██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe





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██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe

Postby Qarlo » Wed May 05, 2021 8:39 am

    

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In light of the racial and hate issues circulating within the pageant fandom on social media now that Miss Universe is fast-approaching, here is an article about the black queens who became the Key Beauties in Miss Universe during their time at the pageant.



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'Breaking The Color Barrier' - Miss Haiti 1962, Evelyn Miot!


The first woman to break the color barrier was Haiti's black entrant Evelyn Miot upon gaining the right to compete for the semis during the 1962 Miss Universe Pageant on Floridian soil, what had seemed highly improbable days ago at a time when the black women were not allowed to participate in the beauty pageants in many states of America, Europe, Latin America, South Africa, Rhodesia (now known as Zimbabwe), and several islands on the Caribbean.

This amazing girl also was the first Haitian woman to enter the top 15 in the south Florida city of Miami Beach. In fact, she wrote one of the chapters most important in the history of Miss Universe, paving the way for a generation of black beauties. A year later, the Bahamian-born Sidney Poitier was the first African-American entertainer to win an Academy Award for his role in "Lilies of the Field".



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Caribbean's Diana Ross: Anne Marie Braafheid of Curacao


During the second half of 1968, the young Afro-Caribbean Anne Marie Braafheid of Curacao, a tiny island from Holland in the Americas, made history as she was first runner-up, after losing to Miss Brazil's Marta Maria Vasconcelos Cordeiro at the Miami Convention Center, in a thrilling final. Renowned for her sensual lips, personality, and exotic looks , the Dutch Antillean candidate had impressed the international judges from the biginning.

This time was absolutely unique in the history of the Miss Universe Pageant: She became the first black girl to be elected Vice Miss Universe in the city of Miami Beach (FL) during a year where Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated and Shirley Chisholm (D, New York) was the first black woman elected to Congress.

Curiously she was also the first citizen from Netherlands (and all their dependencies) to be named second, at the expense of Leena Marketta Brusiin from Finland (later Miss Europe ) and U.S. contestant Dorothy Catherine Anstett. Miss Curacao 1968 was regarded as one of the most popular girls by the public, likening her to American superstar Diana Ross.

Since then, the dark-eyed woman was a "national hero" in the Netherlands Antilles,from Aruba to Saint Maarten. Two years later, the Miss Photogenic title -most important special award at MU-- was won by Bermuda's Miss Universe 1970 candidate Margaret Hill, making history as the first black delegate to capture that trophy.



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Cherrie Raphaelia Creque: The First Black American in the Semis


In what was a surprise, Miss United States Virgin Islands, Cherrie Raphaelia Creque, qualified for the second round in the global contest by the early 1970s, a feat never before accomplished by an African-American female. The Virgin Islands is a U.S. overseas territory on the Caribbean and their residents have been U.S. citizens since the late 1920s (this land is very famous for its superstar basketball player Tim Duncan).

Additionally, Cherrie was one of the four representatives for the Americas to enter the Top 12 in the universal tournament which was held at the Miami Convention Center, alongside Eliane Parreira Guimaraes of Brazil, Beba Franco of Puerto Rico, and U.S. entrant (as well as being one of the three American women to do so). She was among the 8 best in swimsuit, well ahead of Miss England and Miss Spain. An ebony queen didn't appear on the international television until 1974 when a tiny Caribbean island from Holland sent a world-class contestant to the Philippines (Asia).

On 15 July 1974 at Manila, millions watched on television as Aruba's Miss Universe contestant Maureen Ava Vieira - Caribbean's best hope in the Philippines-- was considered one of the five most beautiful girls on Earth by a team of world-famous judges-particularly people from the worlds of entertainment, diplomacy, and sport. She was also the first islander to reach the Miss Universe finals, winning the hearts of the Filipino people.



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The Goddess of Haiti: Miss Gerthie David


By 1975, the International Year of the Woman, Gerthie David,came close to winning the universal crown at San Salvador's National Gymnasium (Gimnasio Nacional), captivating the viewing audience with her down-to-earth personality and sophisticated elegance over the course of the two-and-a-half-hour contest, and turning Haiti into one of the most successful countries in this year. It was a moment of immense pride for Haiti, the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere and the first black republic in history.

At the 24th Miss Universe -which almost coincided with the UN Conference on Woman at Mexico City- the young Haitian attracted attention, as much for her elegance as for her intelligence and beauty. Wearing a spectacular evening gown with a withe feather boa around her neck, Haiti's Miss Universe 1975 candidate Gerthie David -so far one of the most elegant ladies in the history of MU- impressed the audience and the jury, among them were two international individuals-- France's former Olympic champ Jean-Claude Killy and the legendary American jazz singer Sarah Vaughan (known as "the Divine Sarah"). It was one of El Salvador's most stirring moments. But this was only the beginning: She also captivated for her intelligence.

During her brief interview with Bob Barker, the host, she was one of the first non-English speaking representatives to answer the semifinal question in perfect American-sounding English. Luckily she was a fluent speaker of Sarah Vaughan's native English. On her way to becoming one of the five finalists, the elegant and youthful-looking Gerthie David talked about superstitions on the island of Haiti (the home of voodoo cult). In the preliminaries she also didn't need a translator for her interview with the 11 telecast judges. However, she, perhaps for strategic reasons, preferred to speak in her native tongue (French) in the finals. In fact, she made a sensational impression.

The young Haitian holds the distinction of being the second black woman to be elected vice Miss Universe. It was a sign of how lively competition is at the top level in the world. However, her passing did not pave the way to end a long losing spell for the island at Miss Universe. Over the following decades, a variety of troubles, military coups, and poverty limited its participation in the pageant.



