Miss USA's new CEO is bringing 3 big changes to the 2025 pageant - including how contestants are judged
Briefly

Miss USA's new CEO is bringing 3 big changes to the 2025 pageant - including how contestants are judged
""My team knows we have a lot of work to do," Brodeur said. "We have trust to rebuild, we have faith to restore, and we have healing to begin.""
"Voigt and Srivastava's mothers spoke up for pageant queens instead, telling Business Insider at the time that their daughters had endured " eight months of torture and abuse" under Rose's leadership - allegations she denied in an open letter shared in May 2024."
""I've never ever in my life been on anti-anxiety medication," Voigt told Business Insider in August. "I felt like I had to put on a facade to represent the organization because I"
Thom Brodeur became president and CEO of Miss USA as the brand's third owner in five years. The nearly 75-year-old pageant has faced recent scandals, including rigging and bullying allegations and the historic resignations of Miss USA and Miss Teen USA. Strict nondisclosure agreements introduced in 2023 prevented full public disclosure of alleged mistreatment. Families said contestants endured prolonged abuse and emotional harm, and a former CEO denied those allegations. Brodeur announced three major changes for the Miss USA 2025 pageant on October 24 in Reno, Nevada, and emphasized priorities of rebuilding trust, restoring faith, and beginning healing.
Read at Business Insider
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]