USA TODAY US Edition

The combatants

- Contributi­ng: The Associated Press

Gretchen Carlson: The 1989 Miss America winner and Fox News anchor is the reform-minded new pageant chairwoman. Intent on dragging Miss America into the 21st century, she announced in June that Miss America 2.0 is no longer a “pageant,” it’s a “competitio­n.”

“We will no longer judge our candidates on their outward physical appearance. That means we will no longer have a swimsuit competitio­n,” Carlson said on “Good Morning America.”

Cara Mund: The reigning Miss America was among those not pleased by the changes. She loudly claims she has been bullied by pageant officials, including Carlson, seeking to control what she says. She said she was left out of interviews and not invited to meetings and that her televised farewell speech was cut to 30 seconds af-

ter she indirectly hinted at trouble with pageant leadership in an interview.

“Our chair and CEO have systematic­ally silenced me, reduced me, marginaliz­ed me, and essentiall­y erased me in my role as Miss America in subtle and not-so-subtle ways on a daily basis,” she lamented in a letter she wrote to former Miss Americas. “... The sheer accumulati­on of the disrespect, passive-aggressive behavior, belittleme­nt, and outright exclusion has taken a serious toll.”

She and Carlson have since feuded on social media and in the press about who bullied who and who should have reached out to the other first before going to the media.

The state pageants’ view

Representa­tives from 22 state pageants signed a petition calling for the resignatio­ns of Carlson and CEO Regina Hopper and expressing “no confidence” in the Miss America Organizati­on’s board of trustees.

In response, 30 Miss America winners issued their own letter, saying they “fully support Gretchen Carlson (and) our unified board who are and have been working tirelessly to move our program forward.”

Origins of the dispute

Miss America has been embroiled in drama since December 2017, when CEO Sam Haskell and several other board members abruptly departed following the leak of vulgar and sexist emails denigratin­g the appearance, intellect and sex lives of former Miss Americas.

As the #MeToo movement to call out sexual abuse and harassment took flight, Carlson, who left Fox after she successful­ly sued the network accusing the late Roger Ailes of sexual harassment, became the new face of Miss America, while Hopper became the new CEO.

Carlson has argued that it’s more important to judge women on what comes out of their mouths instead of what they wear or don’t wear. She said it’s “disturbing” to assume viewers might be “bored” by a pageant that celebrates women’s talents, ideas and personalit­ies without the usual jiggle and wriggle.

“We’ve heard from a lot of young women who say, ‘We’d love to be a part of your program, but we don’t want to be out there in high heels and a swimsuit,’ ” she said when she announced the swimsuit decision. “So guess what? You don’t have to do that anymore. You’re welcome. Please come join us.”

But Miss America 2016 Betty Cantrell told the Associated Press the decision to eliminate the swimsuit portion was presented to the state pageants as a fait accompli, with little time to adjust to the change.

“I thought it would be like, ‘Hey, what’s y’all’s opinion?’ ” she said. “But, no. It was, ‘I have taken away swimsuit and we expect your support.’ If they had taken a poll, they would have gotten a resounding ‘no.’ ”

Taking it personally

Some critics have taken to op-ed pages to protest that the changes are an implicit dismissal of all the thousands who competed in the past under the old traditions – and what was so wrong with those traditions anyway?

“Why does Miss America have to change its standards to please people who are never going to like the pageant anyway? Why can’t it be called a pageant? When did that become a dirty word?” Lea Schiazza, Miss Pennsylvan­ia 1985, wrote in a column in the Philadelph­ia Inquirer in June.

“With this change, is it saying that I’m not good enough? That my swimsuit win negates everything else on that ballot where I scored? I guess I’m not smart or talented because I have a trophy. Girls like me don’t belong anymore.”

On the other hand, Jennifer Aniston – who plays an ex-pageant queen in her upcoming movie, “Dumplin” – is thrilled about the swimsuit ban. In an interview with InStyle, she questioned how a swimsuit could be a considered a valid measure of a woman’s worth.

“You know, a swimsuit body is a body in a swimsuit, no matter what that body is. It’s time to just stop thinking beauty is in the shape of a size 4, and the right butt size, and the right waist size, and the right mea- surements. It’s just old. We’ve done it. We’ve been there. Let’s move on,” she declared.

The scholarshi­p money

After Mund went public with her complaints, Carlson took to Twitter to deny she bullied Mund and to claim that Mund’s actions had cost Miss America $75,000 in scholarshi­p money. “We are already seeing a negative ripple effect across the entire organizati­on,” she said.

Mund pooh-poohed that. “Sending out this letter, I’ve had so much support, and two of our top sponsors actually messaged me directly and told me they were proud of the courage to stand up for what’s right.”

Hopper told the Associated Press that at least as much would be given out in scholarshi­p funds this year as last year: around $500,000 from the Miss America Organizati­on and the Miss America Foundation.

Talk about healing

On Aug. 8, in an interview with AP that Carlson said would be her last on the subject, she said she hoped for healing and unity by the time the next Miss America is crowned.

“It would be important that we all try to come together and have a healing process,” she said. At the same time, she dismissed her critics as “a noisy minority” mostly unhappy about the eliminatio­n of the swimsuit competitio­n.

But the conflict was far from over as contestant­s begin arriving. It might even get worse, at least in public.

Some of the critics plan to make a public stink in the days before the pageant, including filing lawsuits, holding news conference­s and mounting demonstrat­ions outside Boardwalk Hall where the pageant will take place.

 ??  ?? Gretchen Carlson
Gretchen Carlson
 ?? WAYNE PARRY/AP ?? Contestant­s attend last year’s welcoming ceremony on Aug. 30 in Atlantic City, N.J.
WAYNE PARRY/AP Contestant­s attend last year’s welcoming ceremony on Aug. 30 in Atlantic City, N.J.

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