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Janelle Commissiong of Trinidad: The First Miss Universe of Color!


The Annual Miss Universe title was won by Trinidad-Tobago's national candidate Janelle "Penny" Commissiong at Santo Domingo's National Theater on July 16, 1977, making history by becoming the first black woman to win the event and putting her island on world map. Without a doubt, Miss Universe 1977 influenced a generation of black women on the Planet.

When she and Eva Maria Duringer, Austria's "Farrah Fawcett-Majors", were called as the two finalists, the crowd began chanting the name of Miss TT as the new universal queen. Few minutes later, Janelle was crowned by last year's winner Rina Messinger of Israel, Miss Universe 1976, as host Bob Barker announced the eleven-member panel's decision, led by the up-and-coming fashion designer Oscar de la Renta of the Dominican Republic.

The gala evening was attended by many special guests from politics, diplomacy, culture, and entertainment: Latin America's greatest comic actor Mario Moreno (best known as "Cantinflas"), Argentina's diplomat Alejandro Orfila (then Secretary of the Organization of American States), and Mexico's Minister of Tourism, Guillermo Rossell, among others.

In fact, the islander woman, a Trinidadian-born fashion-design student of Venezuelan descent, stunned tournament favorite Miss Austria. But that wasn't all.To the surprise of many critics, she, who professed to be an admirer of Anwar Sadat (The 1978 Nobel Peace Prize winner from Egypt) also was elected the "Most Photogenic " (it was her first win over Miss Duringer).

Commisiong's win was one of the greatest feats in Miss Universe history, generating special interest worldwide-it was a spectacle that would have been unthinkable two decades earlier! Following a champagne breakfast at a world-class hotel at Santo Domingo, Miss Commissiong, accompanied by Messinger, met with the legendary Dominican statesman Joaquin Balaguer while the famous photographer Gordon Parks praised her beauty. "She has the classical beauty of black women around the world", said Mr. Parks, one of the judges in the oldest capital of Santo Domingo. She also received considerable support her fellow candidates. Decades later, Beatriz Lacayo Obregon, ex Miss Nicaragua 1977, said, " She was very beautiful and a good person".

During her own term as the 26th Miss Universe, Janelle was considered as one of the most outstanding beauty queens in the 20th Century, gaining a host of admirers around the globe, from Iceland and Hong Kong to Saint Maarten and the Kingdom of Lesotho. On returning home, the young inspirational Trinidadian was declared national hero alongside sprinter Hasely Crawford, first place in the men's 100 meters final at the 1976 Montreal Summer Olympics. At that time, she was awarded the Trinity Cross, Trinidad-Tobago's highest civilian honor.

Ironically, the following year, Miss Commissiong crowned Margaret Gardiner of White South Africa Miss Universe 1978 in the finals which were held in Acapulco, on Mexico's southern coast, where the African-American entertainer Melba Moore was one of the celebrity judges. Miss Gardiner was a candidate from the former apartheid regime of South Africa, among the most isolated states during Cold War.



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The Newest Sensation at 1979 Miss Universe : Gina Swainson of Bermuda


With the hopes of following the path of Miss Commissiong, Gina Ann Casandra Swainson, a student at the University of Wisconsin (U.S.), left Bermuda for Perth, Western Australia, to become one of the 75 candidates for the Miss Universe title. And nearly captured the third title for the Caribbean region in the 70s!

At Perth 1979, two Afro-Caribbean entries made the Top 12: Miss Bermuda and Belize's Sarita Diana Acosta. Subsequently, the young Bermudian was named Vice Miss Universe (the island's best-ever result) after being beaten into second place in the finals at the Perth Entertainment Centre.

Swainson became the first black to do since Haitian Gerthie David accomplished the feat in El Salvador in the mid-1970s. Meanwhile, Miss Acosta failed to qualify for the next round, but she gained fame with her status as the first Belizean woman to make the semis.

At the 29th pageant, the statuesque Gloria Karamanites thrilled her country, Panama, as she entered the Top 12 in Seoul's Sejong Cultural Centre, being the only black lady selected by a panel of telecast judges made up of 12 noted personalities, from South Africa's Margaret Gardiner to U.S. journalist Abigail Van Buren. Over the next four years, all black entries failed to make the semis for the first time since 1978, although Bahamas' Pearl Black Ava Marilyn Burke -archipelago's best-ever Beauty Queen-- lifted the Miss Photogenic Trophy during the global tournament in July 1982 in the South American city of Lima, on Peru's Pacific coast. Three years later, Zaire's Kayonga Mureka -the most beautiful Congolese woman of all the time-- was ranked third by a panel of jury (where there was only an African-American personality) in the city of Miami Beach (FL), home of the Miss Universe Pageant 1985.



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Deise Nunes de Souza: The Black Aphrodite of Brazil


Upon her victory at the 1986 Miss Brazil, Deise Nunes de Souza became the first Afro-Brazilian to win the national trophy, gaining the right to represent her republic in the world pageant despite being heavily criticized by some conservative groups.Before her adoring fans in Panama City's Atlapa Convention Center, she finished in sixth place.

The Brazilian mulatta lost a hard-fought competition to Scandinavia's Tuula Irmeli Polvi to reach the finals. However, Miss Brazil Universe 1986 provided one of the most amazing images of Miss Universe when she walked in her stunning white dress accompanied by her "little sister" (a Panamanian schoolgirl) during the evening gown competition in the semifinals.

In Central America, the young mulatta also received second place in the Best National Costume award. Prior to competing at Miss Universe 1986,in June, she left Brazil for Caracas (Venezuela's capital) to take part in Miss South America, where was chosen as one of the three most outstanding beauties on the continent mainland as well as winning the Best National Costume award.

