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Miss America is an annual competition that is open to women from the United States between the ages of 18 and 28.[1] Originating in 1921 as a "bathing beauty revue",[2] the contest is judged on competition segments with scoring percentages: Private Interview (30%) – a 10-minute press conference-style interview with a panel of judges, On Stage Question (10%) – answering a judge's question onstage, Talent or HER Story (20%) – a performance talent or 90 second speech, Health and Fitness (20%) – demonstrated physical fitness onstage dressed in athletic wear, and Evening Gown (20%) – modeling evening-wear onstage.[3][4][5]

Key Information

The previous year's titleholder crowns the winner. Miss America 2026 is Cassie Donegan of New York, who was crowned on September 7, 2025, at the Dr Phillips Center for the Performing Arts in Orlando, Florida.

Overview

[edit]
Margaret Gorman, Miss America 1921

On February 1, 1919, a beauty pageant was held at the Chu Chin Chow Ball at the Hotel des Artistes in New York City. The winner, Edith Hyde Robbins Macartney, was called "Miss America." Neither the title nor this pageant was related to the current "Miss America Pageant" which would develop a year later in Atlantic City, New Jersey.[6][7][8][9][10] Rather, the origins of the "Miss America Pageant" lie in an event entitled The Fall Frolic held on September 25, 1920, in Atlantic City. This event was designed to bring business to the Boardwalk: "three hundred and fifty gaily decorated rolling wicker chairs were pushed along the parade route. Three hundred and fifty men pushed the chairs. However, the main attractions were the young 'maidens' who sat in the rolling chairs, headed by Head Maiden Miss Ernestine Cremona, who was dressed in a flowing white robe and represented 'Peace.'"[2]

The event was so successful that The Businessmen's League planned to repeat it the following year as a beauty pageant or a "bather's revue"[2] (to capitalize on the popularity of newspaper-based beauty contests that used photo submissions).[2] The event was scheduled to take place the weekend following Labor Day, to encourage summer visitors to stay in Atlantic City. Thus, "newspapers from Pittsburgh to Washington, D.C., were asked to sponsor local beauty contests. The winners would participate in the Atlantic City contest. If the local newspaper would pay for the winner's wardrobe, the Atlantic City Businessmen's League would pay for the contestant's travel to compete in the Inter-City Beauty Contest."[2] Herb Test, a "newspaperman", coined the term for the winner: "Miss America."[2] On September 8, 1921, 100,000 people gathered at the Boardwalk to watch the contestants from Washington, D.C., Baltimore, Pittsburgh, Harrisburg, Ocean City, Camden, Newark, New York City, and Philadelphia.[2] Out of the nine contestants, the two frontrunners were Virginia Lee and Margaret Gorman. A conflict ensued when the judges disqualified 22-year-old Lee at the last minute because she was deemed a professional rather than an amateur like the other contestants because she was 1) a working actress, 2) married, and 3) a friend of the competition's chief judge.[11][12][13] The 16-year-old winner from Washington, D.C., Margaret Gorman, was crowned the "Golden Mermaid" and won $100.[2]

The pageant continued consistently over the next eight decades except for the years 1928–1932, when it was temporarily shut down due to financial problems associated with the Great Depression and suggestions that it promoted "loose morals."[14] With its revival in 1933, 15-year-old Marian Bergeron won, prompting future contestants to be between the ages of 18 and 26.[14] In 1935, Lenora Slaughter was hired to "re-invent" the pageant and served for 32 years as its director.[14] By 1938, a talent section was added to the competition, and contestants were required to have a chaperone.[14] In 1940, the title officially became "The Miss America Pageant" and the pageant was held in Atlantic City's Convention Hall.[14] In 1944, compensation for "Miss America" switched from "furs and movie contracts" to college scholarships, an idea generally credited to Jean Bartel, Miss America 1943.[14][15]

During the early years of the pageant, under the directorship of Lenora Slaughter, it became racially segregated via rule number seven that stated: "contestants must be of good health and of the white race."[16] Rule seven was abolished in 1950.[17] Miss New York 1945, Bess Myerson, the only Jewish American winner to date, became Miss America 1945 and faced antisemitism during her time as Miss America, leading to a cutback in her official duties.[18][19][20][21][22] Although there were Native American, Latina, and Asian-American contestants, there were no African-American contestants for fifty years (African-Americans appeared in musical numbers as far back as 1923, however, when they were cast as slaves).[16][23][24]

In 1970, Cheryl Browne, Miss Iowa 1970,[25][26][27] competed as the first African-American contestant in the Miss America 1971 pageant.[28][29][30] She also participated in one of the last USO-Miss America tours in Vietnam.[29] A decade later in 1983, Miss New York (and Miss Syracuse) 1983, Vanessa Williams (the first African-American woman to win the competition as Miss America 1984), resigned under pressure due to a scandal involving nude photographs.[31][32] Three decades after these events, Miss New York (and Miss Syracuse) 2013, Nina Davuluri, the first Indian-American woman to win the crown as Miss America 2014, faced xenophobic and racist comments on social media when she won.[31][32] Two years later, at the Miss America 2016 pageant, then Miss America CEO Sam Haskell apologized to Vanessa Williams (who was serving as head judge) for what was said to her during the events of 1984.[33][34][35]

In 2018, the pageant adopted a new format, referred to as "Miss America 2.0", as part of an effort under new chairwoman Gretchen Carlson to "[evolve Miss America] in this cultural revolution." Under the new format, competitors were no longer judged on their physical appearance (resulting in the highly publicized announcement that the event would no longer include a swimsuit competition).[36][37][38] In 2023, many of the "Miss America 2.0" changes (including the ban on judging personal appearance) were reversed under the advent of new leadership.[39]

History

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1921–1967

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Margaret Gorman, Miss District of Columbia, was declared "The Most Beautiful Bathing Girl in America" in 1921 at the age of 16 and was recognized as the first "Miss America" when she returned to compete the next year. The contest that year was won by Mary Katherine Campbell (Miss Ohio), who won again in 1923.[40] She returned to compete a third time in 1924 but placed as first runner-up that year, and pageant rules were then amended to prevent anyone from winning more than once.[citation needed] Alta Sterling, competing as Miss Sioux City, was the first to represent the state of Iowa at the 1924 Miss America pageant. Sterling had the distinction of being the first Jewish contestant to compete for Miss America – one of some very notable "firsts" by Miss Iowa contestants.

Beginning in 1940, Bob Russell served as the first official host of the pageant.[41] In 1941, Mifaunwy Shunatona, Miss Oklahoma, became the first Native American contestant.[42][43]

In 1945, Bess Myerson became the first Jewish-American and the first Miss New York[44] (competing as Miss New York City, a competition organized by a local radio station[20]) to win the Miss America pageant as Miss America 1945.[18][19][20][21] As the only Jewish contestant, Myerson was encouraged by the pageant directors to change her name to "Bess Meredith"[45] or "Beth Merrick",[18] but she refused.[18][45] After winning the title (and as a Jewish Miss America), Myerson received few endorsements[18][19][20][21][45] and later recalled that "I couldn't even stay in certain hotels […] there would be signs that read no coloreds, no Jews, no dogs. I felt so rejected. Here I was chosen to represent American womanhood and then America treated me like this."[45] She thus cut short her Miss America tour and instead traveled with the Anti-Defamation League. In this capacity, she spoke against discrimination in a talk entitled, "You Can't Be Beautiful and Hate."[18][19][20][21][45]

In 1948, Irma Nydia Vasquez, the first Miss Puerto Rico, became the first Latina contestant.[42][46] In addition, in 1948, Yun Tau Chee, the first Miss Hawaii, was also the first Asian-American contestant.[42] Miss America 1949, Jacque Mercer, was married and divorced during her reign; after this, a rule was enacted requiring Miss America contestants to sign a certification that they have never been married or pregnant.[47]

Miss America 1953 swimsuit competition

Starting in 1950, although the pageant continued to be in September, the organization that hosted the pageant changed the Miss America title to "post-dated"; thus, that year's pageant winner, Yolande Betbeze, became Miss America 1951, and there was no Miss America 1950.[48] The pageant was first televised nationally in 1954, hosted by Bob Russell.[41] Future television star Lee Meriwether was crowned Miss America 1955. It would also be the last time Russell served as host. He recommended, and was replaced by, Bert Parks, who served as the host for the second televised pageant in 1955 and stayed as host until 1979.[41][49] Television viewership peaked during the early 1960s, when it was the highest-rated program on American television.[50]

1968–2016

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Miss America 2003 contestants
Miss America 2015 contestants

