Tonight is the 60th anniversary of the Miss Universe pageant. A record 89 women will take to the stage in Sao Paulo, Brazil in national costumes and bikinis then answer questions such as, “Which animal would you like to be?” and “What advantage do women have over men?”
Sorry, girls, Miss Kosovo has already nailed that one with the blindingly insightful: “Because we can compete in pageants.”
Am I hearing right? This is 2011. Yet women of the modern world – sorry, Universe (come on Miss Pluto, Miss Venus – isn’t it time you showed up?) still think it’s empowering to parade in their smalls, and a staggering 6 million of us still think it’s fun to watch images like these:
Well, it isn’t. It’s stupid and anachronistic; the sort of visible and mainstream manifestation of sexism and objectification that ranks alongside Page 3 girls and Playboy bunnies.
I’m sure our Australian contender Scherri-Lee Biggs is a very nice girl. But this weekend her see-through gown and itsy-bitsy bikini pants made international headlines because organisers wanted to drum up some publicity. Oops, sorry, because her outfits were deemed too sexy. (Miss Colombia was also told off for not wearing knickers, to which she replied: “It was an accident. This is not the first time this has happened to me”.)
Now, I had a chat about this on the Today show yesterday. Funnily enough, straight after I talked about how female representation in the Australian work force is at a decade low with the proportion of women in 50 per cent of our industries lower than in 2006.