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Subject: Miss Universe hopeful's pageant gaffe draws jeers


Author:
Tommy
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Date Posted: 08:11:08 06/11/10 Fri

Carola Vyhnak
Urban Affairs Reporter


Tiffany Munro, of Edmonton,, speaks at the Miss Universe Canada session at G.L. Roberts High School in Oshawa.

It started off well enough.

Beauty queen Tiffany Munro was talking to Oshawa high school students about body image, saying she put on weight to enter the Miss Universe Canada competition.

Pageant organizers, the 26-year-old said, didn’t want them looking anorexic, “like some little African child with the ribs going on.”

Rumblings and muted jeers erupted from the audience at G.L. Roberts Collegiate and Vocational Institute, and a fellow contestant who had just described her experience in a Rwandan refugee camp gasped in shock.

The event Thursday morning was to have been a chance for the pageant’s 62 contestants to practise their public speaking skills. But Munro, for one, learned a hard lesson of a different sort.

“Skeletons,” the Edmonton native said later. “I meant to say they don’t want us to look like skeletons. But I’m still half-asleep after having to get up at 5 a.m.”

Munro, a filmmaker who has her own production company, said she was apologizing to everyone for the gaffe that “just slipped out.”

African-born Solange Tuyishime, 26, spent much of her time onstage being consoled by another contestant.

“I was hurt” by the reference to “stereotypical images they show on TV,” she said in an interview. “It’s very sad that in 2010 when we make references to the poor, we think of African children, because poverty is everywhere.”

But the “beauty” of the pageant, she added graciously, is that it gives them an opportunity “to learn from each other.”

Expanding on her body image theme, Munro told the 300 Grades 11 and 12 students that she struggled with weight issues, at one point ballooning to 180 pounds. “Dancing around on stage in swimsuits” for the competition might seem “archaic,” she noted, but it shows that they have healthy bodies.

Judges in the Miss Universe Canada pageant, which wraps up Saturday and Monday at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre, are looking for “someone who has the whole package” of brains and beauty, according to national director Denis Davila.

Most of the 62 contestants, nine of whom are from the Greater Toronto Area, arrived at G. L. Roberts in six-inch stilettos and short skirts. But they quickly wowed the audience with their stories of achievement and messages of hope and inspiration.

“Be proud of who you are. Be proud of your culture,” urged Ashley Callingbull, 20, a Cree woman who said she was representing aboriginal and Canadian women. Stereotypes suggest she should be “a failure, a drunk, a drop-out, on welfare,” she said. “But I’m here promoting a healthy lifestyle. I’m in the best shape of my life.”

One woman spoke passionately about her uncle, a newspaper editor in Yemen who was assassinated for speaking out: “He taught me some things are worth dying for.”

Tuyishime, who said all she was left with in Rwanda was the instinct to survive, urged the students to believe in themselves and get a good education: “Your power is greater than you think. Your dream is what you make it.”

Paisley McNab, 19, went back in time to answer one student’s question about who she’d most like to meet.

“Shakespeare,” she responded. “I love reading and I love Shakespeare. It’s fun to try and figure out what he’s saying.”

http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/article/821915--miss-universe-hopeful-s-pageant-gaffe-draws-jeers

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Replies:
Subject Author Date
Is this the first time a public session like this has been done? And are the judges present? I think it's a much better representation of each girl's public speaking ability than the 'pat' final questions. (NT)East Coast Pageanteer08:42:21 06/11/10 Fri
Ashley Callingbull looks gorgeous in every photo of her, it would be terrific to have a Miss Universe Canada of native heritage! (NT)DR09:39:47 06/11/10 Fri
no, girls do the school visits every year, usually with no screw ups liek this, this is why it is the first time that this school visit is covered. but i agree, it's a great way to test the ability of public speakingcleo11:51:59 06/11/10 Fri
O M G ! I dont know whether to laugh or cry! Poor girl, both the one who said it and Solonge. Wow! But yes, it gives a better idea of the girls public speaking ability, and being able to think on your feet, and just general way of speaking. sheesh. (NT)Christi12:26:54 06/11/10 Fri
No, they have done speeches at schools in previous years but only a handful of contestants are selected at random to do the speeches. I don't believe the judges are present for them. (NT)Calgary Pageant Fan15:18:04 06/11/10 Fri
It's just very clear who is NOT ready to represent Canada! Although I'm sure she's very sorry, not being able to think on your feet, and fail that miserably, it is clear that she should just enjoy her time and Beauties of Canada should make sure she is NOT a finalist (NT)Robyn13:10:49 06/12/10 Sat
Mike, where did you see a video? (NT)DR15:56:57 06/12/10 Sat
Interesting. The judges may not have been present, but they don't live in a bubble - they can't help having seen this in the media. It definitely would (and should) influence their scoring - but obviously wouldn't fall into any of the official 'judging' categories. How would they deal with it? Just food for thought. (NT)East Coast Pageanteer19:56:53 06/12/10 Sat
Im sure she feels sorry, but still, what kind of comparison is that...seriously, especially here in Canada, with all the diversity that we have. Also, not that bright of her considering that some of her fellow contestants were born Africa...There is nothing wrong to say that you don;t want to look anorexic, but there was no point to compare it to what she said. (NT)JF15:31:16 06/14/10 Mon



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