Showing posts with label Julia Morley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Julia Morley. Show all posts

31 July 2013

Miss World Philippines 2013 attracted only 31 applicants


Twenty-six candidates vying for the Miss World Philippines 2013 crown are presented to the media at the Solaire Resort and Casino in Pasay City on Wednesday, July 31. The winner will join 119 candidates from other countries at the coronation night in Indonesia in August for the Miss World 2013 pageant.

21 July 2013

China's two Miss World crowns were bought, Miss World is the most corrupt pageant

(Miss World 2012, Wen Xia Yu)

I am now convinced, without a doubt, that the two crowns won by China at Miss World pageant have been bought by the Chinese government or the Chinese people from Julia Morley, the owner of the pageant. I said this because of what I have read from an article published at Globaltimes.cn.

With this being said, my previous notion that Miss World is the most corrupt pageant on earth was just vindicated.

04 July 2013

Maja Cotič is Miss Slovenia World 2013


Now that a new winner was proclaimed to represent Slovenia at Miss World 2013 pageant in Indonesia on 28 September 2013, the number of confirmed delegates to this pageant owned by Julia Morley is now 86.

05 February 2010

Would you choose Miss Earth over Miss World?

I am sure you would pick Miss World over Miss Earth if you are asked to choose between the two.

It won't surprise me. Afterall, Miss World is the oldest among all the 4 grandslam pageants while Miss Earth is only celebrating its 10th year anniversary. Julia Morley's pageant has been broadcasted in most parts of the world while Carousel's can only been seen in Philippine television.



Miss World attracts more participating countries every year of around 100 beauties but Miss Earth is catching up with 80 plus girls. Most beauty pageant fans believe Miss World has more beautiful participants than Miss Earth every year. But personally, I believe this is not true especially if we compare the ladies who competed last year in both pageants. Miss Earth had more quality contestants than Miss World. In fact, Miss Earth produced the most competitive and most stunning girls in the Top 5 of any international pageants last year.

If most of us will choose Miss World, Vietnam did the exact opposite over the question on which of the two pageants they will keep to host. The Province of Khan Khao dropped Miss World 2010 but they kept Miss Earth 2010.

This is definitely a blow on Julia's face but a sure victory for the lesser Miss Earth. I can't imagine what Julia might be thinking now but I am sure the Carousel staffs are grinning from ears to ears.

I can only think of one valid reason why Miss Earth was favored. Hosting this pageant is lot cheaper than the USD 10 million Vietnam will be needing to bring Miss World.

With this, I personally believe Khan Khoa just did the most practical thing to do. The Vietnamese government can still market their tourism with Miss Earth with a lesser budget than spend 10 million without a guarantee they can get this back.

So, kudos to Vietnam for the wise decision.

04 February 2010

Miss World 2010 is going to Sanya, China AGAIN?

Miss World is not Miss World without controversies. Since time in memorial, this London-based pageant has been plagued by scandals. The 2010 edition is not an exception. The pageant has not even started yet but it is already drawing the attention of pageant fans worldwide.


Last week, it has been announced by Miss World Organization through its official website that the pageant will take place this year in Vietnam in November. Actually, the announcement did not come as a surprise because as everybody knows Julia Morley, the owner of the pageant and Ksenia Sukhinova, the then Miss World winner, were in Vietnam in 2008 to sign the contracts. The announcement was only a formality.

What excited the fans was the scenario that both Miss World and Miss Earth pageants will be taking place at the same country on the same month.

Read my post here about Miss Earth being hosted by Vietnam in November.

But news broke out that the main sponsor of Miss World backed out because of a dispute on the venue. Two provinces, Tien Giang and Khanh Hoa were caught in the middle of the dispute.

RAAS, a pharmaceutical company, is providing USD 10 million for the pageant and they wanted it to be held in the Province of Tien Giang. However, the government of Vietnam through its Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism approved the pageant to be held in the province of Khanh Hoa, in Nha Trang City.

