After competing at Miss Texas multiple times, she returned to the Miss Texas stage in early September of 2014 and was crowned to represent the state of Texas at Miss. USA. As the hosts began calling the runners up essentially eliminating them Ylianna started to feel like she was dreaming. Soon enough she was holding hands with Allie Gonzales another valley native and we were the last two standing. When they called Allie as first runner up and Ylianna as the winner, she could not believe it. Winning this title had been a goal and a dream of hers ever since she started competing, finally winning after being defeated twice was one of Ylianna’s proudest moments because she felt like her hard work had finally paid off.
Upon winning Miss Texas USA
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However, pageant titleholders are judged and scrutinized tremendously because of one mistake they may make on the national stage. Pageants are about strong, intelligent women empowering one another, and making a positive impact on the community. Guerra has always wanted to form her own non-profit that helps with the expensive medical bills for children with disabilities. Growing up in the Rio Grande Valley, one of the poorest places in the United States, Ylianna has first handily seen the struggles that many families go through to barely make it by. Ylianna recently met with a little girl, Danae Garcia, who has Treacher Colins syndrome. This a genetic disease that will require her to have several surgeries throughout her lifetime. The pageant community in the Rio Grande Valley has come together to raise money for this little girl and her family to help pay her medical bills. Ylianna would love to form an organization where money raised could go to kids like Danae, who don’t have the funding to pay for required surgeries or medical …show more content…
Universe pageant owner, made controversial and defamatory statements about Mexican immigrants the week before Ylianna left to compete for Miss USA in Baton Rouge. During her time in Baton Rouge, Ylianna got interviewed by major news stations regarding his comments. They also asked her why she decided to continue competing for the title despite knowing her potential boss said these things about Mexicans. Her response was simple, she was not going to let someone define who she is, not even “The Donald.” She felt that if she would’ve pulled out of the competition she would not only let the state down, but let the Rio Grande Valley down. Ylianna thinks it is sad that people feel at a disadvantage because they are from the valley. She believes that anyone can do anything as long as they work for it. It doesn’t matter where you are from. As Miss Texas USA this was a topic Ylianna would talk about in her speeches around the valley. She wanted kids to know they could achieve their dreams and goals as long as they worked for them. Being Miss Texas USA was great and she was glad that she was able to inspire so many in the Rio Grande Valley, but that was only a small taste of what she is hoping to do in the future.
Ylianna and her fiancée, Michael Dadashi, are starting a company together to heal people’s voids within them. Although they are in the beginning stages of creating this company, Ylianna hopes that through their company they will be able to impact people
Chapter 6: Empire and Resistance records how the Revolutionary War unfolded as the result of the French Indian War or as the Europeans called it, The Seven Years War. When the British were victorious, they gained territory west of the Applicants Mountains and east of the Mississippi River. Colonists were eager to settle on these lands but King George III, the newly crowned king of Britain, issued the Proclamation of 1763 which prohibited the desires of the American Colonists as the result of Pontiac’s Rebellion. Afterward, the British had imposed hefty taxes on the colonies with the first being the Sugar Act which was created by Greenville’s program and passed by the British Parliament. It taxed not only sugar but coffee, animal hides, and
Many settlers lived in scarcely populated areas forming small settlements during the Oregon territory disputes with Britain. Many native people lived in areas that were thriving over the spanish success in a cotton boom; however this made American expansion into this land extremely difficult because they would have to fight against the aligned native and spanish powers to gain control of this land.
a) On May 10, 1775 the Second Continental Congress all of the people from the
Most people have seen or heard of the reality television show Toddlers and Tiaras. The show is often what people first think of when people think of pageants,in fact, when it comes to the topic of beauty pageants, most of us will readily agree that they are looked down upon. Where this agreement usually ends, however, is on the question of whether beauty pageants should be banned. Whereas some are convinced that they should be banned, others, including myself, maintain that they should be allowed, considering, they build self confidence, foster girls ambitions and help develop critical thinking.
Dazzling dresses, sparkling jewelry, and perfect makeup sounds like every girl’s dream, right? Sadly, these are just a few of the things that are used to lure children into the clutches of the detrimental world of pageants. Child pageants may seem to be fun and games, just look pretty to win a prize, but the damages it can do to a young girl brings new light to the subject. Parents are submitting their kids to be judged by fully grown adults, based solely on their child’s incredibly altered appearances. These parades of artificial beauty can lead to both low self-esteem, an inflated self-image and irregular growth in the developing children involved.