But Deise Nunes de Souza wasn't the only black female on Panamanian soil. Encouraged by her countrywoman Mureka, Aimee Likobe Dobala of Zaire -now known as the Democratic Republic of the Congo- qualified for the second phase in her first major international competition.

Speaking through an interpreter during her interview with Bob Barker, Aimee, then an up-and-coming international model, said that she had a dozen brothers and sisters. Thanks to her, Zaire reached the Miss Universe semifinal for the second year running. However, the country's women don't compete on the world stage since that year due to the long-running political instability in the current Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

After having one of the highest scores in the preliminary competition, Carmelita Louise Ariza of the Turks & Caicos, a British archipelago on the Caribbean, became a semi-finalist for the Miss Universe Pageant title in Singapore City's World Trade Center (Far East) in May 1987--T&C's best-ever result. However she had little chance of advancing beyond the second round. The next year, Sandra Foster became a semi-finalist in the southern Mexican city of Cancun, making her the first Jamaican to do so.



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Carole Gist - The Black Pageant Queen Icon


Michigan-born Carole Gist stunned the pageant world as she became the first black U.S. delegate in the annual event at Los Angeles (CA) at the beginning of the 1990s after winning the Miss USA. Four years earlier, Halle Berry, then an up-and-coming American actress, had failed to win the national title on Floridian soil, losing an opportunity to travel to Panama City as United States' Miss Universe 1986 candidate. In Miami Beach, Halle was first runner-up to Christy Fichtner, Miss Texas. After travelling across America during her reign, Carole Gist worked as a fitness specialist at Wayne State University in her hometown Detroit.

Kenya Moore made a trip to Mexico City (or Ciudad de Mexico) as Miss USA Universe to took part in the international tournament in May 1993, where reached the finals. Before travelling to the Mexican metropolis, Moore from Michigan became the second African-American female to hold the Miss USA title by winning the national contest in Wichita (Kansas).

By the mid-1990s, United States' delegate Chelsi Smith (ex Miss Texas) became the second black and first bi-racial woman to be crowned Miss Universe, justifying her label of favorite during the telecast, which was held in the Windhoek Country Club Resort,in the sub-Saharan African country of Namibia, a land once riven by apartheid. "I feel I'm becoming a professional in the beauty pageant field", said Smith, of Dee Park (TX), upon her victory.

Almost fifteen years had passed since America last lifted a major trophy. In the meantime, the contestant of Trinidad's Arlene Peterkin made the finals and South Africa's Miss Universe 1995 delegate Augustine Masilela competed for the second phase. The Rainbow Nation's Tv hostess Masilela, who grew up under Apartheid, was the only representative from the "Dark Continent" to compete in the semifinals and as such received a standing ovation in the Country Club Resort, one of the most distinguished resorts on the African mainland.

Aruba's Taryn Mansell was first runner-up (territory's best-ever result) to Alicia Machado of Venezuela on U.S. soil, home of the Miss Universe Pageant 1996. In the evening gown competition, the judges (among them the African-American entertainer Starletta Dupois) gave the second highest televised score (9.73) to Aruban queen, well ahead of Miss USA Ali Landry (9.60). Finland's contestant Lola Odusoga, of sub-Saharan African heritage, was second runner-up, reviving flashes of its brilliant past with two world championships ( Long Beach'55 & El Salvador'75) and three Vice Miss Universe titles (1965, 1966 & 1969).

Caribbean-born Denny Mendez reached the Miss Universe finals under the Italian flag in 1997. Denny made international headlines when she was the first black beauty to be crowned Miss Italy by late 1996, breaking away from the traditional practice of appointing only women of European descent. Hailing from Dominican Republic, the young mulatta, however, was heavily criticized by some radical groups in Western Europe.

Under Wendy Fitzwilliam's leadership, the island the Trinidad captured the prestigious title in 1998, after doing so well in the past couple of years. Wihout a doubt, she was one of the biggest surprises of the Pageant. The new Miss Universe was crowned by last year's winner Brooke Mahealani Lee of Hawaii, making her the third black woman to receive the trophy. After beating the top- ranked Miss Venezuela (Verushka Ramirez), Fitzwilliam was regarded as a national hero in her homeland country.The islander woman professed to be an admirer of Audrey Hepburn, her lifelong role model.By the early 2000, the National Geographic Magazine published a photo of Wendy in full Trinidadian costume (the Best national Costume for Miss Universe 1998).



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Mpule Kwelagobe : The Ambassador of Africa


By 1999, the host country paid tribute to their African roots during the 48Th Pageant: The coveted title was won by sub-Saharan Africa under the leadership of Mpule Kwelagobe of the Republic of Botswana, an inexpert country in the world's biggest beauty pageant. All the great Trinidadian queens of the past and present, including Janelle Commissiong (the world's first black Miss Universe), were among the guests.

After missing the 1997 Miss World on the island-nation of Seychelles (East Africa), Mpule, a sportswoman and a university student, captured the First Miss Botswana Universe title in the capital city of Gaborone, gaining the right to go to theTrinidadian city of Chaguaramas, host city.

In fact, the event produced many suprises: In the a unprecedent four out of 10 semifinalists were of African descent for the first time in the prestigious contest's history: Akuba Cudjoe of Ghana (the only semi-finalist in the country's history), Nicole Haughton of Jamaica, and Venezuela's Lucbel Carolina Indriago Pinto (as well as Miss Kwelagobe).

Because of Trinidad's African roots, Osmel Sousa, Miss Universe Venezuela National Director, sent an Afro-Venezuelan to the Caribbean island, anticipating a victory by a delegate of African descent. However, Carolina Indriago was eliminated in the finals as a result of her poor performance, curting Venezuela's chances for the universal title. Anyway, Sousa, the nation's Beauty Guru, made an interesting prediction: A female from African origin won the coveted title!