Since this is the decision of the government, Mr. Hoang Kieu, the president of RAAS company can't do anything so he willingly gave up the right to organize the Miss World 2010 to Khanh Hoa Province.

The problem came when the Province of Khanh Hoa announced that it is not willing to spend USD 10 million just to sponsor the pageant. No one from Khanh Hoa can afford to shell out the amount needed to host Miss World 2010.

In another development, Hoang Kieu and the RAAS company will instead seek the permission of the Vietnamese government to host Miss World 2011 or 2012.

Now there is a rumor that if Miss World 2010 will not be held in Vietnam, it will be moved back to Sanya, China. Sanya hosted the pageant for 4 years - from 2003 to 2005 and in 2007.

07 December 2009

Miss South Africa Tatum Keshwar Brings Miss Universe to Miss World

Everybody, let's take a look back at the last Miss Universe pageant that was held in the Bahamas. Let me refresh your memory about the dress for the opening number. But focus your attention on Miss South Africa Tatum Keshwar. Notice that graceful catwalk with the floral white dress? You only see that on Miss Universe 2009.



After failing to get a title at Miss U, Tatum decided to try her luck at Miss World 2009 which is currently taking place in her home country. She is definitely hoping of getting the title this time around - on her second try. Let's check on how she is doing right now.


Oh, nooo! Have you noticed that? Look at that floral white dress. Was that the one she wore at Miss Universe? I guess so!  Then I was wrong that the dress is exclusive only for Miss Universe.

Does Tatum think she's still competing at Miss Universe and not on Miss World? Or does she run out of dresses? She did not only bring herself from Miss U to Miss World but also the dress she wore from the previous pageant.

Donald Trump and Julia Morley, what do you wanna say about this?

15 May 2009

Mister World 2009 will be hosted by South Korea

Eighty countries will compete for Mr. World 2009, it was recently announced in London. For the very first time the event will be held in Korea, in September.

Julia Morley said, 'I am so delighted that we will have the opportunity to showcase the beautiful country of Korea to the rest of the world as our contestants battle it out for the title of Mr World.

Previous winners from the Mr World pageant came from Belgium (1996), Venezuela (1998), Uruguay (2001), Brazil (2003), and Spain (2007).

Spain's Juan Garcia Postigo has been reigning since March 2007. 

12 May 2009

Inside the Miss World summit

As ten of the world's most beautiful women meet in London, it seems a good time to talk about world peace - and grouting.

If you didn’t know, you wouldn’t guess. There’s Kimberley, who talks with pride of her grouting skills, Denise, who wanted to be an archaeologist but ended up as a councillor in Nice, and Linda, a single mother who was once voted entrepreneur of the year in Iceland. They do not, on the face of it, seem to be a group of women with a great deal in common. Not with each other, and not with any of the seven other women gathered in the room at the Dorchester Hotel.

The others, admittedly, start to give the game away. There is Azra, with the lustrous hair and deep brown eyes, Zi Lin with the flawless complexion and quite possibly the longest legs in the world, and the remarkable Tatana, who seems to have fallen off some Eastern European production line for identikit blonde sex kittens. Miss Worlds every one, spanning more than half a century of the world’s most celebrated — and vilified — beauty pageant, and who’d have known?

Why they were there does not matter for the moment: we will get on to that later. But the fact is that this strange assembly of miscellaneous women is the largest gathering of former Miss Worlds in almost a decade, and an unmissable opportunity to take a look at a cultural phenomenon that has attracted fascination and loathing, but never a great deal of insight. Oh yes, and it was also a great chance to meet a whole bunch of really beautiful women.

When I first mentioned what I was doing, there was a lot of heavy-handed humour from friends and colleagues about the arduous nature of the task. Meeting a whole room full of Miss Worlds? And you actually get paid for this? Well, yes. But the one I most wanted to meet wasn’t Ksenia Sukhinova, the 21-year-old Russian blonde who is the current holder of the title, or the fragrant Zi Lin Zhang, the first winner from China and the current face of L’Oréal in Asia, lovely though they might be; it was Kimberley Santos from Guam. She’s really interesting.