The hit TLC show Toddlers and Tiaras welcome viewers behind the scenes of the competitive world of child beauty pageants, showing viewers the glitz and glam of the pageant world. Typically, competitions demonstrate the importance of hard work and practice, teaching contestants valuable life lessons, however, beauty pageants teach contestants that the worth of a person is solely based on their appearance. Beauty pageants are based on physical appearance, customs, and fitness appearance instead of importance factors such as intelligence, achievements, and self-love. Children beauty pageants are extremely exploitive and detrimental to a child’s overall well being, damaging self-esteem and health.
The last reason as to why child beauty pageants have a positive impact on children is because they can earn scholarship money to the college of their choice. For example, a 15 year-old, Nicola Dalryimple, former winner of Trinidad and Tobago Pageant, received a $5,000 scholarship to a college of her choice (“Trinidad and Tobago” 1-2). The many people who say that beauty pageants are nothing but beauty
In the world of beauty pageants many people find themselves entrapped in the expensiveness of the gown, the extravagance of the hairstyle, and how attractive the woman sporting all of this truly is. However, when entered into this arena at a young age, one where you are not fully developed and deep in adolescence, this presents a problem not all are aware of. Many people don’t understand the emotional stress that almost everyone that participates in pageants goes through. Women face various issues after everything has been said and done. A number of pageant contestants start at a relatively young age, some as young as infants, and grow up in this seemingly glamorous world of pageantry, from which they learn to present themselves in a specific way, giving some a false sense of character. As a whole, beauty pageants tend to have more of a degrading and potentially harmful effect on women and children.
“What they are learning basically is that they have one characteristic which is of total primary importance, and that is their body and their attractiveness.” Many people believe that these young children are sacrificing their self image and self confidence when they become older, but there are so many biased opinions about beauty pageants for kids. After seeing young kids spray tanned, in revealing attire and a full face of makeup, beauty pageants are nothing less than blatant objectifications of these young girls. As entertaining and hysterical beauty pageants can be, pageants have raised immense controversy throughout the world.
This paper will explore the negative effects that a beauty pageant has on a child. While many people think that these pageants are an overall good experience for any child this paper contains and explores research paper that will outline the negative effects these pageants have on the children in them, some of them being long term effects. Some of these effects include mental anguish that is formed from children being in these contests and the effects the pageants have on a family as a whole. Together these findings show that perhaps these beauty pageants should not be something that a child should participate in, or be forced into participating in.
Pageants offer many opportunities for young adults and any females that enter. Title holders especially reap the benefits of not just a tiara. Miss America is the most prime example of a pageantry organization that wants girls to feel they can achieve their beauty dreams, whilst not having to give up education and job opportunities. Miss America contestants go through extensive interviewing not seen on TV, and they are to stand behind a cause of their choice that they wish to promote. Miss America contestants are given opportunities for college scholarships at not only the nation level, but state titleholders as well. The Miss America company organizes their contestants to help raise money for the Children's Miracle Network, where they help children and women in need.
“I’m so happy that I won that pageant. Now, we can move onto the pageant that I have been
This last year I held the state position of Miss Wisconsin Job’s Daughter. In this office, I worked as the head of promotion for the state, but also as a role model for the girls. During my term, it was my mission to instill confidence into the girls, encourage them to share their individual gifts and talents, and make them realize their importance. I learned the significance of supporting others, and that a kind word or action can make an impact. One of my duties as Miss Wisconsin Job’s Daughter was to run in the pageant for the title of Miss International Job’s Daughter. This rigorous competition lasted a week, and it consisted of an interview, a test, a public speaking portion, an impromptu question on stage and overall stage presence during the pageant itself. I competed against 32 girls from all over the United States, Brazil, the Philippines, Canada, and Australia. While I was one of the youngest competitors in the pageant, I received first place in the written test, second place in the public speaking portion, and overall won first runner-up. This was an amazing experience that exposed me to other cultures, taught me valuable communication skills, and gave me a plethora of lasting friendships around the world and memories.
The TLC Show, “Toddlers and Tiaras,” is not an accurate representation of all that goes into preparing children for pageants. The show dramatizes the mostly the negative side of childhood beauty pageants. It depicts competitors that want to win strictly based on appearance. Despite the bad reputation that beauty pageants have, they equip young men and women with skills and opportunities such as chances to win scholarships, improving self-confidence and promoting social skills.
Banet-Weiser’s analysis of the Miss America pageant, specifically the 1945 winner Bess Myerson, and the 1995 winner, Heather Whitestone, concludes that the pageant is the site of racialized and gendered national identity, in which moments like the crowning of these women, “contribute to a broader national politics that consolidates whiteness as a dominant ideology” (Banet- Weiser, 68). Thus, as representations of who and what American women, who have historically been used to