The Daily Telegraph

Miss USA sends hidden message in bullying row

Cry for help hidden inside resignatio­n letter amid concern over pageant winners’ mental health ‘Noelia and Uma’s mental health has taken a toll and I cannot remain silent about that’

- By Raoul Simons

THE reigning Miss USA and Miss Teen USA have both quit in the same week, with the older title holder hiding the message “I am silenced” in her resignatio­n announceme­nt.

Noelia Voigt became the first title holder in Miss USA’S 72-year history to voluntaril­y step down. She resigned on Monday and Umasofia Srivastava, Miss Teen USA, followed suit and quit on Wednesday.

Insiders believe the resignatio­ns are linked after both competitio­n winners delivered carefully worded statements criticisin­g the pageant.

In her letter, Miss Voigt, 24, suggested that she had quit to prioritise her mental health.

But coded within appeared to be a cry for help. “In life, I strongly value the importance of making decisions that feel best for you and your mental health,” wrote the Venezuelan-american in a post on Instagram.

Internet sleuths said that the first word of each sentence of the full version of her statement spelt out the words, “I am silenced”.

A source told the New York Post that she appeared to be referring to “harmful workplace conditions” over which she had been forced by her contract to stay silent. On Wednesday, 17-year-old Miss Srivastava followed Ms Voigt’s lead and quit the junior version of the contest, claiming that her personal values “no longer fully align with the direction of the organisati­on”.

The resignatio­ns came shortly after

Claudia Michelle, the Miss USA social media manager, also quit her job.

In an Instagram post, she wrote: “I feel the way current management speaks about their titleholde­rs is unprofessi­onal and inappropri­ate; I disavow workplace toxicity and bullying of any kind.”

She added: “I believe Noelia and Uma’s mental health and happiness has taken a toll and I cannot remain silent about that.”

One insider, who knows all three women, told the New York Post that they decided to quit together and strategica­lly timed their resignatio­ns. The source cited a “toxic atmosphere” and suggested that the beauty queens had been afraid to speak out for fear of damaging their future career prospects.

Ms Michelle told the newspaper: “Noelia’s contract – as in her salary – was used against her. They would threaten her by saying ‘If you don’t do

XYZ …’ In this case, following social media guidelines from the Miss Universe Organizati­on that, as a social media director, I still had yet to see.”

Miss USA and Miss Teen USA are run under licence from the Miss Universe Organizati­on, which has been owned by Thailand’s JKN Global Group since 2022.

JKN, which is run by Thai media investor Anne Jakkaphong, filed for bankruptcy in November and two months later announced the sale of a 50 per cent stake to The Legacy Holding group, which was founded by Raúl Rocha Cantú, a Mexican entreprene­ur.

In August 2023, Laylah Rose, previously a fashion designer, took over as president and chief executive of Miss USA and Miss Teen USA.

The New York Post’s source alleged Ms Rose had been secretly posting on social media under Miss Voigt and Miss Srivastava’s names, much to the frustratio­n of the two contest winners. The source also suggested the relationsh­ip with Miss Srivastava had deteriorat­ed to such an extent that her parents recently refused to let Ms Rose speak to their daughter directly, insisting all correspond­ence was through them.

In a statement, Ms Rose said: “Our all-encompassi­ng goal at Miss USA is to celebrate and empower women. Our participan­ts make a real difference in this country and around the globe.

“All along, my personal goal as the head of this organisati­on has been to inspire women to always create new dreams, have the courage to explore it all, and continue to preserve integrity along the way.

“I hold myself to these same high standards and I take these allegation­s seriously. Please be assured that the wellbeing of all individual­s associated with Miss USA is my top priority,” Ms Rose added.

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 ?? ?? Laylah Rose, the new chief executive. Below, Noelia Voigt is crowned Miss USA
Laylah Rose, the new chief executive. Below, Noelia Voigt is crowned Miss USA

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