Kimberley, 48, who took the crown in 1980 after Germany’s Gabriella Brum resigned, has not had a conventional life, post-Miss World. After living for a while with her husband in Tokyo (where they had a son), they moved first to Paris (where they had another son) and then to London (where they had a third; “I didn’t want to move any more after that,” she says). Living in Greenwich, she decided to fulfil a long-held ambition by becoming . . . a special constable.

“It was something I had always been interested in,” she said. “I remember my first call. It was to a really cute house with lace curtains and figurines like your grandmother has. The door was opened by this old man who was naked. He had been stabbed in the groin with a knitting needle. His wife said he had been getting frisky. ‘I don’t want that when I’m knitting,’ she said. You just don’t know what goes on behind people’s doors, do you?”

After that she started a building company with a colleague who had just retired from the force. “We did everything — kitchens, bathrooms, we had a nice little business going.” Did the former Miss World actually get her hands dirty? “Oh yes,” she said, “I had my overalls and everything — the jokes were amazing, as you can imagine.” She was, she says, “an excellent grouter”.

She now lives in North Carolina, where she is a guardian ad litem, a court-appointed representative for children who are in the care of social services. Her charges include some teenage girls now, which she describes as a novelty for her. “It is a bit scary — you have no idea.”

If Kimberley was the contestant who was so naive back in the day that it took her a while to realise she was the only one not to have a full manicure — “I thought, ‘Oh, you’re supposed to polish your nails?” — then Maria Julia Mantilla Garcia, 24, the 2004 winner from Peru, had a very different story to tell. A while back she became the first Miss World to admit having had cosmetic surgery, in her case on the nose and breasts. It happened in early 2004, when she came under pressure from the organisers of Miss Peru.

“Most of the girls had had operations,” she said. “You see it a lot more in Latin America. At first I did not want to do it, but the organisers were looking at all the girls and saying, maybe you need that done. I was not really happy at first, but in the days that followed I thought, ‘I’ve done it now. I cannot change it’.”

Would she consider ever having work done again? She makes a sign of the cross as if to ward off evil. “Never”.

As the women are waiting to have their photograph taken, a telling moment occurs. There has been some confusion about what they should wear for their picture, and while some have turned up in cocktail dresses, looking as glamorous as hell, others have turned up in jeans. One of them, Lisa Hanna, is not pleased: she wants to go back to her hotel and change. But there is a blonde woman standing next to her who really couldn’t care less. “I don’t mind,” she says. “I’ll stand at the back.” Such modesty, from a woman who once had the world at her feet.

She turns out to be Linda Petursdottir, 39, the 1988 winner who now runs Iceland’s first women-only spa and a small chain of health clubs. “This is not my lifestyle,” she says, looking at the recent winners, with their micro-skirts and pristine make-up. “I’m very down to earth.”

So, winning Miss World — was it a good thing for her? “It has its pros and cons,” she says, cautiously. “Iceland has a population of 300,000. Overnight they all knew who I was. They still do. You don’t have any privacy — well, not in Iceland. Here I’m fine. But I used it to my advantage — I opened up a company.”

Sensing that she is not quite so enthusiastic a supporter of the whole Miss World fantasy as some previous contestants, I ask her if she thought that the competition was a bit of an anachronism. “Don’t ask me that question,” she says, shaking her head and pursing her lips. “Let us talk about something else. Ask me about the financial situation in Iceland. It is worse than you can imagine. Interest rates are 30 per cent. The nation is going to go bankrupt, it’s really bad.”

Others, though, love Miss World. They talk about the organisation as if it were family, with Julia Morley — the widow of Eric Morley, who founded the pageant in the UK in 1951 — as the mother figure; indeed she is the reason they are in London at all. On Tuesday night she was made president of the charity Variety International at a ceremony at the Guildhall, and they had all flown in to support her.

