The Red and Black (Athens, Ga.) 1893-current, May 01, 2009, Page 5, Image 5
QUEENS: More to pageanting than ‘butt glue,’ teased hair > From Page 1 college for free this semes ter,” Black said. “I paid for college in one night [of competition].” Miss Warner Robins, Channing Wood, said her mother has had her in pag eants since she was three weeks old, but the scholar ship opportunities were always the reason for com peting. “I’ve gotten really lucky. My freshman year, I had money from my high school pageants, and through HOPE scholarship and pageants, my entire school career has been paid for,” the junior biology major said. “From room and board to these shoes on my feet.” So who is funding all of this? Each crown comes with its own pageant board —a group of volun teers who typically get involved through the coun ty government. In addition to the scholarship awards, the board allocates money for the queen’s dresses, transportation, meals, hotels and venue fees. But the board also pro vides a lot of non-mone tary support. “Once we are crowned, it’s like an instant family,” Black said. “Our boards volunteer their time only because they love advocat ing this support for women ... it’s nothing for them to call me and say, ‘Hey, how was your day? How were your finals? I heard you were really stressed out about that.’” Lindsay Mann, Georgia’s Watermelon Queen, had a different incentive for competing for her crown. Mann is a “commodity queen.” This means she represents an industry in Georgia, and rather than a scholarship opportunity, her title is a paying job. “This title is not about me. It’s about the farmers of Georgia their liveli hoods depend on this,” the accounting major from Tifton said. “[lt’s] like a job in a marketing department, you get involved in poli tics, working with state representatives and mak ing people happy at the same time. I mean, who doesn’t love a piece of watermelon?” Mann will not compete for Miss Georgia this sum mer but will compete for the national Watermelon Queen title in 2010. Although it is not part of the competition’s criteria, the pageant features a 2&3BR Apartments, Townhomes & Duplexes Walk to Campus • Pets Welcome Deposit Only $150! Washer/Dryer & Dishwasher Included (706)548-2522 I DovetailManagement.com 115 Berlin St. Apt Dl3 ‘ n*t •/■* F 0 ft Q BlAntZ hl n seed-spitting contest. *** Another reason women compete for a crown is to promote a “platform.” Black, who has been vol unteering at nursing homes “long before [she] ever started doing pag eants,” said her platform the Alzheimer’s Association is some thing she has experienced first hand. “I can’t just walk into a school and say, ‘Hey, I want to talk to you about Alzheimer’s disease,’ and have people listen to me,” she said. “But apparently, when I have a crown on my head, I have something important to say.” Briana Jewett, who was crowned Miss University of Georgia in February, said her platform is a big part of her pageanting because it hits close to home. “A good friend of mine had a cousin, Lindsay Bonistall, who was brutally murdered in her apart ment off-campus [of The University of Delaware],” she said. Jewett’s platform, PEACE OUTside Campus, aims to promote off-cam pus safety. “I’ve worked with land lords, realtors simple things like changing locks on a door for new tenants, more blue light stations that’s something I hope to accomplish by the time I graduate.” Although every woman has a unique platform spe cific to her concerns and interests, collectively they are working to eradicate a problem plaguing pag eants for years: the Barbie stereotype. “Oh, that just drives me nuts,” Stone said. “People will tell me they’re sur prised that I’d do pag eants, but I think they’d think that for all of the girls [I compete with].” Stone is a speech com munication major from Waynesboro and took 20 hours of course credit this spring. She was also vale dictorian of her high school. “There’s such a diverse amount of girls, so I don’t think you could pinpoint one kind of ‘pageant girl.’” Jewett, an exercise and sports science major from Atlanta said “breaking the Barbie mold” has been something she and her mother have talked about since her involvement with pageants began. “I have never consid ered myself the typical \ jf ■ - ft Courtesy Matt Boyd ▲ Miss University of Georgia, Briana Jewett, is an exercise and sports science major. She danced with the Atlanta Ballet for 14 years. pageant girl. You don’t need the measurements, you don’t need the plati num blonde hair, you don’t need the boob job,” Jewett said. Miss Black and Gold Georgia, Tiffany Hobbs, went into her first pageant thinking it would be a “shallow experience” but learned quickly there was a lot to be gained. “I got sucked in. I do set my standards high, but it’s not always about win ning. Sometimes it’s just about being able to make it to the next round,” said Hobbs, a theater major from Augusta. “Because no matter what level you’re on, you’re going to go to so many different places that you’ve never been before, meet so many different people, and they’re going to teach you so much about yourself, more than you could even ask for. I really respect pageanting even more now.” And get this they’re not catty toward one another. “People think we’re pul lin’ hair backstage,” Jewett said. “Most people would be surprised to know that we’re back there dancing, with curlers in our hair, snackin’ on Snickers and helping each other put fake eyelashes on,” Black said. “We’re all just a bunch of nerds, really.” But there are some pag 706 • 5434>000 -jfgfl View UGA's largest delivered menu & order online at: gumbyspizza.com . t double" T "gumby” T campus T "gumby" 1 1 TROUBLE.L _SOLO_ J.SPECIALJ _COMBO i !twoi-item pizzas, l SMALL I 1-ITEM PIZZA ILGIl LGI . 