Miss America Says Farewell To Its Swimsuit Competition, Embracing ‘Whole New Era’

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Laryssa Bonacquisti, Miss Louisiana 2017, participates in the swimsuit challenge of last fall’s Miss America competition in Atlantic City, N.J. The segment is set to be the final one in Miss America history, after the competition scraps it beginning this September. Donald Kravitz/Getty Images for Dick Clark Productions hide caption

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Donald Kravitz/Getty Images for Dick Clark Productions

Laryssa Bonacquisti, Miss Louisiana 2017, participates in the swimsuit challenge of last fall’s Miss America competition in Atlantic City, N.J. The segment is set to be the final one in Miss America history, after the competition scraps it beginning this September.

Donald Kravitz/Getty Images for Dick Clark Productions

Miss America is waving goodbye to its swimsuit competition, scrapping one of its most iconic elements in an attempt to shift the annual ceremony’s emphasis away from its longtime focus on contestants’ physical beauty.

“We are no longer a pageant, we are a competition,” Gretchen Carlson, the chairwoman of Miss America’s board of directors, announced Tuesday on ABC’s Good Morning America. “We will no longer judge our candidates on their outward physical appearance. That’s huge.”

Carlson, who won the Miss America competition herself in 1989, says the change is intended to change the very nature of the program — and it will begin all but immediately. The move will be put into effect when the next edition is held on Sept. 9 in Atlantic City, N.J.

Cara Mund, who holds the current title of Miss America, welcomed the move as ushering in a “whole new era,” emphasizing it with a tweet depicting a bikini going up in smoke.

“Whatever they choose to do,” Carlson said, “it’s what comes out of their mouth that we’re interested in.”

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