Miss America chairwoman Gretchen Carlson and reigning Miss America Cara Mund managed to awkwardly coexist at the introduction ceremony for the pageant, avoiding any direct mention to the bitter feud between them.
As 51 hopeful queens made their way to Thursday’s event, Mund and Carlson stayed well away from each other and tried their best to seem pleasant for the women.
During her comments, Mund said she was confident whoever wins this year’s competition ‘will be 100 percent ready and supported throughout her entire year.’
As 51 hopeful queens made their way to Thursday’s introductory ceremony in Atlanta, reigning Miss America Cara Mund and chairwoman Gretchen Carlson stayed well away from each other
Carlson (pictured) has feuded on Twitter with Mund after the reigning champion said she’d been ‘silenced’ by pageant officials seeking to control what she says publicly
Carlson has feuded on Twitter with Mund after the reigning champion said she’d been ‘silenced’ by pageant officials seeking to control what she says publicly.
Carlson and CEO Regina Hopper also have come under fire for their decision to discontinue the swimsuit competition. Many state pageant officials have called for Carlson and Hopper to resign.
Mund spent a majority of her speaking time, deflecting questions about her August 17 letter criticizing the pageant’s leadership, saying, ‘It’s all about the women competing and we’re here to celebrate their accomplishments.’
The 51 women from across the country competing in the Pageant
During her comments, Mund said she was confident whoever wins this year’s competition ‘will be 100 percent ready and supported throughout her entire year.’ Miss Iowa and Miss Minnesota are pictured
Mund deflected questions about her August 17 letter criticizing the pageant’s leadership. She said: ‘It’s all about the women competing and we’re here to celebrate their accomplishments’
Asked about the letter, Mund said, ‘I think my letter’s telling. At the same time, I’m a product of this organization and I’m very grateful for that. I’ll be able to go to law school because of the scholarship money I earned from this organization.’
Carlson and Hopper separately declined to answer questions after the ceremony.
On Thursday, an attorney representing Mund said the Miss America Organization had told him it was conducting an internal investigation into Mund’s allegations that included, in his words, ‘bullying and a corrosive work environment.’ In a letter to the organization’s attorneys, attorney Roger Haber urged that the results be made public.
Carlson and CEO Regina Hopper separately declined to answer questions after the ceremony
The Miss America Organization told The Associated Press this month it hopes to hand out at least as much in scholarships this year as it did last year, approximately $500,000
The Miss America Organization said in a letter from its attorney to Haber Thursday that the investigation by Employment Practices Solutions, a human resources consulting firm, will be ‘a prompt and thorough review of Ms. Mund’s allegations.’
The next Miss America will be crowned at Boardwalk Hall in a nationally televised broadcast on Sept. 9.
Carlson and Hopper took over earlier this year after previous pageant officials were revealed to have circulated emails denigrating the appearance, intellect and sex lives of former Miss Americas.
The competition airs live on ABC from Atlantic City’s Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall on September 9
Mund said in a letter to former Miss Americas on Aug. 17 that she has been left out of interviews and not invited to meetings, and that she had a televised farewell speech cut to 30 seconds after she indirectly hinted at trouble with pageant leadership in a newspaper interview.
Carlson responded on Twitter that Mund’s actions had cost the pageant $75,000 in new scholarships and that she was ‘already seeing a negative ripple effect across the entire organization.’
The Miss America Organization told The Associated Press this month it hopes to hand out at least as much in scholarships this year as it did last year, approximately $500,000.
Pageant officials also announced Thursday that music producer and television host Randy Jackson and news anchor Soledad O’Brien will be among this year’s celebrity judges. Joining them will be former boxer and author Laila Ali; on-air personality and author Bobby Bones; country music star Jessie James Decker; founder of Dry Bar Alli Webb; and singer/songwriter Carnie Wilson.