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Miss America announces broadcast with live audience after year of virtual events

The 100th Miss America will be crowned before a live audience at the Mohegan Sun casino in Connecticut following a year of virtual appearances and delayed competitions due to the pandemic, organizers announced Thursday.

“To be standing here today is exciting, especially with what everyone has been through over the course of the last 12 months,” said Mohegan Sun President and General Manager Jeff Hamilton.

The organizers had to postpone the planned 2020 broadcast and competitions until 2021 and extend the reign of the current Miss America, Camille Schrier, for a second year. This year’s event and broadcast are planned for December, with specific dates yet to be announced.

Camille Schrier, of Virginia, right, reacts after winning the Miss America competition at the Mohegan Sun casino in Uncasville, Conn., Thursday, Dec. 19, 2019. At left is runner-up Miss. Georgia Victoria Hill and at rear is Miss. America 2019 Nia Franklin. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa) ORG XMIT: CTCK106
Miss America organization plans to crown its 100th winner before a live audience in 2021.  
CHARLES KRUPA, AP

The Miss America organization said Thursday it had reached an agreement to hold the multiday competition’s events and nationally televised finals for three years at Mohegan Sun, a resort casino in southeastern Connecticut that is owned and operated by the Mohegan Tribe.

In 2019, the organization had announced it was leaving Atlantic City, New Jersey, for a second time.

Schrier, a former Miss Virginia who gave a colorful chemistry demonstration at Mohegan Sun in 2019, performed virtual demonstrations in her backyard during the pandemic to get kids interested in science and made “appearances” from a studio in her basement, discussing drug safety and opioid awareness, said Shantel Krebs, chair of the Miss America Board of Directors.

After winning the 2019 competition, Schrier was awarded a $50,000 scholarship and “the job of Miss America,” succeeding 2019 Miss America Nia Franklin, a classically trained opera singer from New York. Victoria Hill of Georgia, a passionate foster care advocate, was named the first runner-up and was awarded a $25,000 scholarship.

No longer referred to by organizers as a “pageant,” the competition, now dubbed “Miss America 2.0,” has seen multiple changes since it ditched swimsuits in 2018 in an effort to keep up with the times.

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