Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Virginia Biochemist Crowned Miss America After Colorful On-Stage Science Demonstration

Virginia Biochemist Crowned Miss America After Colorful On-Stage Science Demonstration
Donald Kravitz / Getty Images

Miss America pageant is for more than just beauty. Organizers wanted to make it clear the 99th Miss America competition was not like beauty pageants of old, and their winner did just that.


Virginia biochemist Camille Schrier won the crown minutes after wowing the crowd with a colorful science experiment. Dressed in a lab coat, she gave a fun chemistry demonstration of the catalytic decomposition of hydrogen peroxide.

Camille Schrier performs a science experiment (Charles Krupa/AP)

Schrier, a native of Pennsylvania, said she hopes to “break stereotypes about what it means to be a Miss America in 2020" by being a “woman of science" who is authentic to herself.

“I'm not the beauty queen," she said. “I'm the brand ambassador for this organization and I'm more than just someone with a crown on my head."

No longer called contestants, the 51 “candidates" competed for a $50,000 scholarship and the “job" of Miss America, a one-year paid position they hope to use as a public platform for their “social impact initiative."

For the second year in a row, women were not judged in a swimsuit or how they look in an evening gown. Instead, a series of interviews and talent demonstrations determine who is best qualified to wear the crown.

“To make it relevant for these young women, it was important for us as a scholarship and service organization to make sure that we were reflective of this generation, meaning that you no longer had to be defined by some sort of ideal," said Regina Hopper, president chief executive of the Miss America Organization.

Schrier, spoke on stage about having tackled an eating disorder, said she decided to compete for Miss America after the swimsuit competition was ditched, along with other changes made to modernize the organization.

“I kind of figured that I would never get on that stage because I was a woman who did not want to get into a swimsuit on stage. And I didn't have a performing talent, which is really ironic now," she said, adding how she is the first Miss America to win with a science experiment, a presentation she takes to schools.

Camille Schrier wins the title (Charles Krupa/AP)

Schrier is a graduate of Virginia Tech with dual bachelor of science degrees in biochemistry and systems biology, and is studying to obtain a doctor of pharmacy degree.

Hopper acknowledges there has been some resistance from “old pageant" people who liked the traditional way of doing things, she said there has been greater interest in the competition since the changes were made.

Asked on stage whether the Miss America organization should change even more and allow married women and women with children to participate, Schrier and Hill said no. Schrier told reporters afterwards that she believes the job would be too busy for a mother.

This year's multi-day event was held at Mohegan Sun, a tribal casino and entertainment complex in Connecticut – only the second time in its history it has left Atlantic City, New Jersey.

Miss America also switched from ABC back to NBC to broadcast the glitzy finale to an estimated 4.5 million viewers. And for the first time, preliminary events and the finale — held in Mohegan's 10,000-seat arena — were streamed live on the NBC app.

Schrier succeeds 2019 Miss America Nia Franklin, a classically-trained opera singer from New York.

More from Trending

Nathan Lane
The Howard Stern Show/YouTube

Nathan Lane Opens Up About The Devastating Thing His Mom Said To Him When He Came Out As Gay

There are two types of people when it comes to first becoming acquainted with Nathan Lane: they either immediately assume that he's gay, or they assume he is a really good actor.

With some of his top achievements being The Birdcage, The Producers, Modern Family, and The Lion King, Nathan Lane is both. He's an incredible, immersive, and funny actor, but when it comes to his being gay, he's said in interview after interview that it's something he just assumes "everybody knows" about him.

Keep ReadingShow less
screenshot of Fox News interview with Karoline Leavitt before White House Correspondents Dinner
Fox News

Karoline Leavitt Made An Awkwardly Prescient Joke About The Correspondents' Dinner Before The Shooting

By now, most people are aware that a man reportedly armed with a shotgun, a handgun, and knives was able to gain access to the venue, the Washington Hilton hotel, where the White House Correspondents Dinner was taking place.

This was to be the first time MAGA Republican President Donald Trump was to ever attend the event as a sitting President. Trump had attended previously in 2011 and 2015 during Democratic President Barack Obama's presidency.

Keep ReadingShow less
Elizabeth Smart accepting an award
Frazer Harrison / Staff/Getty Images

Elizabeth Smart Reveals Her Pivot To Bodybuilding With Photo Of Her Ripped Body—And People Are Impressed

After enduring a truly horrific kidnapping experience that no one deserves to be put through, Elizabeth Smart has gone on to achieve several noteworthy accomplishments.

The child-safety activist has published numerous books, been honored with several awards, was the subject of an acclaimed Netflix documentary, and even competed on the short-lived Fox reality competition The Masked Dancer.

Keep ReadingShow less
AI-generated MAGA influencer Emily Hart
@emily_hart.nurse/Instagram

Man In India Reveals He Conned 'Super Dumb' MAGA Fans Into Paying For His Med School With Fake AI Influencer

There's a sucker born every minute, as the saying goes, and the AI revolution seems to have increased that rate exponentially—especially where MAGA is concerned.

A man in India recently shared with Wired that he's made so much money scamming MAGA devotees using AI that he now has enough to go to medical school.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump
Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images

Trump's Dismissive Reaction To Concerns About Insider Trading Amid His War With Iran Speaks Infuriating Volumes

In an article for CounterPunch titled "Trump’s Casino Royale: The Iran War," Matthew Stevenson wrote:

"Given that Donald Trump conceives of the presidency as a casino—why else would he be trying to makeover the White House to look like the Bellagio?—it makes sense that his administration has turned the war with Iran into an insider-trading scheme."
"It used to be that wars were fought to make 'the world safe for democracy' or 'to end all wars' (a World War I expression), but now wars are fought so that Trump insiders can get rich quick in prediction markets or to help the president’s family (and its remittance men) corner the Persian Gulf oil market."

Pointing out who is profiting off inflating oil prices and creating false scarcity, Stevenson added:

Keep ReadingShow less