Like dutiful pupils, they trot out the old Miss World slogan Beauty With A Purpose, the wonderful spin put on a jaded brand by Mrs Morley a few years ago when she added an award for the best charitable endeavour in a contestant’s home country. They all want to set up foundations, just like Puerto Rico’s Wilnelia Merced — better known now as Mrs Bruce Forsyth — did after winning in 1975. It is to easy laugh at their earnestness, but it is also hard to sneer: in her year (2007), Zi Lin Zhang helped to raise a record $32 million for disadvantaged children.

If there was ever beauty with a purpose, however, it is to be found in Lisa Hanna, 33, the 1993 winner from Jamaica. And boy, what a purpose. When I was introduced to all those Miss Worlds, most shook my hand and gave me the sort of dazzling smile that could stop a man dead in his tracks; Lisa Hanna gave me her business card. “Member of Parliament,” it said. “Opposition Spokesperson, Information and Youth.” And culture, she added when we got talking — her portfolio just keeps on growing.

Most of the women, when asked why they had gone in for Miss World, spoke of childhood dreams of being a beauty queen, or else said they were talked into it by friends or family. Not Lisa Hanna: already a television host by the time she entered, she says she did it because it would give her a greater opportunity to talk about “issues I thought were important.”

But you cannot keep an old Miss World contestant down. As we finish our conversation, she notices a piece of paper on which I have noted all the women’s ages. Who was that, she wants to know, which woman said she was 51? “Oh no,” she says when I tell her. “I don’t think that’s right.” Miaow.

There was one woman, though, who no one was going to bitch about. She was not the prettiest, or the youngest, or the smartest; she was Denise Perrier, who won the third ever Miss World competition, in 1953, and is now 73. She once dreamt of being an archaeologist, but put such thoughts aside after she won; she has since been a model, a Bond girl — Sean Connery made to strangle her with her bikini top in Diamonds Are Forever — and, for 16 years, a councillor in Nice.

With refreshing candour, she remembers how she won: it was the swimsuit competition that did it. “I used to swim a lot,” she said, “and do a lot of sport. I was very tall.” Which is, perhaps, a polite way of saying that she was slimmer and leaner than the other girls, who more fitted the curvier 1950s model of idealised womanhood.

Now she is a woman d’un certain age, and looking terrific with it. In a white trouser suit, and a scarf, she has enough elegance and poise for ten Miss Worlds. One of the others, one who won’t see 40 again, says: “I just want to make sure that I look like her when I’m her age. Trying to keep up with all these young girls is difficult.” She pauses, then adds in a stage whisper: “I’ve not had surgery yet. But I will.”

18 November 2008

Miss Canada to Miss World 2008



Leah Ryerse, a 19-year-old resident of Hamilton Ontario and the Canadian representative for the 2008 Miss World Competition, the largest beauty spectacular on the planet, has high hopes.

"I am thrilled to be a new ambassador for Canada," she said. "I have grown so much this year and trained very hard to be Canada's first Miss World." Canada has never won and Leah is hoping that she can make MWC proud and bring home the crown.

Miss World is the longest running major international pageant launched in Britain in 1951 by Eric Morley. The telecast of the final competition is the world's largest live annual beauty pageant television event with global viewers in more than 200 countries. Aside from raising millions of pounds for charities around the globe under the banner of its 'Beauty with a Purpose' program, Miss World is also credited with directly influencing a dramatic increase in tourism in Sanya, China, host of the Miss World finals from 2003-05. Canada no longer broadcasts this popular program.

"I guess there just wasn't enough motor oil in the mascara. No one hot wired the hot rollers" said Connie McNaughton with a smile, president of Miss World Canada.

Leah Ryerse is the first Hamiltonian to win the Miss World Canada title since Connie Fitzpatrick, now McNaughton, won the title in 1984 and finished second at Miss World that year.

McNaughton now runs the Miss World Canada event here in Toronto. "We believe Leah has the right mix of beauty, magic, compassion and intelligence to really make an impact as our delegate on an international stage. Canada is one of the most culturally diverse countries in the world with some of the most beautiful women and it is criminal that we have not yet won at Miss World."

