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Just last week, 24-year-old Génesis Dávila had her Miss Florida title revoked less than a week after receiving it, when she sealed her own fate by Instagramming evidence that she violated pageant rules by using the services of a makeup artist unaffiliated with the organization. Sometimes, the reasons are much less damning than racism or even nudity. And who can forget Carrie Prejean, who, though she didn’t win the Miss USA pageant, emerged as its most notorious contestant after making anti-gay marriage statements during the pageant, then losing her Miss California title a few months later when her sex tape surfaced?īut it’s not just posing in the buff that gets a woman stripped of her pageant duties. That same year, Danielle Lloyd lost her Miss Great Britain title after it came to light that she’d been involved with one of the pageant judges and was scheduled to appear topless on the cover of Playboy. In 2006, nude photos of Katie Rees, then Miss Nevada, emerged on the Internet, and the blond beauty was forced to give up her crown. Williams proved there’s life after controversy by enjoying a successful, decades-long career as a singer and actress post-pageant - perhaps becoming one of the most successful pageant winners of all. In 1984, actress Vanessa Williams became the poster child for pageant scandal when she was famously stripped of her Miss America crown after nude photos of the then-beauty queen surfaced in Penthouse magazine. When it comes down to it, anti-bully crusading has become almost evangelical in its fervor.This content is not available due to your privacy preferences. We are a culture for whom bully spotting has become a sport, bullying itself a ubiquitous label (and damning accusation) fueled by a breed of helicopter parents who want to protect their kids from every stick and stone, and of cable news commentators who whip them further into a frenzy. But like a stereo with the volume turned too high, all the noise distorts the facts, making it nearly impossible to judge when a case is somehow criminal, or merely cruel. None of this is to say that bullying is not a serious problem, or that tackling it is not important. "The picture created in the media," says Norwegian psychologist Dan Olweus, a world-renowned bullying expert, "simply does not fit with the reality.".
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The reality, say social scientists, is that bullying is neither more extreme nor more prevalent than it was during the days of pigtails dipped in inkwells-and in fact, over the past decade, it's even gotten better. The larger question may not be whether these students should be held accountable-they should-but whether the bullying of today is truly any worse than the bullying of past. But you know what got me through that? Time." And Adrianne Curry recounts being called a "worthless dyke" in school and says, with the beautiful distance of hindsight, "These people were insignificant pricks. Perez Hilton admits, "I went through a point in my life where I was suicidal daily. The YouTube channel, which should be required viewing in every middle and high school in America, has, in a just one week, become crammed with hundreds of videos from both gay and straight adults, from celebrities and regular folks, offering light at the end of tunnel of hell that can be adolescence. After the death of Billy Lucas, columnist and author Dan Savage decided enough was enough and launched the It Gets Better Project, a YouTube channel of messages of encouragement and survival aimed at gay and lesbian youth. Everything that makes being young and vulnerable today potentially horrendous - access to a video camera, the postings on a Facebook page - can also be the very tools that can save a teenager's life.