With the rise of second-wave feminism and the civil rights movement during the 1960s, the Miss America pageant became the subject of a series of protests that attacked it as sexist, racist, and part of U.S. militarism. The first such demonstration took place during the Miss America 1969 pageant held on September 7, 1968 (won by Miss Illinois 1968, Judith Ford), when about 200 members of the group New York Radical Women demonstrated as part of the Miss America protest. Bev Grant's photographs of this event have become iconic.[51] In addition, a pamphlet distributed at the protest by Robin Morgan, No More Miss America!, became a source for feminist scholarship.[52] The protest was co-sponsored by Florynce Kennedy's Media Workshop, an activist group she founded in 1966 to protest the media's representation of blacks, along with the feminist Jeannette Rankin Brigade and the ACLU.[53] Morgan later stated that the Miss America pageant "was chosen as a target for a number of reasons: it has always been a lily-white, racist contest; the winner tours Vietnam, entertaining the troops as a 'Murder Mascot'; the whole gimmick is one commercial shillgame to sell the sponsor's products. Where else could one find such a perfect combination of American values—racism, militarism, sexism—all packaged in one ‘ideal symbol,’ a woman."[54] The protesters compared the pageant to a county fair where livestock are judged.[25][55] They thus crowned a sheep as Miss America and symbolically destroyed a number of feminine products, including false eyelashes, high-heeled shoes, curlers, hairspray, makeup, girdles, corsets, and bras.[56] Burning the contents of a trash can was suggested, but a permit was unobtainable; news media seized on the similarity between draft resisters burning draft cards and women burning their bras. In fact, there was no bra burning, nor did anyone remove her bra.[57][58] The Women's Liberation Front later demonstrated at the Miss America 1971 pageant.[28]

Miss Iowa 1970,[27] Cheryl Browne, became the first black contestant in the competition's history during the Miss America 1971 pageant (September 12, 1970).[25][26][28][29][30] She drew attention from reporters and from security personnel in Atlantic City who maintained a visible presence during pageant rehearsals.[29] Browne was not a finalist, however,[29] losing to future media personality, Miss Texas 1970, Phyllis George. In August 1971, Browne traveled to Vietnam with George; Miss Nevada 1970, Vicky Jo Todd; Miss New Jersey 1970, Hela Yungst; Miss Arizona 1970, Karen Shields; Miss Arkansas 1970, Donna Connelly; and Miss Texas 1970 (George's replacement), Belinda Myrick.[59] They participated in a 22-day United Service Organizations tour for American troops that began in Saigon.[29][59][60] Browne later commented that she thought "it was one of the last Miss America groups to go to Vietnam."[29] Miss Arkansas 1980, Lencola Sullivan, finished the Miss America 1981 pageant (September 6, 1980) as fourth runner-up, making her the first black contestant to place in the top five.[42]

A few years later, Vanessa Williams (Miss New York 1983) won the title of Miss America 1984 on September 17, 1983, making her the first black woman to wear the crown.[61] Williams later commented that she was one of five minority contestants that year, noting that ballet dancer Deneen Graham "had already had a cross burned on her front yard because she was the first black Miss North Carolina [1983]."[62] She also pointed out that "Suzette Charles was the first runner-up, and she was biracial. But when the press started, when I would go out on the – on the tour and do my appearances, and people would come up and say they never thought they'd see the day that it would happen; when people would want to shake my hand, and you'd see tears in their eyes, and they'd say, I never thought I'd see it in my lifetime – that's when, you know, it was definitely a very special honor."[62] Williams' reign as Miss America was not without its challenges and controversies, however. For the first time in pageant history, a reigning Miss America was the target of death threats and hate mail.[42][62] Williams was forced to resign seven weeks prior to the end of her time as Miss America, however, after the unauthorized publication of nude photos in Penthouse.[42][63][64][65] First runner-up, Miss New Jersey 1983, Suzette Charles replaced her for the final weeks of Williams' reign.[66] Thirty-two years after she resigned however, Vanessa Williams returned to the Miss America stage on September 13, 2015, for the Miss America 2016 pageant as head judge (where Miss Georgia 2015, Betty Cantrell, won the crown).[67][68] The pageant began with former Miss America CEO Sam Haskell issuing an apology to Williams, telling her that although "none of us currently in the organization were involved then, on behalf of today's organization, I want to apologize to you and to your mother, Miss Helen Williams. I want to apologize for anything that was said or done that made you feel any less the Miss America you are and the Miss America you always will be."[33][34][35] Suzette Charles (Williams' replacement) said in an interview with Inside Edition that she was perplexed over the apology and suggested that it was given for the purpose of ratings.[69]

In 1985, Miss Utah 1984, Sharlene Wells Hawkes, became the first foreign-born, bilingual Miss America, as she was born in Asunción, Paraguay.[70] Miss Alabama 1994, Heather Whitestone, won the 1995 pageant becoming the first deaf Miss America (she lost most of her hearing at the age of 18 months).[71][72] At the Miss America 1999 pageant held on September 19, 1998, Nicole Johnson (Miss Virginia 1998) became the first Miss America with diabetes and the first contestant to publicize an insulin pump.[73][74] Around the same time, Miss America officials announced they had lifted the ban on contestants who were divorced or had had an abortion. This rule change, however, was rescinded and Miss America CEO Robert L. Beck, who had suggested it, was fired.[75][76] Angela Perez Baraquio, Miss Hawaii 2000, was crowned Miss America 2001, thereby becoming the first Asian-American, the first Filipino-American, as well as the first teacher ever to win the pageant.[77]

A few years later, the Miss America 2005 pageant held on September 18, 2004, would be the last one televised live on ABC (which dropped the pageant after this broadcast, as it "drew a record-low 9.8 million viewers")[78] and the last one held in Atlantic City for ten years. Miss Alabama 2004, Deidre Downs, reigned as Miss America four months longer than usual as the Miss America 2006 pageant was moved to a January broadcast at the Las Vegas Strip's Theatre for the Performing Arts (Planet Hollywood Resort & Casino).[79][80] It was broadcast live on Country Music Television. After two years, the pageant moved to the TLC network.[81][82] The Miss America 2011 pageant held on January 15, 2011, showcased Miss New York 2010, Claire Buffie, (the first Miss America contestant to advocate a gay-rights platform)[83][84] and Miss Delaware 2010, Kayla Martell, (the first bald contestant).[85][86] ABC also resumed broadcasting the pageant with the 2011 competition.[87] The Miss America 2013 pageant, held on January 12, 2013, was the last one to take place in Las Vegas.[88] Miss New York 2012, Mallory Hagan, won the competition but only served for eight months as the pageant moved back to its former broadcast slot in September 2013[88][89] Miss Montana 2012, Alexis Wineman, ("America's Choice" winner) was the pageant's first autistic contestant.[90][91]

With the Miss America 2014 pageant, held on September 15, 2013, the competition returned to Boardwalk Hall, Atlantic City, New Jersey.[88] Miss New York (Nina Davuluri) won the title of Miss America. Davuluri was also the first Indian-American and second Asian-American to win the crown.[92][93] Shortly after her win, however, Davuluri became the target of xenophobic and racist comments on social media[94][95][96] relating the proximity of the event date to the 9/11 anniversary and to anti-Indian sentiment.[94][95][97][98][99] News agencies cited tweets that misidentified her as Muslim or Arab, associated her with groups such as Al-Qaeda, and questioned why she was chosen over Miss Kansas 2013, Theresa Vail[94][95][97][100][101] (a soldier who won the "America's Choice" award and was the first contestant to display tattoos during the swimsuit competition).[102][103] Davuluri said that she was prepared for this backlash because "as Miss New York, I was called a terrorist and very similar remarks",[104][105] and Vail denounced the social media backlash, offering her support to Davuluri.[106][107] Torn ligaments forced Miss Florida 2013, Myrrhanda Jones, to perform her baton routine with a decorated leg brace,[108] while Nicole Kelly (Miss Iowa 2013) was the first contestant without a forearm to compete in the pageant.[109]

Amanda Longacre, then Miss Delaware 2014, who was preparing to compete in Miss America 2015, was stripped of the title and the crown[110][111][112] because she was deemed to be too old.[110][111][112] Longacre filed a $3 million lawsuit,[110][111][112] and Miss America officials later blamed the error on state pageant officials who they said "missed the age discrepancy in Longacre's submitted paperwork."[110][111][112] Miss New York 2014 (Kira Kazantsev) eventually won the title of Miss America 2015, making New York the first state to produce a winner for three consecutive years.[113][114]