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It’s a pretty, pretty princess thing and it sparkles so much,” Mann said. “And teezin’ hair to high heaven I have never seen so many girls teeze so much hair!” “I’m a huge tomboy, I have three brothers, I play in the mud, but I just adore getting dressed up and looking my best,” Black said. “You’ve gotta get butt glue,” Stone said. “Spray adhesive from Wal-Mart will work, but if you have a wardrobe malfunction on stage, that is probably the worst thing ever.” *** As glamorous as it all sounds, these beautiful women can receive some pretty ugly criticism. Peggy Kreshel, an advertising professor in the Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication, said it’s hard not to view pageants particularly the swim suit portion of the compe tition —as anything other than objectifying. Kreshel participated in an industry pageant as a child and worked closely with a women’s studies graduate student who wrote a dissertation about The Red & Black | Finals Edition I Friday, May i, 2009 feminism and pageants. “It’s not that me, or feminists in general are against makeup, frivolous ness or whatever, but [the swimsuit competition] seems like an opportunity to go back to the concept that women are important for what they look like, not what they do.” The queens all said the same thing about the swimsuit portion of the competitions: It’s not their favorite, but it is an essen tial aspect of proving your confidence. “It’s more about being physically fit, it really is,” Wood said. “It’s not about being the skinny girl up on stage. I will never be teeny, tiny skinny, I have soccer legs. It’s proving that you’re eating healthy and exercising every day, because being fit is hard work.” Black said the swimsuit portion stems from the tradition of the Miss America pageant, and is therefore “promoting women.” “It’s one of those things that is just so ingrained,” Kreshel said. “[The] swim suit [competition] seems like a throwback to the older days, and that’s just not something we’re inter ested in anymore. But the Miss America pageant has a lot to counter-balance it, with the platform and the scholarships, and even the talent [portion] is fun.” The University has a student population of nearly 33,000, so statisti cally, it’s only logical it’s produced 14 queens. However, Mansfield Bias, president and executive director of the Miss Georgia Pageant, said there is greater reasoning. “When you think of it in terms of the best of the best and top students, most gravitate toward the University of Georgia,” Bias said. “In the past 10 years, four [Miss Georgia win ners] were UGA gradu ates.” Black said it was only natural for highly motivat ed girls to go to the University because it takes a lot to get in. “Not to toot our own horn, but we’re amazing,” she said. “I’m lucky to know them. While we want different career goals, we want the same things. Athens Coolest Sandals • Since 1975! SST Locally Owned 5 % Leather & Outdoor www.masadaleather.com We’re ambitious, we’re stu dious, on top of things in order to compete in pageants, you have to be like that.” So while seven of our girls will go on to the Miss Georgia pageant in July a week-long endeavor sending one girl to Miss America —most of them recognize their pursuits and accomplishments as pageant queens benefit them beyond the crown clad chapter of their life. “I have never been ner vous getting up in front of people or going to a job interview,” Black said. “[ln pageants,] you will never go up against a more qual ified group of people for anything.” “It’s amazing the skills I can relate to as only a sophomore,” Jewett said. “These are things that will benefit me for the rest of my life.” And if nothing else, there will always be the memories of the crown. “I have these indentions in my head from wearin’ it all weekend,” Mann said. “It’s hardcore.” REIGNING PAGEANT QUEENS Reigning Pageant Queens at the University will go on to • Compete for Miss Georgia 2010. Miss Gwinnett County Jessica Black Miss Southern Rivers Lauren Edmunds Miss Lake Lanier Amanda Erwin Miss University of Georgia Briana Jewett Miss Savannah River Laura Lyn McLeod Miss Southern Heartland Laura Stone Miss Warner Robins Channing Wood Other Queens Miss Sorority Row Katie Black Cherry Blossom Queen Rachel Cozart Miss Angus Beef Katie Gazda Miss Georgia USA Kimberly Gittings Miss Black & Gold Georgia Tiffany Hobbs Miss Alpha Kappa Psi Christina Jones Watermelon Queen Lindsay Mann 5