The Mercury News

Can controvers­y fill swimsuit void at this year’s pageant?

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ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. >> The swimsuits are gone, but there has been plenty of controvers­y surroundin­g this year’s Miss America competitio­n that could keep viewers tuning in.

The next Miss America will be crowned around 8 p.m. PDT today on a nationally televised broadcast on ABC from Atlantic City. This year marks the first time the broadcast will not include a swimsuit competitio­n.

It has been replaced by onstage interviews, which have generated attentiong­rabbing remarks from contestant­s regarding President Trump, and NFL player protests, among other topics.

And behind the scenes, a revolt is underway among most of the Miss America state organizati­ons who demand that national chairwoman Gretchen Carlson and CEO Regina Hopper resign.

The outgoing Miss America, Cara Mund, says the two have bullied and silenced her, claims that the women deny.

Through it all, the 51 young women vying for the crown and a $50,000 scholarshi­p have tried to remain focused.

“I am just having the time of my life,” said Miss Massachuse­tts Gabriela Taveras, who won Friday’s onstage interview preliminar­y with comments on how Americans traveling abroad should let people from other nation’s know that America supports and wants to help them. “I don’t know what will happen; I just really shared myself as much as I could.”

The 98th Miss America competitio­n will be held at Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall in the city where it started nearly a century ago as a bathing beauty contest designed to extend the summer tourism season for another week after Labor Day. Upon taking over at the helm of the Miss America Organizati­on last winter following an email scandal in which former top leaders denigrated the appearance, intellect and sex lives of former Miss Americas, Carlson and Hopper set out to transform the organizati­on, dubbing it “Miss America 2.0.”

The most consequent­ial decision was to drop the swimsuit competitio­n and give the candidates more time to talk onstage about themselves, their platforms and how they would do the job of Miss America. Supporters welcomed it as a long-overdue attempt to make Miss America more relevant to contempora­ry society, while others mourn the loss of what they consider an integral part of what made Miss America an enduring part of Americana.

Unhappy with how the decision was reached, as well as with other aspects of Carlson and Hopper’s performanc­e, 46 of the 51 state pageant organizati­ons (the District of Columbia is included) have called on the two to resign.

 ?? WAYNE PERRY - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Miss America 2015 Kira Kazantsev, left, conducts an onstage interview with Miss New Jersey Jaime Gialloreto during the preliminar­y competitio­n Friday night.
WAYNE PERRY - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Miss America 2015 Kira Kazantsev, left, conducts an onstage interview with Miss New Jersey Jaime Gialloreto during the preliminar­y competitio­n Friday night.

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