A second-year student at McMaster University, Leah is pursuing an Honors degree in Health Studies and Social Work. She is also a professional model and has graced the catwalks of many designers' fashion shows and the famous Fashion Cares gala in Toronto.

True to the head office motto, "Beauty with a Purpose", Ryerse and all her fellow contestants diligently fundraised in the months prior to the contest for the Miss World Canada Charity of Choice, S.O.S. Children's Villages, an international organization dedicated to bringing homes, clean water and the essentials of life to orphaned and abandoned children in over 130 countries. All proceeds raised for this worthy cause were donated to an All-Canadian community revitalization project in rural Namibia.

Ryerse departs this Saturday, from Toronto Pearson, Nov. 15th, at 6:00 PM via KLM ROYAL DUTCH AIR692 to compete in the 58th Annual Miss World event. Leah will spend one month in South Africa, where numerous festivals and fund raising events in celebration of women's beauty, talent, fashion and culture will take place. The final competition will be held in Johannesburg on Saturday, 13th December 2008.

17 November 2008

Miss World 2008 Welcomed in Joburg



 
  
The City of Joburg today welcomed the first group of contestants of the Miss World 2008 Festival at the Sandton Sun Hotel in Johannesburg.

The Miss World 2008 Festival hosted by the Johannesburg Tourism Company (JTC ), is a month-long affair comprising of several pageants within a pageant culminating in the Finals scheduled for 13 December at the Sandton Convention Centre.

In a press conference attended by among other dignitaries the Mayor of Joburg, Amos Masondo, CEO of the JTC, Lindiwe Mahlangu, reiterated the positive spin-offs an event of this magnitude will have on the socio-economic landscape of the country.

"One of the reasons we were so excited when the appointment to host the event came, is the massive marketing opportunities and global exposure of the beauty, variety and cultural diversity of our country.

"We have a detailed activity schedule for the ladies which includes, amongst others, visitation of various provinces, a tour of Johannesburg, a Charity Ball, a photoshoot at the iconic Mandela Bridge, tree planting in Soweto, a hospice visit on World Aids Day (1 December) and many others.

"Remember that beauty pageants have gone beyond their classic definition and have become much more involved in many other worthy causes, hence the phrase 'beauty with a purpose'", Miss World 2008 will have a direct impact on a number of Joburg NGO's ranging from those focused on the empowerment of disabled people to those whose mission is to better the lives of troubled youth, says Mahlangu.

According to Julia Morley, CEO and Chairperson of the Miss World Organisation (MWO), MWO looks forward to working with the city of Joburg to promote their world class facilities.

"Our goal is to bring more visitors to your vibrant city so that they too can enjoy the sights and sounds of Joburg and its hospitality," says Morley.


30 August 2008

Miss World Scandals and Controversies

Miss World is not only the oldest pageant among the Big Four, along with Miss Universe, Miss Earth and Miss International, but also the most controversial. The pageant has gone so many trials but all were surpassed with the management of Eric Morley and later on his wife, Julia Morley.

Since Miss World is fast approaching, let's a take a time to brush up ourselves with some of the controversies and scandals of this pageant.

1. In 1960, Argentina's Norma Gladys Cappagli was threatened with disqualification from Miss World when it was reported that she frequently drank alcohol.

2.Britain's Lesley Langley, crowned Miss World 1965, hit the front page of many tabloids for having posed in the nude. She was not dethroned.

3.Scandal broke out again four years later when it was leaked that Sweden's Eva Von Ruber-Staier, Miss World 1969, also had shed her clothes in a photo shoot. She was allowed to keep her crown.

4.When comedian Bob Hope stepped onto the stage of Royal Albert Hall in London to host the Miss World Pageant in 1970, he was bombarded by protesters hurling smoke and flour bombs. Feminists declared the protest a triumph. It became one of a handful of demonstrations in the early seventies that many believed strengthened the feminist movement in Britain.


5. Four months after United States delegate Marjorie Wallace was crowned Miss World in 1973, she was dethroned for dating too many high-profile men. But the crown was not given to the Miss Philippines, Evangeline Pascual who was that year's first runner up.

