, sharing their intimate stories in powerful ways.

The simple truth is, Mallenbaum might just not like beauty pageants. She sniffs at contestant­s’ answers to interview questions and then shares a list of Twitter memes mocking the women’s responses.

That would all seem far more tone-deaf, and far less empowering, than what happened at the pageant on that Monday night.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Miss Nebraska Sarah Rose Summers receives the Miss USA crown from last year’s winner Kara McCullough on May 21 in Shreveport, La.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Miss Nebraska Sarah Rose Summers receives the Miss USA crown from last year’s winner Kara McCullough on May 21 in Shreveport, La.
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