economie

Miss America Madison Marsh says people just keep getting pageantry and the Air Force wrong

Madison Marsh salutes as President Joe Biden delivers remarks during the D-Day Ceremony in the Normandy American Cemetery.

Breaking these long-held stereotypes was not one she “actively” wanted when she became the first active-duty officer to be crowned Miss America, she said.

“I didn’t step into this role trying or actively wanting to break those stereotypes. I was simply just doing something that I loved,” she said. “In the process of being authentically me and ensuring that I still did all the things that I loved, I was able to break some of those stereotypes and show people that if you have passion in different areas, even if they’re conflicting with one another, you can still get it done.”

Nonetheless, the task came easily to her, she said, as she drew on her own fears and uncertainties prior to attending the US Air Force Academy to quell those in potential future cadets.

After her win in January, Marsh embarked on a national tour, returning to her hometown of Fort Smith, Arkansas, throwing the first pitch at a Nationals game, and giving her fellow Miss America delegates a tour of the Air Force Academy.

Her Miss America title took her overseas as well, speaking with Royal Air Force cadets in the United Kingdom at the world’s largest military air show and commemorating the 80th anniversary of the D-Day landings in Normandy, France.

And in her 10-month reign as Miss America, Marsh said she is already seeing an impact.

“This young freshman came up to me with her and her mom, and she told me that she was really considering not going to the [US Air Force] Academy anymore until she had seen that I became Miss America because that showed her that she could still be feminine in and out of uniform, that she could still be herself, that she could still take charge of her outside passions while still serving,” Marsh said.

Second Lt. Madison Marsh sits on the ramp of a C-130J during a flyover of Normandy, France.

If there’s one thing that people will take away from her reign, Marsh said she hopes she’s shown that putting on a uniform — be it crown and sash or flight suit — adds to your identity, not takes away from it.

“Now we can start to talk about these misconceptions that the general public has, showing that you don’t have to give up these vital, passionate parts of yourself to put on that uniform,” Marsh said.

“My passion for serving the pancreatic cancer community still exists when I put on that uniform every morning,” she added, “and that’s what the military now wants us to move toward: recognizing we don’t have to give up these outside passions to still serve.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

https://www.businessinsider.com/madison-marsh-miss-america-pageant-air-force-myths-2024-10