6. In 1874, Helen Morgan, Miss United Kingdom, relinquished her crown just four days after it was revealed she was a single mother.

7.In 1984, radical animal rights activists campaigned against Miss Venezuela, Astrid Herrera, for her support of toros coleados ("pulling the bulls' tails"), a popular South American rodeo sport. Bolivia's representative also that year was highly criticised by Britain's Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals for wearing of leopard fur. Miss Venezuela went on to win the crown.

8. In 2002, Human rights advocates called for an international boycott of the contest, protesting the treatment of women under sharia, the code of law based on the Koran recently enacted in 12 of Nigeria's northern states. Some Miss World contestants answered the call to protest. Several countries' delegates dropped out of the competition and rallied behind the campaign to save a Muslim Nigerian woman, Amina Lawal, sentenced to be stoned to death for adultery. Amid growing international attention to the case, the Nigerian government promised that Lawal's sentence would not be carried out.

9. Also in 2002 in Nigeria, after a young fashion writer in Nigeria wrote that Prophet Mohammed probably would have chosen one of the Miss World contestants as his wife, old tensions between Christians and Muslims exploded. Riots erupted in the northern city of Kaduna, where two years before, 2,000 people had died in religious clashes. The trouble spread to Nigeria's capital, Abuja. The death toll exceeded 200 people, with hundreds of others reported injured. Miss World was then transferred to London where Miss Turkey, Azra Akin, was crowned the winner. Amina Lawal was freed on September 2003.



10.The 1980 winner Gabriela Brum of Germany resigned one day after winning, initially claiming her boyfriend disapproved. A few days later it emerged that she had been forced to resign after it was discovered that she posed naked for a magazine.

11. In 1976, several countries went on a boycott, because the pageant included both a Caucasian and African representative for South Africa. In yet another shut-out for the nation for its apartheid policy, South Africa competed for the last time in 1977, before it was welcomed back in 1991 as that policy disintegrated.

12. Just days after her 1998 crowning, Israel's Linor Abargil revealed that she had been raped only two months before the pageant. One of the highlights of her year was seeing her accused rapist convicted.

Miss World 2008 in South Africa





On 24 August 2008, Julia Morley, the owner of Miss World announced in the pageant's official website that this year's contest is moved to South Africa. Here is the statement of Morley:


Miss World 2008 will be hosted
by Johannesburg - World Class
African City.


We look forward to welcoming contestants in Johannesburg on Sunday 16th November.


The 58th Miss World Final will be held at Sandton Convention Centre in Johannesburg on Saturday 13th December 2008.

Contestants will enjoy a full South African authentic experience and during their 4 week stay will visit many exciting landmarks of South Africa.


All details will follow.

Julia Morley

Yesterday, 29 August 2008, she released an official statement to the press. Here is copy of the statement from Julia:

It was decided that for reasons beyond Miss World's control, it was necessary to move the final from Ukraine. When this was announced in the media, several cities/countries approached the Miss World Organisation about the
hosting of Miss World 2008 Final.

Each city presented to Julia Morley, Chairman of Miss World Limited, their plan for hosting. This included details of hotel arrangements, a suitable venue to stage the final and the backing of all the parties necessary to stage a successful world class event in their city.

Julia Morley was very impressed with the bid from Lindiwe Mahlunga of the Johannesburg Tourism Company, as it not only fulfilled all the requirements to stage the final but also was backed by a young dynamic team who sincerely believe in their World Class City. Johannesburg is therefore the host city for Miss World 2008

" The speed with which they have implemented their proposal and the professional and dedicated support of Lindiwe and the JTC team have already demonstrated that we can stage the most successful Miss World in our history."

"We look forward to working with the city of Johannesburg to promote their World Class City in over 180 countries during our one month Miss World Festival. Our goal is to bring more visitors to your vibrant city so that they too can enjoy the sights and sounds of Joburg and the hospitality if its people."

Julia Morley