In September 2014, comedian John Oliver ran a segment on his show, Last Week Tonight, that investigated the Miss America Organization's claim that it is "the world's largest provider of scholarships for women."[115] Oliver's team, which included four researchers with journalism backgrounds,[116] collected and analyzed the organization's state and federal tax forms to find that the organization's scholarship program only distributes a small fraction of its claimed "$45 million made available annually".[117] Oliver said that at the national level, the Miss America Organization and Miss America Foundation together spent only $482,000 in cash scholarships in 2012.[115] Oliver found that at the state level, the Miss Alabama pageant claimed that it had provided $2,592,000 in scholarships to Troy University despite not actually distributing any such scholarships.[118] The pageant appeared to multiply the value of a single available scholarship by the number of contestants theoretically eligible for it, while using the term "provided" in a way that did not mean "distributed."[119] The Miss America Organization responded by stating that Oliver affirmed that it provides the most scholarships to women and that the $45 million figure was based on all scholarships made available whether or not they are accepted.[120]

In February 2015, Sharon Pearce announced that she was stepping down from her role as President of the Miss America Organization. At that time, former CEO Sam Haskell was named Executive Chairman of the Miss America Organization, retained the title of CEO, and assumed all of Pearce's responsibilities.[121] In addition, Miss America 2014, Nina Davuluri, was appointed one of the new trustees to the Miss America Foundation.[122] In September 2015, Miss America officials announced that the organization granted $5.5 million in scholarships,[123] a number that included all offers of in-kind tuition waivers from multiple schools when a contestant could accept one at most.[124] In 2019, a lawyer for the Miss America Foundation put the number at $1.3-1.4 million and said that 85% of the money is raised by contestants themselves, through solicitations from friends, family, and businesses.[125]

On March 24, 2016, the Miss America Organization announced a contract renewal with ABC to continue carrying the pageant for the next three years to the 2019 edition.[126]

In June 2016, Erin O'Flaherty was crowned Miss Missouri, becoming the first openly lesbian Miss America contestant.[127]

2017–2022 (Miss America 2.0 Era)

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Miss America 2018, Cara Mund, visits the Fort Meade USO
Miss America 2023, Grace Stanke (the last Miss America winner of the 2.0 era).

In late December 2017, HuffPost published an article exposing derogatory emails sent and received by CEO Sam Haskell, board members Tammy Haddad and Lynn Weidner, and lead writer Lewis Friedman. The emails, sent between 2014 and 2017, featured instances of expletive name-calling and unprofessional comments. The comments were often sexual or violent in nature and targeted former Miss America winners, notably Mallory Hagan and Katherine Shindle, both of whom joined 47 other former Miss Americas (including all Miss Americas from 1988 to 2017)[128] in signing a joint open letter calling for the firing or resignation of all involved.[129] On December 22, the Miss America Organization (MAO) released statements to USA Today, saying that it was made aware of concerns several months prior. They stated that the organization does not "condone the use of inappropriate language" and reported that its investigation had determined that Haskell was under "unreasonable distress resulting from intense attacks on his family from disgruntled stakeholders". The organization also reported that its relationship with Friedman had been terminated. Haskell explained that attacks on his character impaired his judgment when responding to the emails.[130] Miss America's board of directors also suspended Haskell, who released a statement labeling the HuffPost article "unkind and untrue".[128][131] Hagan and Shindle criticized the decision to suspend Haskell, rather than fire him, as inadequate.[132] The following day, the President of Miss America, Josh Randle; executive chairwoman Lynn Weidner; and Haskell all resigned.[133] The scandal prompted the pageant's producer, Dick Clark Productions, to cut ties, and the Casino Reinvestment Development Authority (CRDA) announced that it was reconsidering its contract with Miss America, with its executive director Chris Howard describing the scandal as "troubling", and both Frank Gilliam, incoming mayor of Atlantic City, and State Senator Colin Bell called for CRDA to end its relationship with Miss America.[134] On December 24, Haddad also resigned.[135]

In January 2018, Gretchen Carlson, who won the Miss America pageant in 1989, was elected as the new chairwoman of the organization, becoming the first former Miss America to serve as its leader. Katherine Shindle, Miss America 1998, was also appointed to the board alongside fellow Miss America winners, Heather French Henry (2000) and Laura Kaeppeler (2012).[136] This move led to a number of changes. In June 2018, there was an announcement that Miss America contestants would no longer be judged based on their physical appearance. Thus, the national Miss America event would be considered a competition, rather than a beauty pageant, and the titleholders would now be candidates, rather than contestants.[38][137][37][36][138] The swimsuit competition was replaced with state titleholders participating in a live interactive session with the judges.[137][37][36] The evening gown competition was dropped; the contestants chose clothing "that makes them feel confident, expresses their personal style, and shows how they hope to advance the role of Miss America."[38][139] In interviews, Carlson emphasized the organization's desire to be more welcoming, "open, transparent, [and] inclusive to women," and to prioritize displaying the talent and scholarship in the contestants.[38][140] The new board of directors increased the maximum age of titleholders to 25 years old, from 24.[141] Therefore, contestants could not be older than 25 years old on December 31 in the calendar year of their state competition.[141] These new organizational changes under Carlson were referred to as the "Miss America 2.0" format.[36]

In August 2018, Miss America 2018 Cara Mund gave an interview to The Press of Atlantic City in which she stated that it had "been a tough year."[142] She then wrote an open letter to former Miss Americas a few weeks later, in order to explain her comments. In the letter she states that the current leadership had "silenced me, reduced me, marginalized me, and essentially erased me in my role as Miss America." She also stated that her "voice is not heard nor wanted by our current leadership …nor do they have any interest in knowing who I am and how my experiences relate to positioning the organization for the future."[143][144][145] Carlson denied Mund's claims.[146] However, at the time the Miss America 2019 competition began, 46 of 51 state organizations (as well as 23 former Miss America winners) had signed a petition calling for the resignation of Carlson and CEO, Regina Hopper, from the Miss America Organization.[147] The states who had not signed were Arkansas, Kentucky, Minnesota, Nevada, and Vermont.[147]

On September 5, 2018, Fox Rothschild LLP, a law firm based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, filed a breach-of-contract suit against the MAO for failing to pay nearly $100,000 for legal services.[148] Court fillings from October 26, 2018, ordered MAO to pay Fox Rothschild LLP $98,206.90 with interest for their unpaid legal bills.[149] The Miss America Organization reported in December 2018 that a settlement had been made with Fox Rothschild LLP.[149] From 2011 to 2016 (with the exception of 2014), MAO's tax fillings reveal that the organization was operating with a negative net income.[149]

In the fall of 2018, MAO terminated licenses from Florida, Georgia, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, and West Virginia.[150][151] The leadership of the Miss Colorado organization quit in protest.[151] With license termination the state organization cannot "claim to be affiliated with the Miss America Organization and must...turn over bank accounts with scholarship money to the national organization."[150] On December 22, 2018; MAO awarded the license for the Miss Georgia organization to Trina Pruitt.[152] On December 26, 2018; MAO also reinstated the license for the Miss New Jersey organization for one year, contingent on leadership changes and recruitment of new sponsors and board members.[153]

In December 2018, state organizations from Georgia, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, and West Virginia, along with Jennifer Vaden Barth (former titleholder and former MAO board member), filed a lawsuit requesting the actions of Carlson and Hopper be voided, citing an "illegal and bad-faith takeover of the MAO, beginning in January 2018."[154][155] The court date for this suit was set for January 25, 2019.[155]

On June 5, 2019, Miss South Dakota 1997 and former South Dakota Secretary of State, Shantel Krebs, was unanimously elected to chairwoman of the Miss America Organization Board of Directors, succeeding Carlson.[156] Krebs had been a member of the organization's board since October 2018.[156] Carlson will "remain involved as an advisor to the Miss America Organization Board."[156]

In Summer 2019, Miss America announced the contest would move out of Atlantic City. The December 19, 2019, event took place at Mohegan Sun in Uncasville, Connecticut. The broadcast moved from ABC to NBC, and was live streamed for the first time.[157] On May 8, 2020, the organization announced its next competition, originally slated for December 2020, was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The postponement will also include revised eligibility to be coordinated with state qualifying organizations to allow competitors who would usually age out to remain in consideration and ultimately there was no Miss America 2021 pageant and Miss America 2022 was held on December 17, 2021.[158]

In November 2022, Brían Nguyen was crowned Miss Greater Derry in New Hampshire, becoming the first transgender titleholder under the Miss America organization.[159]

2023–present

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Beginning in January 2023, major changes were made to the competition format following the "advent of...new Miss America Opportunity"[160] of Robin Fleming as new Owner/CEO of the Miss America organization.[39] Fleming is an entrepreneur, dress designer, and television producer[161] and she formerly spent over 9 years directing state level Miss USA pageants.[162] The new administration under Fleming has reversed some of the Miss America 2.0 changes including terminology (as of 2023, a competition participant will once again be referred to as a 'contestant' rather than the Miss America 2.0 term 'candidate')[163] and the decision to not judge contestants based on their physical appearance (which occurred with the elimination of the swimsuit competition in 2018).[39][36] Instead of a swimsuit competition, contestants will now be judged on physical fitness while modeling activewear.[39] In addition, the performance talent competition, which has been part of the Miss America competition since 1938,[14] has added a new category; contestants may now choose to present a “personal narrative in storytelling” as their talent in a category named "HER Story".[163][164] The contestant age limit was also raised from 18–25 to 18–28.[39][1]

