hahahahuhu wrote:Let's face it ....
She choked when it mattered. She was my bet too, she was my winner in my PG entry and I was hoping she would win but she faltered.
Maybe the nerves got the better of her. I don't know whatever happened to her but after she spoke I knew she was gone....
I believe she is an intelligent girl but she lost composure.
mrgary wrote:
I know that there were also countless Filipinos and international fans who supported the Thai candidate. I, myself, was one of them. Unfortunately, Fahsai just didn't deliver the goods. She choked on the simplest and easiest "Millennials" hashtag question. She kept repeating that "Think of Mother Earth as an extension of the living room" spiel like a broken record. In the beginning, I thought she was very relatable with her platform when I first heard her at an interview several weeks ago. But then, she still kept saying the same things over and over again without elaborating or giving us another point of view about her platform. That was really sad. Worse, she looked exhausted and had lost her spark on stage since the start of the programme. I expected to be wowed by her because of the hype that went on for weeks on this forum but she looked so lost on stage. The catwalk performance wasn't solid, the posture was just off, and the poses were very forgettable. She didn't tease the camera during the swimsuit segment. She had a beautiful face but she didn't flaunt it. Do not blame the ME organisation for the failure of the Thai candidate to deliver her best on that fateful night.
Reeves wrote:You may post all her academic achievements tucked on her sleeve but nothing can negate the fact that she failed big time in understanding and articulating the now commonly used demographic word MILLENNIALS. Her defeat was her own making and the judges' decision to drop her from the top 4 was fair judging. No one can dispute that fact that she fucked her chance big time. Regarding the ND's dropping of franchise only prove he is a sore loser and his departure won't diminish the prestige Miss Earth has as a established institution. Beauty queens in any pageant do come and go, but a well-defined advocacy remain and can stand the test of time. I tell you Miss Earth is here to stay no matter what and with or without Thailand.
aimee_aimee wrote:mrgary wrote:
I know that there were also countless Filipinos and international fans who supported the Thai candidate. I, myself, was one of them. Unfortunately, Fahsai just didn't deliver the goods. She choked on the simplest and easiest "Millennials" hashtag question. She kept repeating that "Think of Mother Earth as an extension of the living room" spiel like a broken record. In the beginning, I thought she was very relatable with her platform when I first heard her at an interview several weeks ago. But then, she still kept saying the same things over and over again without elaborating or giving us another point of view about her platform. That was really sad. Worse, she looked exhausted and had lost her spark on stage since the start of the programme. I expected to be wowed by her because of the hype that went on for weeks on this forum but she looked so lost on stage. The catwalk performance wasn't solid, the posture was just off, and the poses were very forgettable. She didn't tease the camera during the swimsuit segment. She had a beautiful face but she didn't flaunt it. Do not blame the ME organisation for the failure of the Thai candidate to deliver her best on that fateful night.
She did gave a correct answer : I believe that MilleNNials and everyone should treat the mother earth as the way you want to be treated.-- then she explain on her advocacy and her thought to environment issue.
Why MEO needed to separate hashtag into 2 jars. Ones in the left jar were much more difficult than ones in the right jar ( they were not directly related to the environment nor the pageant) We saw that the girls came to standby next to each jar...it's clear that MEO had decided to give a difficult set to Australia / Thailand /the Netherlands / Colombia... and the more easy one to the Philippines/ Russia / Venezuela / Czech. How MEO can correctly evaluate candidates' intelligence level by giving one candidate very difficult question and another candidate super easy question.
One more about hashtag MilleNials, it was not only typo,..it is not a worldwide hashtag as the host claimed on stage, not at all. It is only hit in US.
Geeyourhair wrote:And if there is a hardest hashtag in the top 8---it is actually the "biodiversity". This word is so science and normal people will not understand it. You need to understand the science part of this word to better explain it. But the word "millinneal" even a little kid knows this word.
aimee_aimee wrote:Geeyourhair wrote:And if there is a hardest hashtag in the top 8---it is actually the "biodiversity". This word is so science and normal people will not understand it. You need to understand the science part of this word to better explain it. But the word "millinneal" even a little kid knows this word.
Please kindly be informed that you misspelled the word "Millennials" it is not "millinneal" nor "millenials" as shown in Miss Earth Final.
Please see the worldwide popularity of the hashtag "Millennials" and "Biodiversity" below
Geeyourhair wrote:And granting that the word mileneal (the hell with spelling) is not popular in Thailand--Fahsai being a Canadian breed, degree holder with a distinction to boot--is unforgivabable to not knowing this word. Now, if she can not explain this simple word which is just a name of her generation, how can you let her carry the heavy of responsibilities of being Miss Earth? But don't get me wrong, I actually love Fahsai she is my 2nd choice after Puerto Rico. It is just that--it was a bad night for her. Maybe she is not destine for Miss Earth--maybe she is destined for Miss Universe where "brain" isn't that much of a need.
Geeyourhair wrote:aimee_aimee wrote:Geeyourhair wrote:And if there is a hardest hashtag in the top 8---it is actually the "biodiversity". This word is so science and normal people will not understand it. You need to understand the science part of this word to better explain it. But the word "millinneal" even a little kid knows this word.
Please kindly be informed that you misspelled the word "Millennials" it is not "millinneal" nor "millenials" as shown in Miss Earth Final.
