nzherald.co.nz

Dita De Boni: Beauty pageant baloney

By Dita De Boni
10:44 AM Thursday Aug 11, 2011
An overwhelming and heartening majority of New Zealanders polled on the child beauty pageant issue find the whole thing grotesque, but as it's not illegal, I can't see the argument for banning it outright. Photo / Thinkstock

An overwhelming and heartening majority of New Zealanders polled on the child beauty pageant issue find the whole thing grotesque, but as it's not illegal, I can't see the argument for banning it outright. Photo / Thinkstock

I tried to picture the type of woman who would enter her daughter in child beauty pageant after news broke that the Texas-based outfit Universal Royalty would hold such an event in New Zealand in June.

I don't know of any specific women who have expressed a desire to do so, but I do think there are those who would want to, even here in New Zealand. Well, clearly, as Universal Royalty would not be looking at coming all the way out here if there wasn't money to be made.

But unlike their more sophisticated, money-and-fame driven US counterparts, who can command huge fees for daughters who win consistently (like US pageant star Eden Wood, whose mother took her to Melbourne for the Aussie event but pulled her out at the last minute for a reportedly huge media paycheck) the Kiwi pageant mum would be perhaps an ex-beauty herself or someone seeing the chance to taste the glory of being a beauty queen through her daughter.

I bet she would see entering her daughter in these competitions as little different to entering them into tap dancing or cheerleading competitions.

She would be oblivious to the protests of outsiders - joining a small but determined group of women who persist in seeing nothing wrong with plastic surgery for young teenagers, or padded bras and pole dancing classes for eight-year-olds.

Certainly that was the reaction of the 80 or so mothers who entered their daughters in the Melbourne pageant- many of whom were genuinely perplexed as to why these events attract such criticism.

An overwhelming and heartening majority of New Zealanders polled on this issue find the whole thing grotesque, but as it's not illegal, I can't see the argument for banning it outright.

As a mother of a little girl who refuses to brush her hair, insists on wearing her shoes on the wrong feet and would tell anyone to "stuff off" if they asked her to stand and pose for a photo, I find it hard to believe that the little girls involved aren't in some way enchanted by the idea of dressing up like beautiful princesses, and must, to some extent, enjoy the process.

More than the business exploitation of the girls, more than the ever-present and often hysterical fear of encouraging paedophiles, and more than the sometimes loopy and deluded stage mothers, the real danger from these pageants, to my mind, is their role in enforcing to young girls that their ability to successfully consume all the trappings of 'femininity' - the waxing, blow drying, hair dying, make-up wearing inanity of it all - is something worth doing.

It happens quickly enough as a woman once you reach puberty, it's sad it's even a possibility at the tender age of three.

On a side note (perhaps), and in case you ever wondered if there was a part of the female body that couldn't be judged in isolation and compared with others, spare a thought for the women who entered, and failed to place, at the 2nd Annual Vagina Beauty pageant in Portland, Oregon a few weekends back.

As with any modern beauty pageant, the "vag pag" apparently had a distressing lack of variety on show - no hair to be seen and everything as slick and photogenic as any Playboy spread. But there was one that stood out from the crowd, apparently. And in case you wondered, Miss Beautiful Vagina 2011 won a large trophy and $500 for her efforts - whatever they are (probably endless Brazilian waxes).

On the web: Vagina beauty pageants really exist: Here's why we think that's a good thing, from Fashionista.com

By Dita De Boni
Aaron (New Zealand) | 01:44PM Thursday, 11 Aug 2011
Let kids be kids please!
Najma (Samoa) | 01:45PM Thursday, 11 Aug 2011
Little girls may very well be enchanted with the idea of dressing up for a few hours but the reality of these pageants is far from that: they represent months of grueling preparation. This includes hours spent practising the 'item' the child does usually singing and dancing, which is often quite sexually charged.

There are hours of rehearsing speeches and responses to questions by the judges, hours spent being fitted for a range of glamorous costumes and being trained to display them; and when other children are watching children's programmes on TV the pageant children are watching videos of pageants in order to be taught what to do and what not to do.

Children are not entered in pageants for an afternoon of fun dressing up; they are entered in pageants by their parents in order to win: to be crowned Little Miss Whatever. Children take this kind of pressure very seriously and they see it as a personal failure if they don't win.

I agree that pageants shouldn't be banned but I do think we should look behind the scenes. Perhaps NZ will be lucky and they won't take root here or maybe we can subvert the idea and make them truly just a bit of fun dressing up for an afternoon.
Golden Oldie (New Zealand) | 01:45PM Thursday, 11 Aug 2011
Are these mothers really all that different to the parents of the Williams sisters or Tiger Woods ? Or any dad "forcing" a young boy into physical and emotional stress trying to raise a sports star, and making them devote hours each day practicing said sports, instead of enjoying their childhood.

I've heard countless dads urging 7 and 8 year old boys to "get hard" or "toughen-up" in Rugby or League games. So, a mum who wants little Mary to become a model or movie star or the next Venus Williams is much the same as a dad who wants little Johnny to be the next Roger Federer or Richie McCaw.

Feeding there own failed egos and forgetting kids are kids ! Please don't bring the "paedophile component" into it, as pedos invariably groom and abuse "normal" kids in the family or neighbourhood, not painted dolls on a stage.
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