On July 10, 2023, A&E premiered a four-part documentary series, "Secrets of Miss America", which interviewed past winners, contestants and staff members about historical issues with the Miss America organization related to body-shaming, racism and "psychological warfare" against contestants and winners.[165][166]

In November 2024, Miss America's operator filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.[167] In December 2024, Miss America Competition LLC asked to dismiss its bankruptcy.[168]

Winners

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Hosts

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Present

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Past

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See also

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Further reading and viewing

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Miss America is an annual beauty pageant and scholarship competition in the United States that crowns a national titleholder selected from state, district, and territorial representatives competing in private interview, onstage interview, talent, fitness, and evening wear categories.[1] Originating on September 7, 1921, in Atlantic City, New Jersey, as the Inter-City Beauty Contest—a promotional event organized by local businessmen to prolong the summer tourist season by featuring young women parading in bathing suits along the boardwalk—the pageant initially emphasized physical appeal amid a field of fewer than ten entrants, with Margaret Gorman of Washington, D.C., named the inaugural winner.[2] Over the subsequent century, it evolved under leaders like Lenora Slaughter, incorporating a talent competition in 1935 to highlight skills beyond appearance, launching scholarships in 1945 to fund women's higher education, and broadcasting nationally on television from 1954 onward, which drew tens of millions of viewers and amplified its cultural footprint.[2] Today, the organization positions itself as the foremost provider of scholarships for young women, awarding more than $5 million in tuition assistance each year to contestants pursuing undergraduate and graduate studies, while requiring participants aged 17 to 28 to champion personal "platforms" addressing social issues such as education, health, and community service.[3][4] Defining characteristics include its transition from a Depression-era hiatus and post-World War II revival to a televised spectacle that has sparked debates over objectification—exemplified by 1968 feminist protests decrying it as a "cattle auction"—prompting reforms like the 2018 discontinuation of the swimsuit segment in response to #MeToo-era scrutiny, though core judging retains 20% weighting on physical fitness.[2][5]

Overview

Founding Principles and Evolution

The Miss America pageant originated on September 8, 1921, in Atlantic City, New Jersey, as an initiative by local businessmen to prolong the summer tourist season beyond Labor Day and boost hotel revenues during early September, a period of typically low occupancy.[6][7] Organized as the "Inter-City Beauty" contest featuring bathing-suited participants from several cities, it emphasized physical attractiveness and entertainment to draw crowds to the boardwalk, directly tying the event to empirical economic incentives rather than abstract ideals of femininity.[8][9] Sixteen-year-old Margaret Gorman of Washington, D.C., emerged as the inaugural winner, selected initially as Miss Washington, D.C., for her athletic build, prior achievements in swimming and diving, and vibrant personality, before prevailing in Atlantic City's amateur and bathers' revue categories.[10][11] Her victory, awarded a golden mermaid trophy, exemplified the contest's early prioritization of wholesome, athletic American beauty standards over professional modeling, with judging focused on poise, appeal in swimwear, and crowd engagement.[8][12] By the 1940s, amid growing public and media critiques portraying the event as superficial, the organization under executive director Lenora S. Slaughter introduced a scholarship program in 1945, offering college tuition grants to winners and finalists to reframe participation as an avenue for education and personal development.[2][13] This pivot, initially funded by corporate patrons like Joseph Bancroft and Sons, marked a strategic evolution while preserving the foundational competitive elements of beauty, interview, and performance judged by panels and audience response.[14][15] The change responded to cultural pressures for substance beyond aesthetics but did not alter the pageant's core reliance on visual and performative appeal for selection.[14]

Current Mission and Format

In 2018, the Miss America Organization announced significant reforms, eliminating the swimsuit competition and shifting away from judging based on physical appearance to position the event as a leadership and empowerment program rather than a traditional beauty pageant.[4] The stated mission became "empowering women to lead," with an emphasis on developing skills in service, scholarship, and social impact initiatives, while retaining elements like evening wear to assess poise, presentation, and overall composure during public interactions.[16] This evolution aims to evaluate contestants holistically through private interviews, talent performances, and pitches on personal platforms addressing issues such as children's health advocacy or support for military families, though the format's continued focus on stage presence and attire underscores persistent elements of aesthetic evaluation.[17] The national competition occurs annually, typically selecting one titleholder from 51-52 delegates (representing the 50 states, District of Columbia, and occasionally territories like Puerto Rico, as in the 2026 competition with 52 entrants), with the winner outperforming the other delegates at the national finals. The 2025 event crowned Abbie Stockard of Alabama on January 5 after preliminary rounds and finals emphasizing leadership qualities.[18] Participants advance through state-level pageants, where they develop and refine social impact projects, and the national stage awards scholarships to all competitors, including $3,000 for non-finalists and higher amounts for semi-finalists and the winner, contributing to annual distributions exceeding $5 million in tuition assistance.[19] Historically, these programs have provided millions in funding to support education and professional development, prioritizing verifiable commitments to community service over superficial traits.[3]

Historical Development

Inception as Bathing Beauty Contest (1921–1940s)

The Miss America pageant began on September 7, 1921, as the "Inter-City Beauty" contest in Atlantic City, New Jersey, organized by local businessmen to prolong the tourist season beyond Labor Day by attracting crowds to a bathing beauty parade.[6] Nine contestants from cities including Washington, D.C., Philadelphia, and Pittsburgh competed by parading in wool bathing suits along the boardwalk, with 16-year-old Margaret Gorman of Washington, D.C., selected as the winner based on physical appeal and popularity, receiving a $100 prize and the unofficial title of "Golden Mermaid."[20] This inaugural event drew significant attendance, evidenced by reports of thousands viewing the procession, directly linking the contest to economic incentives as hotel occupancy and local commerce extended into early fall.[6] Early iterations through the 1920s and 1930s maintained a primary focus on swimsuit competitions and physical beauty, with winners exemplifying conventional standards of feminine attractiveness without emphasis on talents or intellect. In 1924, 18-year-old Ruth Malcomson of Philadelphia was crowned after a swimsuit parade that highlighted her figure, reflecting the era's cultural normalization of such displays as entertainment drawing over 100,000 spectators annually by the late 1920s.[21] The contest evolved minimally, incorporating judging on poise and personality alongside appearance, but remained unapologetically a showcase of bathing beauties, as contemporary accounts described entrants' measurements and poses rather than skills.[22] During World War II in the 1940s, the pageant persisted amid wartime constraints but adapted to promote patriotism, with contestants and winners like 1943's Jean Bartel engaging in bond-selling tours that raised millions for the war effort, substituting some glamour with nationalistic appeals while retaining the core swimsuit format.[23] Resource rationing affected production scales, yet events proceeded annually, underscoring the contest's resilience as a public diversion tied to American morale rather than full suspension.[2] This period marked the bathers' parade's final prominence before later shifts, with winners such as 1945's Bess Myerson embodying the blend of beauty and wartime symbolism.[24]

Post-War Expansion and Talent Emphasis (1950s–1970s)

Following World War II, the Miss America pageant experienced substantial growth, fueled by the expansion of state-level qualifying competitions and the advent of national television broadcasts. Franchised state organizations, licensed by the national pageant to select representatives, proliferated in the 1950s, enabling broader participation and revenue generation from local events while maintaining centralized judging standards at the national level.[13] By the mid-1950s, preliminary contests across states drew thousands of entrants annually, a marked increase from the hundreds competing in earlier decades, as the structured pipeline from local to state to national levels democratized access and amplified the event's reach.[25] To address criticisms portraying the pageant as superficially focused on physical appearance, organizers heightened emphasis on the talent segment, which had been introduced in 1935 but initially carried limited scoring weight.[15] In 1951, Yolande Betbeze won the crown primarily through her operatic performance of "Caro nome" from Verdi's Rigoletto, underscoring talent's role in elevating contestants' intellectual and artistic merits over aesthetics alone; her victory prompted sponsor Catalina Swimwear to withdraw after she declined promotional swimsuit poses, highlighting internal tensions but also the shift toward skill-based legitimacy.[26] This evolution aligned with scholarship expansions, surpassing $250,000 in total awards by the late 1950s, positioning the competition as a meritocratic platform rather than an elitist spectacle.[27] Television coverage accelerated visibility, with the 1955 broadcast attracting 27 million viewers and a 39% audience share, setting records for the era.[27] Viewership peaked in the 1960s, reaching approximately 85 million by 1960 and sustaining high ratings into the 1970s, such as a 37.2 Nielsen rating in 1970, despite cultural upheavals.[28] [29] Amid Vietnam War-era scrutiny, the 1968 protest by about 100-200 members of New York Radical Women outside the Atlantic City event—where demonstrators discarded symbols of female oppression into a "Freedom Trash Can"—drew media attention to charges of objectification but failed to derail the pageant's momentum, as sustained TV audiences affirmed its enduring appeal.[30]