Two black entries from the World Industrialized competed in the second phase in 2000. Upon being crowned Miss USA Universe by outgoing queen Kimberley Pressler of New York at Branson (Missouri), Lynnette Cole, an African-American student, won the right to attend the global event on Cyprus. On the island's capital of Nicosia, she, of Puerto Rican descent, made the Top Five. Under France's flag,on the other hand, a Rwanda-native girl, Sonia Rolland, make history in Miss Universe 2000 to become the first Frenchwoman (and biracial) to qualify for the pageant since the early 1990s.

During the second half of 2001, Nigeria's Miss Universe candidate Ibiagbanidokibabo "Agbani" Asenite Darego did not place in the Top Five in Bayamon's Coliseo Ruben Rodriguez, but the dark-eyed woman -sub Saharan Africa's best hope on the island of Puerto Rico-- finished in seventh place in the event's final standings,making her the first Nigerian to enter the Top 10 with 18.43 points (country's best-ever result).From the beginning, Darego was considered as one of the 10 top favorites to reach the coveted trophy, alongside Andrea Maria Noceti Gomez (Colombia), Claudia Cruz de los Santos (Dominican Republic), Evelina Papantoniou (Greece), Jacqueline Bracamontes Van-Hoorde (Mexico),Zorayda Ruth Andam (Philippines), Denisse Quinones (Puerto Rico),Eva Siso Casals (Spain), Kandace Krueger (U.S.), and Eva Ekvall (Venezuela).



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France's Black Queen: Chloe Mortaud


The "darling of the Puerto Rican media", Vanessa Mendoza was Latin America's "big black hope" at the 51st Pageant in July 2002. After being elected as the first black beauty queen in Colombia on November 14, 2001, she tried to become the first woman from her country to win the global trophy since Luz Marina Zuluaga accomplished the feat at the Seventh Miss Universe in the late 1950s on California soil. Nonetheless, she was eliminated in the preliminaries along with other black beauties such as Miss USA Shauntay Hinton from District of Columbia, and Ruth Ocumarez Apatano from the Dominican Republic.

In the telecast Vanessa Mendoza had received more applause than the semi-finalists. The results had stunned Colombia, a beauty-obsessed country on the South American continent. Hinton secured her berth on Puerto Rico by winning the American Pageant at Gary (Indiana).

There were two notable candidates in the second phase in 2006: Ethiopia's Dina Fekadu Mosissa (the only semi-finalist in the country's history) and Trinidad Tobago's Kenisha Nalisha Finita Thom, but both girls could not qualify for the next round. Ethiopia, a high-poverty country in the Horn of Africa, appeared for the first time in the semis in the prestigious event's history. About a year later, Rachel Smith from Tennessee was the new Miss USA Universe 2007 in Los Angeles (CA). Smith's LA win qualified her to compete in the Universal tournament, held in the Mexican metropolis,where she was named fourth runner-up following a win over Tanzania's Flaviana Matata (nation's best-ever result) in a battle of black beauties (U.S.A vs Africa!).

By 2008, in Nha Trang (Vietnam), USA sent a black representative for the second year running. Besides all that, its national entrant, Crystle Stewart from Texas, became the seventh African-American girl to compete under United States' flag in Miss Universe after Michigan's Carole Gist (1990), Michigan's Kenya Moore (1993), Texas' Chelsi Smith (1995), Tennessee's Lynnette Cole (2000), DC's Shauntay Hinton (2002), and Tennessee's Rachel Smith (2007). Stewart finished 8th in the event's final standings.

For the first time since the early 2000s, a black female was the frontrunner. Her name and country: Chloe Mortaud, Queen of France (who holds dual French and American citizenship). Despite her credentials, she could not even reach the fifth position at the 2009 Pageant in the Commonwealth of The Bahamas after a duel against Venezuela's Stefania Fernandez (the eventual winner of the tournament). Chloe became the third black and first French-American woman to represent France in the event. She was born on September 9, 1989 in Lisieux (France) to a native-Mississipian mother, an African-American, and a French father.



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The 21st Century's Dark Horse & African Queen


At the beginning of September 2011, Angola's Leila Lopes celebrated her victory over Ukraine's Olesya Stefano to be crowned as the 60th Miss Universe by nine telecast judges from Brazil, Dominican Republic, Philippines, and the States, becoming the first black woman to win the global contest in the 21st Century-it is Angola's first trophy at a major international event outside of Africa. A victory which contributes to the increasing globalization of the pageant.

On September 12th, exactly, she beat 88 other entries from around the world, watched by audiences in their billions globally-- a feat no woman on the African mainland had accomplished since the end of the 20th Century.This prestigious tournament was hosted by Brazil's city of Sao Paulo.

Despite its wealth in petroleum resources, which by the mid-2000s accounted for 80 percent of government revenue, her land, a war-torn country during Cold War, is currently one of the least-developed nations in the Third World and is making enormous efforts to fight against AIDS/HIV.

Like Akiko Kojima (Japan) in Long Beach 1959, Janelle Commissiong (Trinidad) in Santo Domingo 1977, Cecilia Bolocco (Chile) in Singapore 1987, Shusmita Sen (India) in Manila 1994, and Mpule Kwelagobe (Botswana) in Trinidad 1999, Leila Lopes was a "Dark Horse" in the Brazilian metropolis. But before her victory, an Afro-Caribbean, Miss Jamaica, was first runner-up in the world tournament in Las Vegas (NV) in 2010. A year ago, other Afro-Caribbean, Ada Aimee de la Cruz of the Dominican Republic, finished second place in the Atlantis Paradise Island (Nassau, Bahamas).