Please see the worldwide popularity of the hashtag "Millennials" and "Biodiversity" below
I know it is misspelled doesn't matter. If you mispel the word millionaire people know what this word is. One can not hide their stupidity in the spellling.
mrgary wrote:aimee_aimee wrote:mrgary wrote:
I know that there were also countless Filipinos and international fans who supported the Thai candidate. I, myself, was one of them. Unfortunately, Fahsai just didn't deliver the goods. She choked on the simplest and easiest "Millennials" hashtag question. She kept repeating that "Think of Mother Earth as an extension of the living room" spiel like a broken record. In the beginning, I thought she was very relatable with her platform when I first heard her at an interview several weeks ago. But then, she still kept saying the same things over and over again without elaborating or giving us another point of view about her platform. That was really sad. Worse, she looked exhausted and had lost her spark on stage since the start of the programme. I expected to be wowed by her because of the hype that went on for weeks on this forum but she looked so lost on stage. The catwalk performance wasn't solid, the posture was just off, and the poses were very forgettable. She didn't tease the camera during the swimsuit segment. She had a beautiful face but she didn't flaunt it. Do not blame the ME organisation for the failure of the Thai candidate to deliver her best on that fateful night.
She did gave a correct answer : I believe that MilleNNials and everyone should treat the mother earth as the way you want to be treated.-- then she explain on her advocacy and her thought to environment issue.
Why MEO needed to separate hashtag into 2 jars. Ones in the left jar were much more difficult than ones in the right jar ( they were not directly related to the environment nor the pageant) We saw that the girls came to standby next to each jar...it's clear that MEO had decided to give a difficult set to Australia / Thailand /the Netherlands / Colombia... and the more easy one to the Philippines/ Russia / Venezuela / Czech. How MEO can correctly evaluate candidates' intelligence level by giving one candidate very difficult question and another candidate super easy question.
One more about hashtag MilleNials, it was not only typo,..it is not a worldwide hashtag as the host claimed on stage, not at all. It is only hit in US.
No, she did not answer the question. There was a huge disconnect in her answer because she segued into Al Gore's "The Inconvenient Truth" where she had a hard time trying to reconcile with the hashtag question. She could have counted herself as a millennial and started from there in her answer, and explained what the views of the millennials were in this day and age in regard to protecting Mother Earth. She shouldn't have used the word, "us", because "us" could mean the G.I. generation, the silent generation, the baby boomers, generation X'ers, the millennials, and generation Z'ers. She generalized it instead of focusing on one generation which was supposedly the millennials. Besides, who doesn't know the word, "millennials"? I came from Vancouver, Canada before moving to New York City. Fahsai graduated from the University of Calgary which is in Canada. She should have known this word as I and other Canadians do!
aimee_aimee wrote:mrgary wrote:aimee_aimee wrote:mrgary wrote:
I know that there were also countless Filipinos and international fans who supported the Thai candidate. I, myself, was one of them. Unfortunately, Fahsai just didn't deliver the goods. She choked on the simplest and easiest "Millennials" hashtag question. She kept repeating that "Think of Mother Earth as an extension of the living room" spiel like a broken record. In the beginning, I thought she was very relatable with her platform when I first heard her at an interview several weeks ago. But then, she still kept saying the same things over and over again without elaborating or giving us another point of view about her platform. That was really sad. Worse, she looked exhausted and had lost her spark on stage since the start of the programme. I expected to be wowed by her because of the hype that went on for weeks on this forum but she looked so lost on stage. The catwalk performance wasn't solid, the posture was just off, and the poses were very forgettable. She didn't tease the camera during the swimsuit segment. She had a beautiful face but she didn't flaunt it. Do not blame the ME organisation for the failure of the Thai candidate to deliver her best on that fateful night.
She did gave a correct answer : I believe that MilleNNials and everyone should treat the mother earth as the way you want to be treated.-- then she explain on her advocacy and her thought to environment issue.
Why MEO needed to separate hashtag into 2 jars. Ones in the left jar were much more difficult than ones in the right jar ( they were not directly related to the environment nor the pageant) We saw that the girls came to standby next to each jar...it's clear that MEO had decided to give a difficult set to Australia / Thailand /the Netherlands / Colombia... and the more easy one to the Philippines/ Russia / Venezuela / Czech. How MEO can correctly evaluate candidates' intelligence level by giving one candidate very difficult question and another candidate super easy question.
One more about hashtag MilleNials, it was not only typo,..it is not a worldwide hashtag as the host claimed on stage, not at all. It is only hit in US.
No, she did not answer the question. There was a huge disconnect in her answer because she segued into Al Gore's "The Inconvenient Truth" where she had a hard time trying to reconcile with the hashtag question. She could have counted herself as a millennial and started from there in her answer, and explained what the views of the millennials were in this day and age in regard to protecting Mother Earth. She shouldn't have used the word, "us", because "us" could mean the G.I. generation, the silent generation, the baby boomers, generation X'ers, the millennials, and generation Z'ers. She generalized it instead of focusing on one generation which was supposedly the millennials. Besides, who doesn't know the word, "millennials"? I came from Vancouver, Canada before moving to New York City. Fahsai graduated from the University of Calgary which is in Canada. She should have known this word as I and other Canadians do!
You just said it by yourself : you've moved to New York. Thank you to give more weight to the hashtag popularity map above.
Miss Pretty wrote:Problem is not about Fahsai didn't win but the winner is UG*Y! Miss Earth Organization and the Philippines tried too hard to get another crowd, very greedy. To be honest, Miss Philippines shouldn't have been in the top 16 and she would never be if it is other beauty pageant. This is a beauty contest, so beauty should be considered too. Lots of pretty girl in this batch but the UG*Y hometown girl win. So damn proud.
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