Television Dominance and Institutional Growth (1980s–2000s)

The Miss America pageant entrenched its television prominence in the 1980s and 1990s via sustained ABC broadcasts, building on the network's exclusive rights secured since the 1954 debut telecast sponsored by Philco for $10,000.[31] High-profile hosts, including Regis Philbin from 1991 to 1996—often co-hosting with Kathie Lee Gifford—drove ratings surges, with the 1986 edition attaining a 23.0 Nielsen rating and 44 share, while the 1988 broadcast ranked as the week's top program.[32][33] Viewership peaked at around 23 million in 1992, affirming its role as a seasonal staple amid network competition, though audiences dipped to 12 million by 2002 as cable fragmentation intensified.[34] ABC continued airing the event through the Miss America 2005 pageant in September 2004, after which it shifted to other outlets, marking the end of a half-century broadcast era. Institutionally, the organization formalized growth by maintaining 52 affiliates—covering all 50 states plus the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico—creating tiered competition pathways from local preliminaries to state pageants and the national finals, which enhanced participant access and organizational depth.[35] Scholarship disbursements expanded correspondingly, with cumulative awards exceeding $10 million by the late 1980s and the system promoting up to $45 million annually across levels by the 2000s, funded partly through corporate partnerships like those with Clairol and early electronics firms.[2][34] These ties bolstered financial resilience, enabling structured empowerment programs despite sponsor fluctuations, such as Disney's ABC affiliation waning by the early 2000s.[34] Despite enduring criticism from 1970s feminist demonstrations that targeted the event's objectification, the pageant's institutional framework proved durable, as evidenced by consistent television draw and winners' subsequent professional trajectories.[14] Scholarships facilitated advanced education for titleholders, yielding careers in fields including law and politics; for instance, Miss America 2003 Erika Harold, a Harvard Law School graduate, pursued legal advocacy and a 2004 congressional bid in Illinois.[2] This pattern of post-reign achievement underscored the organization's emphasis on talent and intellect over transient controversy, sustaining its cultural footprint into the 2000s.

Reforms Amid Cultural Shifts (2010s–Present)

In June 2018, the Miss America Organization, under the leadership of board chair Gretchen Carlson, announced the elimination of the swimsuit competition effective for the 2019 pageant, citing a shift away from judging contestants on physical appearance in response to the #MeToo movement and prior scandals involving leaked executive emails.[36] [37] This reform, part of a rebranding to "Miss America 2.0," introduced a "social impact pitch" segment allowing contestants to present personal initiatives focused on community service and leadership, aiming to emphasize intellect and advocacy over aesthetics.[38] Carlson, who assumed the chair role in January 2018 following her high-profile sexual harassment settlement with Fox News, framed the changes as empowering women to be judged on substance rather than form.[39] However, the decision sparked internal dissent, including termination of licenses for organizations in four states (Missouri, New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania) that opposed the reforms, reflecting tensions over whether the overhaul prioritized ideological alignment over organizational consensus.[40] The reforms correlated with measurable shifts in viewership and engagement, as the 2019 pageant drew 4.3 million viewers, a 19% decline from 5.4 million the prior year, amid broader concerns about sponsorship sustainability without traditional elements that had historically driven audience interest.[41] [42] Despite these challenges, annual participation grew from approximately 5,000 contestants pre-reform to 6,500 by the early 2020s, suggesting the emphasis on social impact and talent attracted a broader pool, though critics, including former titleholders like Miss America 2010 Caressa Cameron, argued the changes transformed the event into a "woke Ted Talk" that undervalued discipline signaled by physical fitness standards.[43] [44] From a causal perspective, physical criteria historically served as proxies for self-control and commitment—qualities empirically linked to long-term success in rigorous pursuits—potentially diluting evaluative rigor when removed without equivalent merit-based substitutes, even as the organization maintained core interview and talent components.[45] Adaptations in the 2020s included virtual preliminary competitions during the COVID-19 pandemic, such as the first Zoom-based state events in 2020, which preserved competition continuity while prioritizing health protocols and reinforcing non-physical judging foci like talent and interviews.[46] Scholarship distribution remained robust, with over $5 million awarded annually across local, state, and national levels post-2018, comparable to pre-reform figures like $5.5 million in 2015, indicating financial incentives sustained participant interest despite external critiques.[47] [43] Carlson's tenure ended with her resignation in June 2019 amid ongoing board transitions, but the reforms endured, prompting debates on whether they enhanced true merit through substantive evaluation or primarily accommodated cultural pressures, as evidenced by persistent internal divisions and mixed empirical signals on audience retention.[48][49]

Competition Mechanics

Eligibility and Participant Pipeline

Eligibility for the Miss America competition requires participants to be female, unmarried U.S. citizens between the ages of 18 and 28, with no felony convictions beyond minor traffic offenses and no custodial parental responsibilities.[50][51] Contestants must reside full-time in the competing state, be employed full-time there, or be enrolled as full-time students at an accredited institution within the state.[52] The age range was updated in July 2025 to allow women no younger than 18 as of September 1 of the competition year and no older than 28 as of September 30, extending the prior upper limit to broaden the pool of experienced candidates while maintaining focus on prime years for talent and leadership development.[53] Additionally, entrants must demonstrate personal involvement in a community or social issue through a required Social Impact Initiative (SII), which mandates outlining a platform for advocacy, fundraising goals (e.g., minimum $100 per local competition), and measurable commitments to public service, filtering for disciplined individuals capable of sustained goal-oriented efforts.[51][54] The participant pipeline operates as a merit-based feeder system from local preliminaries to state-level selections, culminating in approximately 51-52 national delegates (typically representing the 50 states and District of Columbia, with recent inclusions such as Puerto Rico bringing the total to 52 in competitions like Miss America 2025 and 2026).[55] Local pageants, numbering in the hundreds across the country, serve as entry points where competitors undergo scoring in private interview (30%), fitness (20%), talent (20%), evening wear (20%), and on-stage interview (10%), with winners advancing based on cumulative performance.[1] State organizations oversee these locals, crowning a single delegate per state through similar multi-phase competitions that emphasize preparation, poise, and platform execution, ensuring only top performers—typically those with proven local success and SII traction—reach nationals.[56] This tiered structure enforces rigorous filters, as evidenced by the low advancement rate from thousands of initial entrants to just 51-52 finalists, prioritizing resilience and achievement over broader accessibility.[57]

Stages of National Competition

The national competition unfolds over several preliminary nights, where all contestants (52 in recent years such as 2025 and 2026, representing the 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico)—undergo evaluation in key phases including private interviews, fitness and wellness presentations, talent performances, and evening wear competitions. These phases are typically divided across multiple evenings to manage the large field, with contestants grouped for onstage segments such as talent exhibitions on dedicated nights and evening wear walks emphasizing personal style and poise. Private interviews, conducted individually with judges prior to public events, assess communication skills and substantive knowledge, while fitness presentations focus on health advocacy and physical capability through activewear demonstrations rather than appearance-based judgments.[1][58] Top performers from the preliminaries, determined by cumulative scores across these phases, advance to the final night, narrowing the field to approximately 15 semifinalists for heightened scrutiny. The finals feature a live onstage interview segment, where contestants engage directly with judges on social issues and personal platforms; a showcased talent performance highlighting artistic or skill-based abilities; and a final question or closing statement requiring concise, impactful responses under live audience and broadcast pressure. This structure enforces progressive elimination, prioritizing demonstrated composure and relevance over preliminary qualifiers.[1] The swimsuit competition, a longstanding element until 2018, was eliminated that year to shift emphasis from physical appearance to substantive competition, with fitness phases introduced in its place during preliminaries to underscore wellness messaging. The 2025 edition, held at the Walt Disney Theater in the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts in Orlando, Florida, from December 31, 2024, to January 5, 2025, exemplified this format through three dedicated preliminary nights—including one for general phases and another for talent—culminating in a January 5 finale, adapting the multi-venue setup to accommodate elimination flow and live streaming.[36][59]