In the words of Nelson Mandela, no one is born hating another person because of color of his skin, or his background, or his religion. People must learn to hate, and if they can learn to hate, they can be taught to love, for love comes naturally to the human heart than its opposite.


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Re: ██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe

Postby DUBROVNIK » Wed May 05, 2021 9:28 am

It is entirely possible that Zozibini will crown another black beauty on May 16 (17th in the East).
It already happened in 1999 when the Trinidadian Wendy Fitzwilliam crowned Mpule Kwelagobe (Botswana).
In the current edition, the big favorite is the Jamaican's queen Miqueal-Symone Williams
But other delegates such as Miss Uni Canada or Miss Uni Japan could win the crown!
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Re: ██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe

Postby Qarlo » Wed May 05, 2021 11:26 am

DUBROVNIK wrote:
It is entirely possible that Zozibini will crown another black beauty on May 16 (17th in the East).
It already happened in 1999 when the Trinidadian Wendy Fitzwilliam crowned Mpule Kwelagobe (Botswana).


There, you said it!
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Re: ██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe

Postby lingintexas » Wed May 05, 2021 6:27 pm

Great read and my money is on Jamaica for the win
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Re: ██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe

Postby Qarlo » Fri May 07, 2021 12:26 am

lingintexas wrote:Great read and my money is on Jamaica for the win


Stunning, Indeed!

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Re: ██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe

Postby Oma-san » Sat May 08, 2021 7:13 am

I wonder whether these hypocrite Latin Negritos here on Misso could swear up and down that they were not in a dilemma when South Africa beat Puerto Rico a year ago. Yes, Maria Diosa de Beaut, lingintintexas, Atomikk I'm talking to your black butts. Normally, you would act so racist and dismissive of Asians while licking the asses of the PR flag but when Zozi beat the Puerto Rican delegate, I bet you swallowed a lump down your throats just as Maria did when Yendi was beaten by Ximena because you can't openly vouch for Zozi after all you'd been through with them. And because they were whites or Latinas and not Asians. Racist hypocrites.

Anyway, the blacks this year are not that great. Jamaica is pretty but she doesn't have a rocking body. I think USA is a good contender and she is one of the most deserving Miss USAs who deserve all the attention.
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Re: ██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe

Postby Oma-san » Sat May 08, 2021 7:25 am

Miss USA 2002 and 2010 Shauntay and Rima Fakih are one of the few American delegates to unplace in the history of Miss Universe. And what do they share in common, they are ethnic! Rima was said to be uncompetitive but she was more beautiful than most Miss USAs who placed in particular Miss USA 2018. As for Shauntay, you know the story.

And for the past few years, there has been a big story about crowning black delegates successively in Miss USA and currently, Miss Universe, Miss Teen USA and Miss USA are all black. But don't do it for publicity and to simply make a story out of it. Just make sure delegates like Shauntay and Miss Colombia 2002 among many others are not ignored. Those Miss USAs from 2016, 2017, 2019 were nothing spectacular. Instead, don't neglect a black delegate in Miss Universe and please don't have a white woman from Africa representing the African race in Miss Universe. A good start would be to divide Africa, Asia and Pacific separately. We know either New Zealand or Africa takes one of those spots. Avoid having USA place each year, the Americans don't care enough for American victory in Miss Universe. Plus, Miss USA candidates normally suck. Europe is not competitive as well so why have so many slots for them? They are a tiny continent anyway even if they have the most competing countries in Miss Universe. Also, delegates from Asia are super-competitive these years and most of the years, they are sacrificed in the Africa/Asia-Pacific format. Not to mention most of the Asian representatives are Eurasian because no one would take us seriously otherwise.
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Re: ██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe

Postby Qarlo » Mon May 10, 2021 4:24 am

Oma-san wrote:Miss USA 2002 and 2010 Shauntay and Rima Fakih are one of the few American delegates to unplace in the history of Miss Universe. And what do they share in common, they are ethnic! Rima was said to be uncompetitive but she was more beautiful than most Miss USAs who placed in particular Miss USA 2018. As for Shauntay, you know the story.

And for the past few years, there has been a big story about crowning black delegates successively in Miss USA and currently, Miss Universe, Miss Teen USA and Miss USA are all black. But don't do it for publicity and to simply make a story out of it. Just make sure delegates like Shauntay and Miss Colombia 2002 among many others are not ignored. Those Miss USAs from 2016, 2017, 2019 were nothing spectacular. Instead, don't neglect a black delegate in Miss Universe and please don't have a white woman from Africa representing the African race in Miss Universe. A good start would be to divide Africa, Asia and Pacific separately. We know either New Zealand or Africa takes one of those spots. Avoid having USA place each year, the Americans don't care enough for American victory in Miss Universe. Plus, Miss USA candidates normally suck. Europe is not competitive as well so why have so many slots for them? They are a tiny continent anyway even if they have the most competing countries in Miss Universe. Also, delegates from Asia are super-competitive these years and most of the years, they are sacrificed in the Africa/Asia-Pacific format. Not to mention most of the Asian representatives are Eurasian because no one would take us seriously otherwise.


I read somewhere that there won't be continental groupings this year. So, it won't be unfair to the strong continents.
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Re: ██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe

Postby Qarlo » Mon May 10, 2021 4:31 am

Oma-san wrote:

Anyway, the blacks this year are not that great. Jamaica is pretty but she doesn't have a rocking body. I think USA is a good contender and she is one of the most deserving Miss USAs who deserve all the attention.



