Yuma Sun

Historic Miss America sidesteps controvers­y

- BY ELWOOD WATSON

In news you might have missed, 22-year old Madison Marsh – a second lieutenant in the Air Force and master’s student at the Harvard Kennedy School’s public policy program – was crowned Miss America in Orlando, Florida.

Marsh, representi­ng the state of Colorado, is the first active-duty

Air Force officer ever to receive the national title. Southerner by birth, born in Fort Smith, Arkansas, Marsh graduated from the United States

Air Force Academy with a degree in physics focusing on astronomy.

Upon her victory, March paid tribute to her late mother, who died of pancreatic cancer in 2018. Shortly after her mother’s death, Marsh founded The Whitney Marsh Foundation, which raises money for pancreatic cancer research, awareness, early detection, and patient care. This is her platform.

Since their inception as part of the pageant apparatus in 1989, platforms have been one of the most scrutinize­d aspects of the contest. While the majority of Miss Americas have served largely controvers­y-free reigns, there have been a few who managed to garner the ire of certain segments of the country.

One such former winner was Kira Kazantsev, Miss America 2015.

Kazantsev worked at a planned parenthood as an intern, and drew considerab­le outrage among conservati­ve viewers. Organizati­ons such as the National Right To Life (arguably the direct antitheses to Planned Parenthood) wasted no time going after Kazantsev, while a number of conservati­ve websites levied attacks against her character and what they perceived as her lack of moral values. For the most part, Kazantsev took the criticism in stride and was unapologet­ic about her activities.

Miss America 1976, Tawny Godin (then Tawny Little), outraged many pageant fans when she stated she supported a woman’s right to an abortion. Vanessa Williams, Miss America 1984 and the first Black woman to win the crown, was the victim of racial hostility and death threats by those who saw her victory as an affront. Nina Davuluri faced similar racial hostility as well from disgruntle­d internet bloggers when she became the first Miss America of East Indian heritage. The late Leanza Cornett, Miss America 1993, announced that she was a prochoice Christian Republican and was viewed with a jaundiced eye by many conservati­ve pageant fans.

Incidental­ly, during the 1990s, there were a number of Miss Americas who arguably had controvers­ial platforms and still won the crown. Cornett adopted AIDS awareness as her platform. Her successor, Kimberly Aiken, Miss America 1994, took on the plight of the homeless for her cause. For Kate Shindle, Miss America 1998, safe sex and condom distributi­on in public schools was her platform. Each walked off with the crown. Laura Kaeppeler, Miss America 2012, touted mentoring children of incarcerat­ed parents.

The reality is that Miss Americas are complex human beings. Despite wearing a tiara and traveling across the nation for a year promoting their causes, they have emotions and opinions just like the rest of us. Some are liberal, while others are conservati­ve. Some hold deeply political beliefs, while others are completely apolitical.

There are some on the right who need to realize that not every Miss America is going to be devoutly religious or necessaril­y be excessivel­y patriotic. There are others on the left who need to come to the realizatio­n that women who decide to participat­e in the Miss America contest or any pageant cannot be stereotype­d and broadly labeled as people with low self-esteem, limited intellect, entrenched with a hyper intensive level of narcissism, lacking a social conscience or being manipulate­d by a sexist culture. Such regressive thinking of both camps is myopic and backward.

It is probably safe to say all of the nation’s Miss America winners embody characteri­stics that can be found in all of us. They are not monolithic – they’re human.

Copyright 2024 elwood Watson, distribute­d by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate. elwood Watson is a professor of history, black studies, and gender and sexuality studies at east Tennessee State university. He is also an author and public speaker.

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