Judging Criteria and Scoring Evolution

Prior to the 2018 reforms, Miss America's judging criteria emphasized a balance of personal attributes, performance skills, and physical presentation, with swimsuit typically accounting for 15 percent of the score, talent for around 35-40 percent, private interview for 25 percent, and evening wear for the remainder, varying slightly by competition level.[60][61] This structure, in place since the mid-20th century with talent formalized as a mandatory segment by 1938, positioned talent as a primary differentiator, rewarding demonstrated proficiency in areas like vocals, dance, or instrumentation that showcased preparation and poise.[15] For instance, Vanessa Williams' 1983 talent performance—a vocal rendition of "Happy Days Are Here Again"—highlighted vocal and stage command, contributing to her selection as the first Black Miss America in 1984 despite the pageant's historical focus on appearance.[62] The 2018 overhaul, announced on June 5 by then-CEO Gretchen Carlson, eliminated the public swimsuit segment entirely, replacing it with a private "fitness" evaluation focused on health discussions and poise during workout attire, allocated at 20 percent alongside equal weights for talent and evening wear (20 percent each), a 30 percent private interview, and a 10 percent on-stage question.[36][1] This shift aimed to prioritize "social impact" initiatives—contestants' self-selected platforms addressing community issues—integrated into the interview phase, where judges probe leadership potential and platform feasibility, comprising up to 40 percent when combined with on-stage elements in practice.[38] A separate Quality of Life Award, reintroduced in 2025 for platforms demonstrating measurable community service, offers additional scholarships but does not directly alter core scoring.[63] Critics of the physical components, including swimsuit and fitness, have argued they objectify participants, yet proponents contend such elements historically served as proxies for self-discipline, with fitness maintenance requiring sustained commitment akin to leadership demands.[64][65] Winner biographies often reflect this, as titleholders like Williams pursued rigorous training regimens correlating with post-pageant achievements in entertainment and advocacy, suggesting pre-2018 criteria captured traits predictive of resilience.[64] Post-2018, talent's reduced relative weight (from ~35 percent to 20 percent) has persisted as a key separator, with recent winners excelling in performances underscoring intellectual and artistic depth over aesthetics alone, though empirical data on enhanced leadership outcomes—such as career advancement or civic impact—remains anecdotal, with no longitudinal studies verifying improved predictive validity.[1] The evolution reflects cultural pressures toward substance, but historical scoring's inclusion of discipline indicators may have better forecasted real-world tenacity, as evidenced by alumni success rates in professional fields predating the changes.[64]

Scholarship and Empowerment Programs

Structure of Awards and Funding

The Miss America program's scholarship structure allocates funds primarily as tuition assistance across local, state, and national competitions, with awards scaling by competition level and placement. The national titleholder receives a $60,000 tuition scholarship, as increased for the 2024 winner, enabling enrollment in accredited postsecondary institutions.[3] Runners-up and semifinalists earn lesser amounts, such as $15,000 for third runner-up and $3,000–$4,000 for non-finalists, while specialized awards like Quality of Life grants provide $7,500 to select participants.[66] These distributions occur through affiliated nonprofit foundations and state trusts, with participants often accumulating grants from multiple tiers prior to nationals.[67] Annually, the program disburses over $5 million in tuition scholarships system-wide, encompassing more than 100 state and local pageants that pipeline contestants to the national event.[3] This total reflects expansion from the 1940s, when scholarships were first formalized at state and local levels with initial grants in the low thousands, primarily from corporate patrons, contrasting sharply with contemporary scales driven by program growth.[2] Scholarship funding stems from revenue streams including corporate sponsorships, fiduciary partnerships, banking institutions, television broadcast rights, and ticket sales from live events.[67] Beyond tuition, titleholders gain non-cash benefits such as nationwide travel for promotional appearances and access to advocacy platforms for personal causes, though these require adherence to contractual obligations like public engagements and brand representation during the one-year reign.[68]

Measurable Educational Outcomes

The Miss America Organization, through its scholarship program established in 1945, has distributed over $150 million in educational grants to participants, facilitating access to undergraduate and graduate studies.[13] Recipients frequently pursue degrees in demanding fields, with science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) disciplines showing overrepresentation relative to national trends for women; for instance, in 2014, 17 of 53 national contestants (approximately 32%) were enrolled in STEM programs, compared to women comprising about 20-25% of STEM degree earners overall.[69] Similar patterns appear in professional fields like law and medicine among titleholders, though comprehensive tracking of all recipients' majors remains limited by the program's decentralized structure across local and state levels. Empirical evidence on completion rates is anecdotal rather than from large-scale longitudinal analyses, but winner testimonies highlight tangible benefits, such as debt-free graduation enabled by layered awards from preliminary competitions upward.[70] This contrasts with broader need-based aid, where recipients often face competing financial pressures without the motivational framework of performance-linked funding; however, no peer-reviewed studies directly attribute elevated persistence to the program's design over recipients' pre-existing drive.[71] While the organization claims status as the world's largest scholarship provider for women, with over $5 million available annually across tiers, critics note that disbursements lag "available" figures due to non-usage and eligibility gaps, underscoring selection bias: entrants are self-selecting high-achievers whose outcomes likely stem partly from intrinsic ambition rather than aid alone.[72] [73] This bias tempers causal claims of program efficacy but affirms its role in amplifying opportunities for motivated participants beyond generic financial aid.[74]

Long-Term Career Impacts

Former Miss America titleholders and participants have pursued varied professional paths, with notable concentrations in healthcare, media, law, and public service, often leveraging skills in public speaking, leadership, and resilience developed through the competition. For instance, Debbye Turner Bell, Miss America 1990, became the first African American woman to earn a Doctor of Veterinary Medicine from the University of Missouri and practiced as a veterinarian while advancing animal welfare initiatives.[75] Similarly, Camille Schrier, Miss America 2019, completed her Doctor of Pharmacy degree at Virginia Commonwealth University in 2024, crediting the pageant's demands for enhancing her advocacy and scientific communication abilities during her tenure and beyond.[76] Rita Ng, second runner-up in the 2001 Miss America pageant, rose to Physician-in-Chief at Kaiser Permanente Oakland, overseeing clinical operations for thousands of patients.[77] These cases illustrate how the program's interview and talent components cultivate competencies transferable to high-stakes professions requiring poise under pressure. In politics and law, alumni have translated pageant visibility into electoral and advocacy roles, though national congressional representation remains limited. Cara Mund, Miss America 2018 and a practicing attorney, launched a congressional campaign in North Dakota's 2024 election, emphasizing policy expertise over partisan alignment.[78] The pageant's structure, which rewards articulate policy discussions, equips participants with networking access and public profile that facilitate such transitions, as observed in broader alumni trajectories into state legislatures and advocacy. While not every participant attains prominence—many enter education, business, or nonprofit sectors without media acclaim—the aggregate outcomes demonstrate that competitive preparation signals discipline and adaptability, yielding professional advancements that counter narratives of mere superficiality. Historical analyses note the pageant's role in propelling women into broadcasting and public-facing careers, where initial exposure compounds into sustained influence.[79] Empirical tracking of all alumni is sparse, but documented successes in merit-based fields affirm the competition's value in honing attributes like perseverance, evidenced by participants maintaining rigorous academic or professional pursuits post-pageant. This contrasts with critiques focused on objectification, as verifiable outputs—such as medical leadership or legal advocacy—highlight causal benefits from skill-building over transient visibility.[80]

Notable Participants and Achievements

Iconic Titleholders and Their Legacies

Vanessa Williams made history as the first African American woman crowned Miss America 1984 on September 17, 1983.[81] She resigned two months later following the unauthorized publication of nude photographs in Penthouse, yet rebuilt her career through resilience, achieving success as a singer with Grammy-nominated albums, an actress in Broadway productions earning a Tony Award, and a television host.[82] Her trajectory exemplifies how titleholders can leverage the platform for long-term professional excellence amid adversity, contributing to entertainment industries valued at billions annually. Phyllis George, winner in 1971, parlayed her title into pioneering sports broadcasting, co-anchoring CBS's The NFL Today starting in 1975 as the first woman in that role on a major network pregame show.[83] Her on-air presence, which drew millions of viewers weekly, challenged gender barriers in media and led to her 2019 induction into the Sports Broadcasting Hall of Fame, demonstrating the pageant's capacity to propel participants into influential roles that shape public discourse on sports.[84] Madison Marsh, crowned Miss America 2024 on January 14, became the first active-duty U.S. Air Force officer to hold the title, integrating military service with advocacy for pancreatic cancer research following her mother's death from the disease in 2019.[85] As a second lieutenant and Harvard Kennedy School student, she has partnered with organizations like the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network to fund early detection studies and raise awareness of symptoms, securing commitments for targeted research grants.[86] Abbie Stockard, an Auburn University nursing student crowned Miss America 2025, advanced her educational platform through recruitment efforts and healthcare advocacy, earning over $89,000 in scholarships to support her degree and community outreach on medical access.[87][88] As the fourth Alabamian to win, her focus on nursing education underscores recent titleholders' shift toward STEM-related legacies, fostering measurable impacts in public health training programs.[89]