Wondering what are your thoughts about Miss Canada, though? It looks like she's one of the better black contestants this year. Not much posting from Jamaica and USA. Hope to see more from them.
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Re: ██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe

Postby Oma-san » Mon May 10, 2021 10:52 am

Qarlo wrote:
Oma-san wrote:

Anyway, the blacks this year are not that great. Jamaica is pretty but she doesn't have a rocking body. I think USA is a good contender and she is one of the most deserving Miss USAs who deserve all the attention.



Wondering what are your thoughts about Miss Canada, though? It looks like she's one of the better black contestants this year. Not much posting from Jamaica and USA. Hope to see more from them.


Yeah she'd be a great winner. She's not pretty but she has the potential to be a supermodel. You see, my point is, if the past MUO had not ignored non-white contestants, we wouldn't be having imperfect black winners - Wendy and Mpule (considered facially weak) and Leila (considered unimpressive and undeserving). Zozibini is a great winner but she isn't the most stunning. Canada is great but she wouldn't be a conventional winner. One who is beauty pageant beautiful yet who is impressionable.
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Re: ██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe

Postby Oma-san » Mon May 10, 2021 10:57 am

Qarlo wrote:
Oma-san wrote:Miss USA 2002 and 2010 Shauntay and Rima Fakih are one of the few American delegates to unplace in the history of Miss Universe. And what do they share in common, they are ethnic! Rima was said to be uncompetitive but she was more beautiful than most Miss USAs who placed in particular Miss USA 2018. As for Shauntay, you know the story.

And for the past few years, there has been a big story about crowning black delegates successively in Miss USA and currently, Miss Universe, Miss Teen USA and Miss USA are all black. But don't do it for publicity and to simply make a story out of it. Just make sure delegates like Shauntay and Miss Colombia 2002 among many others are not ignored. Those Miss USAs from 2016, 2017, 2019 were nothing spectacular. Instead, don't neglect a black delegate in Miss Universe and please don't have a white woman from Africa representing the African race in Miss Universe. A good start would be to divide Africa, Asia and Pacific separately. We know either New Zealand or Africa takes one of those spots. Avoid having USA place each year, the Americans don't care enough for American victory in Miss Universe. Plus, Miss USA candidates normally suck. Europe is not competitive as well so why have so many slots for them? They are a tiny continent anyway even if they have the most competing countries in Miss Universe. Also, delegates from Asia are super-competitive these years and most of the years, they are sacrificed in the Africa/Asia-Pacific format. Not to mention most of the Asian representatives are Eurasian because no one would take us seriously otherwise.


I read somewhere that there won't be continental groupings this year. So, it won't be unfair to the strong continents.


Don't you think it's very Eurocentric? It certainly didn't help when Africa, Asia and Pacific were clubbed together whereas there are guaranteed 3-4 slots for the European delegates plus USA who places almost every single year and the Latin finalists who were mainly Caucasian. With Australia nabbing the continental spot almost every year, that leaves Asia and Africa fighting over those limited spots from it one is almost always guaranteed for South Africa who are coming strong and where the delegated is mostly white when they place and the Asians are divided between Eurasian Asian delegates making it extremely difficult for the competing delegates to garner a placement. There is a reason why you mostly see white women in Miss Universe and is it because they perform better? No way. We know Europe is one of the least interested continents when it comes to beauty pageants unlike Africa and Asia where such an issue would be arising out of lack of resources. It's unfair.
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Re: ██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe

Postby lingintexas » Mon May 10, 2021 1:10 pm

Oma-san wrote:
Qarlo wrote:
Oma-san wrote:

Anyway, the blacks this year are not that great. Jamaica is pretty but she doesn't have a rocking body. I think USA is a good contender and she is one of the most deserving Miss USAs who deserve all the attention.



Wondering what are your thoughts about Miss Canada, though? It looks like she's one of the better black contestants this year. Not much posting from Jamaica and USA. Hope to see more from them.


Yeah she'd be a great winner. She's not pretty but she has the potential to be a supermodel. You see, my point is, if the past MUO had not ignored non-white contestants, we wouldn't be having imperfect black winners - Wendy and Mpule (considered facially weak) and Leila (considered unimpressive and undeserving). Zozibini is a great winner but she isn't the most stunning. Canada is great but she wouldn't be a conventional winner. One who is beauty pageant beautiful yet who is impressionable.


Dude the only person that considers Wendy to be facially weak is you. Your stupid comments of imperfect black winners, not hearing you call out the multitude of average white winners we have seen over the decades. BULLSHIT comment.
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Re: ██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe

Postby Oma-san » Mon May 10, 2021 1:33 pm

lingintexas wrote:
Oma-san wrote:
Qarlo wrote:
Oma-san wrote:

Anyway, the blacks this year are not that great. Jamaica is pretty but she doesn't have a rocking body. I think USA is a good contender and she is one of the most deserving Miss USAs who deserve all the attention.



Wondering what are your thoughts about Miss Canada, though? It looks like she's one of the better black contestants this year. Not much posting from Jamaica and USA. Hope to see more from them.


Yeah she'd be a great winner. She's not pretty but she has the potential to be a supermodel. You see, my point is, if the past MUO had not ignored non-white contestants, we wouldn't be having imperfect black winners - Wendy and Mpule (considered facially weak) and Leila (considered unimpressive and undeserving). Zozibini is a great winner but she isn't the most stunning. Canada is great but she wouldn't be a conventional winner. One who is beauty pageant beautiful yet who is impressionable.


Dude the only person that considers Wendy to be facially weak is you. Your stupid comments of imperfect black winners, not hearing you call out the multitude of average white winners we have seen over the decades. BULLSHIT comment.


