Saturday, November 26, 2011

Miss Nomer

The Mount Desert Islander exposed the seedy underbelly of beauty pageants with a revealing item in its paper this week.

Well, that might be an overstatement, but the newspaper published an article about the fact that "Miss Bar Harbor" Rani Williamson, who won the Miss Maine USA Pageant last weekend, isn't really from Bar Harbor at all (Williamson is on the right in the photo above).

After the BDN ran a story about the pageant (which focused mostly on pageant co-hosts Ashley Hebert and Ashley Underwood, two Maine natives who have starred on national reality television programs), word of the pageant winner apparently got around Bar Harbor. Many longtime local residents were confused, the Islander reported, because they had never heard of Williamson. Turns out, she is from Cumberland Center (near Portland) and graduated from Greely High School - not from MDI. She chose "Miss Bar Harbor" simply because it is her favorite place in Maine, a pageant official told the paper.

In his BDN-hosted blog, reporter Seth Koenig explains the contestant-naming process. Pageant contestants can choose any name they want, he said, provided it hasn't already been chosen by a competitor in the same pageant. It can be a place name or the name of a sponsor, such as "Body By John" or "Regency Spa."
That's why the pageant had a Miss Bar Harbor who really has no specific connection to Bar Harbor, other than having enjoyed her visits to the town. It may be misleading to many casual observers, but those familiar with the pageant likely knew her stage name did not necessarily reflect her hometown. It could be argued that, for anyone searching for absolutely honesty and raw unfiltered accurate representations of reality, beauty pageants are probably not the best place to go looking for it.

On the other hand, Williamson's choice of a stage name can be interpreted as a high-profile compliment to the town, which otherwise would not have had any connection to the contest. The fact that Williams won the pageant can only help publicize Bar Harbor, which seeks to lure millions of tourists every summer.
For those comfortable with the imprecise linkage between contestants and their stage names, not having Williamson keep her "Miss Bar Harbor" appellation while she competes in the Miss USA Pageant on NBC next June might be seen as a missed opportunity.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

The Odd Death of Rev. Bob Carlson

This story is just stunning to me. Before I say anything else, I need to point out that I never met Rev. Bob Carlson and have no idea whether the allegations that are starting to leak out are true or just absolute falsehoods.

It's hard not to leap to comparisons to the Penn State scandal, despite the myriad reasons not to do so. Both men were well respected in their communities, but the similarities pretty much stop there. One is alive and has been criminally charged, the other is dead and has not been charged (and never will be). One is a national news story involving a football coach, and the other is a local tale about a local pastor that has barely made a flicker outside the state.

But for the Bangor area and much of Maine, this is huge. There was NO ONE in the region who was held in higher esteem than Rev. Bob Carlson. He was a man of the cloth, one known for his advocacy for mental health and other health care issues, and known for his support of local law enforcement and the criminal justice system. The testimonials that the political elite in the Bangor area and in Maine put out on Sunday, after news broke of his death, illustrate how he was held in such high regard.

The thought that he would even commit suicide has been so repellent to some people that, in comments on the BDN website, they have insisted that it was an accident - that he must have fallen over the side of the bridge and fallen to his death while trying to prevent someone else from ending their life. So to have it leak out that he was being investigated by police for allegations of child molestation just seems completely bizarre. In less than a week, he went from being publicly honored by the Boy Scouts to being a dead preacher accused of sexually abusing children. It boggles the mind.

Again, I have no clue whether the allegations against Rev. Carlson are true. I know many people have made up their minds about him, right or wrong, in support or in condemnation. I know this must be devastating to many, his family especially, and to others who held him in such high esteem. And I am sure many will continue to sing his praises, regardless of the reasons behind his sudden, unexpected and ignoble demise. How the people of Maine will ultimately reconcile the reputation Rev. Carlson had in life with the ugly rumors rippling to the surface in the wake of his death, or if they will, I have no idea.

What I do have is links. I'm posting those that I can find below in the hopes that they can shed some light on the life of Rev. Bob Carlson in ways that I otherwise cannot.
One thing I can't link: the many obituaries on the BDN website that indicate which memorial services Rev. Carlson officiated.