Statistical Highlights and Records

California and New York have produced the most Miss America winners with six each, followed by Illinois, Pennsylvania, and Texas with five apiece; these figures span the pageant's history from 1921 through 2023.[90][91] Only one contestant, Mary Katherine Campbell of Ohio, has secured consecutive titles, winning in 1922 and 1923.[92] Participation has expanded from seven contestants representing cities in the inaugural 1921 event to approximately 51-52 annual entrants (one from each state plus the District of Columbia, with recent inclusion of Puerto Rico in 2025 and 2026)—reflecting full national representation achieved by the mid-20th century.[13] Diversity milestones include the first African American semifinalist, Cheryl Browne of Iowa, in 1970, and the first African American titleholder, Vanessa Williams of New York, in 1984, both selected through merit-based scoring in interview, talent, and other categories.[15] Talent performances exhibit broad variety, from traditional piano and vocal renditions to unconventional acts such as Camille Schrier's 2019 science demonstration on handwashing kinetics, which contributed to her 2020 victory without relying on music or dance.[2] Viewership metrics indicate peak audiences exceeding 25 million in the 1960s, declining to approximately 3.6 million by 2019 amid broader shifts in media consumption like cable proliferation and streaming fragmentation.[25][93]
StateNumber of Wins
California6
New York6
Illinois5
Pennsylvania5
Texas5

Media and Cultural Presence

Broadcasting History and Hosts

The Miss America pageant debuted on national television with a live broadcast on ABC on September 11, 1954, originating from Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, New Jersey, attracting an estimated 27 million viewers.[2] This marked the first time the event, previously a local spectacle since 1921, reached a mass audience via network TV, shifting its format to emphasize production elements like performances and interviews alongside competitions.[94] Bert Parks served as host from 1955 to 1979, primarily on NBC, where he introduced the tradition of singing "There She Is, Miss America" to the newly crowned winner, a signature moment that defined the pageant's televisual style for decades.[95] His tenure coincided with peak viewership, including 69 million in 1961, and helped establish a celebratory tone focused on glamour and aspiration.[94] Following Parks's departure in 1979 amid efforts to modernize amid declining ratings, subsequent hosts such as Gary Collins and later figures like Regis Philbin on ABC from 1997 onward adapted the format, incorporating more conversational segments and reducing emphasis on musical interludes to align with evolving viewer preferences.[14] Network affiliations shifted over time due to ratings fluctuations: NBC carried the event for approximately 30 years until dropping it in the mid-1990s, after which ABC acquired rights in 1997 before relinquishing them in 2004 following record lows.[14] Subsequent broadcasts aired on cable outlets like CMT in 2007 and TLC from 2011 to 2016, reflecting challenges in securing prime-time slots amid broader declines in linear TV viewership.[96] By 2021, the pageant transitioned to streaming on Peacock, bypassing traditional broadcast, with the 2025 competition streamed live from the Walt Disney Theater at the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts in Orlando, Florida, on January 5.[97][59] Productions remained live from Atlantic City until the early 2000s, when financial pressures and venue logistics prompted relocations, such as to Las Vegas for TLC-era events, altering the pageant's intimate boardwalk heritage while prioritizing accessible production sites.[2] Television revenue from these deals has underpinned the organization's scholarship funding, enabling awards totaling over $300,000 annually in recent competitions, with historical contributions exceeding tens of millions since the TV era began.[67] Post-Parks hosting eras emphasized interview-driven content, correlating with scoring shifts toward social impact discussions, though empirical viewership data shows sustained but diminished audiences compared to mid-century highs.[15] The Miss America pageant has permeated American media as a cultural archetype for competitive femininity, inspiring both emulation and satire in depictions of beauty contests. The 1999 film Drop Dead Gorgeous, a mockumentary black comedy, parodies the intense rivalries and performative poise of Midwestern teen pageants modeled on Miss America's structure, drawing from real-life dynamics like talent showcases and community stakes to critique underlying pressures while acknowledging their allure.[98] [99] Similar influences appear in broader pop culture, where the pageant's blend of talent competitions—introduced in the 1930s and emphasizing skills like music and oratory—and poised presentation has normalized expectations for women's public competence, evident in recurring tropes of aspiring performers honing stage presence through pageant-like regimens.[100] Critiques portraying the pageant as reinforcing stereotypes of objectification, amplified by the 1968 Atlantic City protest where activists symbolically discarded bras to decry it as a patriarchal symbol, have not deterred its cultural persistence, as voluntary participation rates demonstrate sustained appeal for the discipline it instills.[101] State preliminaries, comprising approximately 2,000 annual events supported by 300,000 volunteers, function as grassroots community gatherings that foster local pride and civic engagement, with winners often serving as regional ambassadors who promote educational and charitable causes. This structure counters narrative-driven dismissals by evidencing tangible social cohesion, as participants report heightened self-efficacy in communication and leadership from the required poise training.[100] Empirical outcomes among titleholders reveal causal pathways from pageant investment—encompassing fitness, skill development, and visibility—to enhanced opportunities, with the program disbursing about $6 million in scholarships yearly, the largest for women in the U.S., enabling recipients to pursue higher education and careers in fields like law, medicine, and media.[102] For instance, many past winners have achieved socioeconomic advancement verifiable through post-pageant trajectories, such as professional endorsements and alumni networks that amplify initial gains, suggesting that deliberate emphasis on appearance and talent correlates with measurable mobility absent in non-participants from similar backgrounds.[103] These effects persist despite biased academic and media critiques often overlooking such data in favor of ideological framing, underscoring the pageant's role in modeling proactive self-improvement over passive ideals.[104]

Controversies and Debates

Objections to Beauty Standards and Objectification

In September 1968, approximately 200 feminists from the New York Radical Women group protested the Miss America pageant in Atlantic City, decrying it as a symbol of women's objectification and livestock judging under a patriarchal gaze.[105] The protesters symbolically discarded items like bras, girdles, and cosmetics into a "Freedom Trash Can" to reject enforced beauty standards, though no bras were burned, contrary to media reports that originated the enduring myth.[101] [106] Feminist critiques have persistently argued that pageants like Miss America reinforce narrow, Eurocentric beauty ideals that prioritize physical appearance over intellect or character, thereby perpetuating gender stereotypes and commodifying women for male consumption.[107] These objections posit that swimsuit and evening wear competitions reduce contestants to bodily evaluation, fostering a culture where women's value derives primarily from aesthetics aligned with heterosexual male preferences.[108] However, such ideological claims often overlook contestants' voluntary participation and self-reported agency, with empirical surveys indicating that many participants experience the process as a platform for personal achievement rather than degradation. Participant accounts and studies reveal that involvement in Miss America frequently yields reported gains in self-confidence and public speaking skills, with a 2016 qualitative analysis of former contestants finding that stereotypes of objectification persist societally but are not internalized by most participants, who instead highlight empowerment through competition.[109] A 2011 West Virginia University study of pageant participants similarly documented higher overall self-esteem compared to non-participants, attributing this to structured feedback and achievement milestones, though it noted elevated dieting behaviors.[110] These self-reports suggest that agency in pursuing scholarships—totaling over $100 million awarded since 1945, enabling debt-free education for many—outweighs perceived harms for entrants.[70] From an evolutionary standpoint, beauty pageants align with biological imperatives by rewarding traits that signal reproductive fitness, such as symmetry, clear skin, and proportional body ratios, which correlate with health and fertility markers in human mate selection.[111] Research links physical attractiveness to higher reproductive success in modern populations, implying that competitions evaluating these cues serve an adaptive function in highlighting genetic quality, rather than mere cultural artifice.[112] This perspective counters anti-beauty ideologies by grounding aesthetic preferences in causal mechanisms of natural and sexual selection, evident across cultures. While some contestants report body image pressures, including heightened awareness of weight and appearance standards, a 2003 anonymous survey of 131 Miss America contestants found average self-esteem scores comparable to general female norms, with 80% engaging in dieting but viewing it as performance preparation akin to athletic training.[113] The voluntary framework, coupled with tangible benefits like scholarships funding advanced degrees, yields net positive utility when contrasted with pervasive social media influences, where uncontrolled exposure to idealized images correlates with broader dissatisfaction without compensatory gains.[114]