Why do you bark when you are the one who couldn't call out the undeserving white winners because you are an insecure black lol
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Re: ██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe

Postby Bonitillo Campanella » Mon May 10, 2021 8:31 pm

Reading your stuff is always such joy Qarlo.

l love you :hx :hx :hx :hx
Angela, gracias por hacer historia guapa!
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Re: ██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe

Postby Qarlo » Mon May 10, 2021 9:29 pm

Bonitillo Campanella wrote:Reading your stuff is always such joy Qarlo.

l love you :hx :hx :hx :hx


I missed you.
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Re: ██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe

Postby lingintexas » Tue May 11, 2021 12:17 am

Oma-san wrote:
lingintexas wrote:
Oma-san wrote:
Qarlo wrote:
Oma-san wrote:

Anyway, the blacks this year are not that great. Jamaica is pretty but she doesn't have a rocking body. I think USA is a good contender and she is one of the most deserving Miss USAs who deserve all the attention.



Wondering what are your thoughts about Miss Canada, though? It looks like she's one of the better black contestants this year. Not much posting from Jamaica and USA. Hope to see more from them.


Yeah she'd be a great winner. She's not pretty but she has the potential to be a supermodel. You see, my point is, if the past MUO had not ignored non-white contestants, we wouldn't be having imperfect black winners - Wendy and Mpule (considered facially weak) and Leila (considered unimpressive and undeserving). Zozibini is a great winner but she isn't the most stunning. Canada is great but she wouldn't be a conventional winner. One who is beauty pageant beautiful yet who is impressionable.


Dude the only person that considers Wendy to be facially weak is you. Your stupid comments of imperfect black winners, not hearing you call out the multitude of average white winners we have seen over the decades. BULLSHIT comment.


Why do you bark when you are the one who couldn't call out the undeserving white winners because you are an insecure black lol


I’m not just black asshole I’m a representative of the future the blending. You are a simple minded individual, and usually it’s the ugly ones that like to judge the women on their beauty. Go f**k yourself.
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Re: ██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe

Postby Oma-san » Tue May 11, 2021 6:23 am

lingintexas wrote:
Oma-san wrote:
lingintexas wrote:
Oma-san wrote:
Qarlo wrote:
Oma-san wrote:

Anyway, the blacks this year are not that great. Jamaica is pretty but she doesn't have a rocking body. I think USA is a good contender and she is one of the most deserving Miss USAs who deserve all the attention.



Wondering what are your thoughts about Miss Canada, though? It looks like she's one of the better black contestants this year. Not much posting from Jamaica and USA. Hope to see more from them.


Yeah she'd be a great winner. She's not pretty but she has the potential to be a supermodel. You see, my point is, if the past MUO had not ignored non-white contestants, we wouldn't be having imperfect black winners - Wendy and Mpule (considered facially weak) and Leila (considered unimpressive and undeserving). Zozibini is a great winner but she isn't the most stunning. Canada is great but she wouldn't be a conventional winner. One who is beauty pageant beautiful yet who is impressionable.


Dude the only person that considers Wendy to be facially weak is you. Your stupid comments of imperfect black winners, not hearing you call out the multitude of average white winners we have seen over the decades. BULLSHIT comment.


Why do you bark when you are the one who couldn't call out the undeserving white winners because you are an insecure black lol


I’m not just black asshole I’m a representative of the future the blending. You are a simple minded individual, and usually it’s the ugly ones that like to judge the women on their beauty. Go f**k yourself.


You wish you could blend lol when you hate your own skin.
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Re: ██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe

Postby lingintexas » Tue May 11, 2021 2:17 pm

Oma-san wrote:
lingintexas wrote:
Oma-san wrote:
lingintexas wrote:
Oma-san wrote:
Qarlo wrote:
Oma-san wrote:

Anyway, the blacks this year are not that great. Jamaica is pretty but she doesn't have a rocking body. I think USA is a good contender and she is one of the most deserving Miss USAs who deserve all the attention.



Wondering what are your thoughts about Miss Canada, though? It looks like she's one of the better black contestants this year. Not much posting from Jamaica and USA. Hope to see more from them.


Yeah she'd be a great winner. She's not pretty but she has the potential to be a supermodel. You see, my point is, if the past MUO had not ignored non-white contestants, we wouldn't be having imperfect black winners - Wendy and Mpule (considered facially weak) and Leila (considered unimpressive and undeserving). Zozibini is a great winner but she isn't the most stunning. Canada is great but she wouldn't be a conventional winner. One who is beauty pageant beautiful yet who is impressionable.


Dude the only person that considers Wendy to be facially weak is you. Your stupid comments of imperfect black winners, not hearing you call out the multitude of average white winners we have seen over the decades. BULLSHIT comment.


Why do you bark when you are the one who couldn't call out the undeserving white winners because you are an insecure black lol


I’m not just black asshole I’m a representative of the future the blending. You are a simple minded individual, and usually it’s the ugly ones that like to judge the women on their beauty. Go f**k yourself.


You wish you could blend lol when you hate your own skin.


Silliy boy you clearly don't understand English if that is your take away. lol I love my skin people sit in the sun and get skin cancer to have what I have lurch
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Re: ██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe

Postby Oma-san » Tue May 11, 2021 5:06 pm

lingintexas wrote:
Oma-san wrote:
lingintexas wrote:
Oma-san wrote:
lingintexas wrote:
Oma-san wrote:
Qarlo wrote:
Oma-san wrote:

Anyway, the blacks this year are not that great. Jamaica is pretty but she doesn't have a rocking body. I think USA is a good contender and she is one of the most deserving Miss USAs who deserve all the attention.



Wondering what are your thoughts about Miss Canada, though? It looks like she's one of the better black contestants this year. Not much posting from Jamaica and USA. Hope to see more from them.


Yeah she'd be a great winner. She's not pretty but she has the potential to be a supermodel. You see, my point is, if the past MUO had not ignored non-white contestants, we wouldn't be having imperfect black winners - Wendy and Mpule (considered facially weak) and Leila (considered unimpressive and undeserving). Zozibini is a great winner but she isn't the most stunning. Canada is great but she wouldn't be a conventional winner. One who is beauty pageant beautiful yet who is impressionable.


Dude the only person that considers Wendy to be facially weak is you. Your stupid comments of imperfect black winners, not hearing you call out the multitude of average white winners we have seen over the decades. BULLSHIT comment.


Why do you bark when you are the one who couldn't call out the undeserving white winners because you are an insecure black lol


I’m not just black asshole I’m a representative of the future the blending. You are a simple minded individual, and usually it’s the ugly ones that like to judge the women on their beauty. Go f**k yourself.


You wish you could blend lol when you hate your own skin.


Silliy boy you clearly don't understand English if that is your take away. lol I love my skin people sit in the sun and get skin cancer to have what I have lurch


You are the dummy. They try to get a tan, not dark skin that you have. And you don't love your skin otherwise you wouldn't be trying to vent out your frustrations of being black by being racist towards Asian ethnicities.
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Re: ██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe

Postby lingintexas » Wed May 12, 2021 8:40 pm

Oma-san wrote:
lingintexas wrote:
Oma-san wrote:
lingintexas wrote:
Oma-san wrote:
lingintexas wrote:
Oma-san wrote:
Qarlo wrote:
Oma-san wrote:

Anyway, the blacks this year are not that great. Jamaica is pretty but she doesn't have a rocking body. I think USA is a good contender and she is one of the most deserving Miss USAs who deserve all the attention.



Wondering what are your thoughts about Miss Canada, though? It looks like she's one of the better black contestants this year. Not much posting from Jamaica and USA. Hope to see more from them.


Yeah she'd be a great winner. She's not pretty but she has the potential to be a supermodel. You see, my point is, if the past MUO had not ignored non-white contestants, we wouldn't be having imperfect black winners - Wendy and Mpule (considered facially weak) and Leila (considered unimpressive and undeserving). Zozibini is a great winner but she isn't the most stunning. Canada is great but she wouldn't be a conventional winner. One who is beauty pageant beautiful yet who is impressionable.


Dude the only person that considers Wendy to be facially weak is you. Your stupid comments of imperfect black winners, not hearing you call out the multitude of average white winners we have seen over the decades. BULLSHIT comment.


Why do you bark when you are the one who couldn't call out the undeserving white winners because you are an insecure black lol


I’m not just black asshole I’m a representative of the future the blending. You are a simple minded individual, and usually it’s the ugly ones that like to judge the women on their beauty. Go f**k yourself.


You wish you could blend lol when you hate your own skin.


Silliy boy you clearly don't understand English if that is your take away. lol I love my skin people sit in the sun and get skin cancer to have what I have lurch


You are the dummy. They try to get a tan, not dark skin that you have. And you don't love your skin otherwise you wouldn't be trying to vent out your frustrations of being black by being racist towards Asian ethnicities.


The only racist I see here is you dude talking shit about black people and my skin is brown because my father is not black you half-wit. Dirty trashy cunt
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Re: ██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe

Postby Oma-san » Thu May 13, 2021 8:17 am

lingintexas wrote:
Oma-san wrote:
lingintexas wrote:
Oma-san wrote:
lingintexas wrote:
Oma-san wrote:
lingintexas wrote:
Oma-san wrote:
Qarlo wrote:
Oma-san wrote:

Anyway, the blacks this year are not that great. Jamaica is pretty but she doesn't have a rocking body. I think USA is a good contender and she is one of the most deserving Miss USAs who deserve all the attention.



Wondering what are your thoughts about Miss Canada, though? It looks like she's one of the better black contestants this year. Not much posting from Jamaica and USA. Hope to see more from them.


Yeah she'd be a great winner. She's not pretty but she has the potential to be a supermodel. You see, my point is, if the past MUO had not ignored non-white contestants, we wouldn't be having imperfect black winners - Wendy and Mpule (considered facially weak) and Leila (considered unimpressive and undeserving). Zozibini is a great winner but she isn't the most stunning. Canada is great but she wouldn't be a conventional winner. One who is beauty pageant beautiful yet who is impressionable.


Dude the only person that considers Wendy to be facially weak is you. Your stupid comments of imperfect black winners, not hearing you call out the multitude of average white winners we have seen over the decades. BULLSHIT comment.


Why do you bark when you are the one who couldn't call out the undeserving white winners because you are an insecure black lol


I’m not just black asshole I’m a representative of the future the blending. You are a simple minded individual, and usually it’s the ugly ones that like to judge the women on their beauty. Go f**k yourself.


You wish you could blend lol when you hate your own skin.


Silliy boy you clearly don't understand English if that is your take away. lol I love my skin people sit in the sun and get skin cancer to have what I have lurch


You are the dummy. They try to get a tan, not dark skin that you have. And you don't love your skin otherwise you wouldn't be trying to vent out your frustrations of being black by being racist towards Asian ethnicities.


The only racist I see here is you dude talking shit about black people and my skin is brown because my father is not black you half-wit. Dirty trashy cunt


Whatever helps you sleep at night.
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Re: ██The Key-Black Beauties of Miss Universe

Postby Bonitillo Campanella » Thu May 13, 2021 9:15 pm

Qarlo wrote:
Bonitillo Campanella wrote:Reading your stuff is always such joy Qarlo.

l love you :hx :hx :hx :hx


I missed you.
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things got real crazy in your thread baby.... @-) @-) :-j :-j
Angela, gracias por hacer historia guapa!
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