Organizational Governance and Scandals

In December 2017, internal emails leaked to USA Today revealed vulgar and misogynistic comments by Miss America Organization executives, including CEO Sam Haskell, about contestants' physical appearances and personal lives, such as referring to one as a "coked up stripper" and mocking another's intelligence. These disclosures, which Haskell dismissed as "fake news," triggered immediate resignations from Haskell and several board members, exposing lapses in oversight that allowed unchecked executive conduct within the organization's centralized structure. By August 2018, under new chairwoman Gretchen Carlson, reigning Miss America Cara Mund publicly accused the leadership of bullying, silencing, and belittling her, claiming restrictions on her public statements and exclusion from key decisions, which she detailed in an open letter supported by 23 former titleholders calling for resignations.[115][116] Carlson denied the allegations, asserting Mund's actions had consequences including the forfeiture of $75,000 in prospective scholarship funding from external partners wary of the ensuing instability.[117] This episode culminated in a December 2018 lawsuit by a former board member and licensees from four states (New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia), alleging an "illegal and bad-faith takeover" by Carlson's faction through abrupt license terminations, which disrupted state-level operations and highlighted tensions between national headquarters' centralized authority and franchise autonomy.[118] In July 2023, more than 20 former contestants detailed alleged executive mistreatment in interviews tied to the documentary Secrets of Miss America, including claims of intimidation, favoritism, and inadequate support during competitions, underscoring persistent accountability gaps despite prior reforms.[119] The organization's governance challenges intensified in 2024–2025 amid an ownership dispute between CEO Robin Fleming and developer Glenn Straub, who filed for bankruptcy on behalf of entities he claimed to control, prompting Fleming's countersuit alleging fraudulent filings, defamation, and improper asset maneuvers lacking ownership basis, seeking $500 million in damages and threatening cancellation of the January 2025 pageant in Orlando.[120][121] These conflicts reflect a pattern where national-level centralization enables rapid executive decisions but erodes trust with state affiliates, as evidenced by repeated license revocations; post-2018 board overhauls, including diversified trustee additions and policy codifications, aimed to distribute oversight and bolster transparency, though recurring disputes indicate incomplete mitigation of power concentration risks.[118]

Political Interventions and Internal Reforms

In June 2018, the Miss America Organization, under newly appointed chairwoman Gretchen Carlson—a former Miss America 2001 and prominent #MeToo advocate following her lawsuit against Fox News executive Roger Ailes—announced the elimination of the swimsuit competition and a shift away from judging contestants' physical appearance.[36] [122] This reform was framed as a response to the #MeToo movement's emphasis on empowerment and substance over objectification, amid internal scandals including leaked executive emails deriding contestants, which prompted the resignation of the prior CEO and board overhaul in January 2018.[123] Carlson positioned the changes as modernizing the pageant to focus on contestants' intelligence, talent, and social impact, with judging reoriented toward private interviews (now 50% of scoring) and on-stage discussions replacing visual evaluations.[124] The reforms triggered significant internal dissent, highlighting ideological tensions. Four board members resigned in July 2018, citing disagreement with the swimsuit ban and arguing it discarded a century-old tradition that served as a proxy for physical discipline and health commitment—qualities empirically linked to broader life outcomes like resilience and self-control, rather than mere aesthetics.[125] [126] Critics, including former contestants, contended that the swimsuit segment incentivized rigorous fitness regimens, fostering measurable merit through effort rather than subjective narratives, and that its removal pandered to cultural pressures without data demonstrating improved contestant welfare or pageant viability.[39] Mainstream media outlets, often aligned with progressive critiques of traditional standards, largely endorsed the shift as progressive inclusivity, though this overlooked potential causal links between enforced physical benchmarks and sustained participant motivation.[127] Initial impacts included a 19% drop in viewership for the 2019 pageant, drawing 4.3 million viewers compared to 5.4 million in 2018, suggesting audience alienation from the diluted format despite defenses that core elements like talent (still 50% weighted) preserved competitive integrity.[41] Participation metrics showed mixed results, with some reports of an uptick in applicants to around 6,500 annually post-reform, potentially from broadened outreach, but state-level entries reportedly fluctuated amid confusion over the new "Miss America 2.0" emphasis on advocacy over tradition.[128] Conservative commentators praised residual focus on discipline via interviews but critiqued the overcorrection as eroding objective standards without evidence of superior outcomes, while progressive voices hailed greater "inclusivity," though empirical scrutiny reveals no clear uplift in winner-driven achievements or long-term organizational health attributable to the changes.[129] By 2023, partial reversals emerged with the introduction of a "health and fitness" category to reinstate physical evaluation indirectly, acknowledging critiques that the 2018 purge had inadvertently sidelined verifiable proxies for personal accountability.[130]

Recent Developments

Rebranding to Miss America 2.0 (2018 Onward)

In June 2018, following a scandal involving leaked emails from former CEO Sam Haskell that disparaged contestants, the Miss America Organization, under new board chair Gretchen Carlson, unveiled "Miss America 2.0," reorienting the event from a traditional pageant to a "competition" emphasizing contestants' intellect, talent, and social initiatives.[37] The reforms eliminated the swimsuit and evening gown segments—previously core to judging physical poise and presentation—and replaced them with live interactive sessions where contestants presented "impact pitches" detailing their personal platforms for community service or advocacy.[126] Carlson framed the pivot as a response to #MeToo-era critiques of objectification, aiming to attract younger participants and audiences by de-emphasizing appearance in favor of substantive content, amid long-term declines in youth engagement and overall relevance.[131][38] The changes elicited immediate internal resistance, with executives from 22 state organizations issuing a petition in July 2018 demanding the board's resignation, contending that excising visual and fitness elements diminished the program's competitive integrity and alienated stakeholders invested in its historical format.[132] Miss America 2018 titleholder Cara Mund publicly alleged in August 2018 that Carlson and board vice chair Mallory Hagan bullied and censored her for expressing dissent, including restrictions on her wardrobe and statements, which amplified perceptions of top-down imposition over organic evolution.[133][134] This pushback reflected broader tensions, as some former titleholders and affiliates viewed the rebrand as prioritizing external optics—such as aligning with progressive narratives on body positivity—over the event's established structure, which had arguably fostered discipline and public speaking skills through multifaceted evaluation.[125] Operationally, the rebrand followed the organization's stabilization after Haskell's resignation, with the 2018 competition proceeding under the new model and correlating with retention of key operational partnerships, though detailed sponsor metrics remain sparse; however, television viewership metrics indicated no reversal of prior declines, dropping 23% to 4.3 million for the September 2018 broadcast compared to 5.6 million in 2017, and further to 3.6 million in 2019—an all-time low—suggesting the shift failed to broaden appeal and may have eroded the spectacle's draw for audiences valuing traditional elements.[135][93][136] Into the early 2020s, the format adapted to COVID-19 disruptions via hybrid virtual components for state and national events, preserving continuity but underscoring reliance on the post-2018 framework amid ongoing audience contraction.[25] These outcomes raise causal questions about whether the reforms genuinely elevated contestant agency and empirical impact—via enhanced scholarship focus—or primarily served reactive cultural signaling, given the absence of viewership recovery and persistent internal fractures.

Key Events and Challenges (2023–2025)

In July 2023, Investigation Discovery's docuseries Secrets of Miss America aired, featuring testimony from over 20 former contestants who alleged executive mistreatment, including unrealistic body standards that contributed to disordered eating and substance abuse among participants.[119][137] These disclosures highlighted ongoing internal pressures despite prior reforms, yet the organization maintained operations, with Grace Stanke serving as the reigning Miss America 2023. On January 14, 2024, U.S. Air Force Second Lieutenant Madison Marsh, aged 22 and representing Colorado, was crowned Miss America 2024 in Uncasville, Connecticut, marking the first time an active-duty military officer won the title.[85] Marsh, a 2023 Air Force Academy graduate pursuing a master's in public policy at Harvard Kennedy School, leveraged her platform to advocate for childhood cancer research, drawing on personal experience with her mother's 2018 diagnosis.[138] The organization adjusted its eligibility criteria in 2023 by raising the maximum contestant age from 25 to 28, aiming to expand the pool of eligible women while preserving competitive focus.[18] This period also saw ownership disputes escalate, as CEO and majority owner Robin Fleming sued developer Glenn Straub in May 2024 for fraud and defamation after he claimed control via a disputed 2015 asset purchase and filed a contested Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition in November 2024, alleging $4 million in debts; Fleming's counsel deemed the filing fraudulent, and the case advanced without halting events.[139][140] The 2025 competition proceeded at Orlando's Walt Disney Theater from December 31, 2024, to January 5, 2025, culminating in the crowning of 22-year-old nursing student Abbie Stockard of Alabama on January 5.[18][59] For the Miss America 2026 competition held September 2–7, 2025, at the same venue, the organization reintroduced the Quality of Life Award with a specialized judging panel of philanthropy experts, including Lora Drasner and Danielle Garno, to evaluate delegates' social impact programs, signaling sustained emphasis on service amid consistent state delegate participation across 51 jurisdictions.[66][141]

References

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