#15: Little Miss Stoneybrook . . . And Dawn

Start from the beginning
                                    

Luckily, Jessi and Mallory refuse to participate on the basis it's sexist. You stick to your convictions, girls. Thank god you're here. However, Mallory's sisters Clare and Margo hear about the pageant. Mallory sticks to her beliefs and refuses to coach the girl, so Mrs. Pike asks Dawn for help, to which Dawn enthusiastically agrees.

The first handwriting chapter we have is for Kristy watching over Karen, Andrew, and David Michael. Karen hears about the pageant (from Kristy) and wants to enter. Her talent will be singing and tap dancing, although she has no training. Then Watson and Kristy's mother return from their birdbath auction.

Jeff is confirmed to be moving back to California after an effusive week for the kid. They argue again, even though they were laughing just a few days before. This really doesn't have anything to do with the pageant. Although, Dawn is using the pageant to distract herself from Jeff. It doesn't matter, as it's a B storyline.

We have an A storyline! Dawn is at the Pikes' house, coaching Margo and Clare.

Clare and Margo raced into the bedroom they share. Before I could say a word, they opened their closet and began peeling their clothes off. Margo reached for her bathing suit. On the front was a gigantic alligator, its mouth open in a grin full of big triangular felt teeth.

"This is what I'm wearing," she announced.

"For what?" I asked

"The pageant," Margo replied impatiently.

Fuck yeah, she should wear whatever the fuck she wants, but Dawn is playing this ridiculous thing straight and asks that they don't think about outfits at the moment. They switch to their talents. They don't play instruments, they can't dance, and they can't sing. Margo chooses to recite a poem from memory, but she doesn't think it's enough. She wants to recite the poem while peeling a banana with her feet, which grossed me out. Then she took a bite from it while reciting the poem and I retched a little.

Mary Anne babysat for the Perkins' and, of course, the girls hear about the pageant. It turns out that Myriah can both dance and tap. Myriah has also taken gymnastics and theater. When their mother comes home, the girls ask her if they can participate in the pageant, to which she says,

"In any pageant, or in any game or contest, there are winners and there are losers. You might be a winner, Myriah, and that would be wonderful. Daddy and Gabbie and I and even Laura would be very proud of you. But you might be a loser, too. There are going to be lots more losers than winners. And I want you to know that we'll be proud of you if you lose. We'll be proud of you for having the courage to be in the pageant, and for the work and rehearsing you'll do."

That is a very good way of putting it. No sarcasm here. It's the best lesson in the book, besides the final lesson, but we'll get that soon.

When Claudia sits for Charlotte, they decide to give Stacey a call. These were the days when you had to have a calling card and it cost, like, fifty bucks a minute or something, so this is a big deal. After the call, to distract from separation from their best-friend, Claudia somehow convinces Charlotte to join the pageant as well, even though Charlotte "would rather read" (a girl after my own heart).

Mallory and Jessi sit for the Pike kids and Margo is still rehearing "The House That Jack Built" complete with banana. I'm disgusted just by thinking about it. Tarantino I am not. All the children start to argue as Adam tries to screw up Margo and Claire tries to sing louder to cover up the fighting. Mallory attempts to quiet them down but it doesn't work and the chapter ends with headaches.

At the next BSC meeting, there's a bunch of pageant talk, especially about the last question. You know, the one where the contestants either shine with their brilliance or become an .

It's obvious that Charlotte really doesn't want to do it, Margo and Claire are the only interesting girls entering because they're so wacky, and Myriah is the only one who has the stage presence and talent to win. Claire would make any pageant awesome and I have the receipts.

"Margo," I said, "What is your greatest wish?"

"Global peace," she replied immediately.

"Yes, but say it in a nice sentence."

"My greatest wish," Margo said, looking rapturous and angelic, "is for global peace. That would be very . . . nice."

I only hoped the judge wouldn't ask her to explain what she meant. Margo didn't have the vaguest idea what global peace was.

"Great," I told her. "Now Claire, if the house were on fire and you had time to rescue three things, what would they be?"

"I would rescue," Claire began sweetly, "my family members, global peace, and the first extinguisher."

Ha! If I were the judge, I'd say she wins.

Jeff leaves for California. Remember when you could just walk all the way to the gate before you had to say goodbye? It's weird to see on television shows and it's weird to read in books. It's certainly more dramatic to say good-bye at the gate, your loved one looking back wistfully over their shoulder as they wave and pass into a long hallway away from you. It's not the same if you drop them off outside as they fumble with their luggage, all while an attendant is yelling at someone, "Hey! This is the drop-off you can't wait here! Get to the cell phone lot!"

Finally, the big pageant day arrives. The girls line up, including a girl named Sabrina Bouvier, who, besides being a distant relative of Marge Simpson, does the pageant thing all the time. It starts with the introductions and Claire immediately starts saying hi to everyone she knows in the audience and is promptly cut off, to which I say, "LET HER SPEAK!" and then I would be promptly cut off and kicked out of the pageant.

During the talent portion, Karen sings, that Sabrina girl sings "Moon River" and is bad, Margo does her banana poem, and Charlotte runs off the stage in tears. I blame you, Claudia. Myriah gives a good answer to the interview portion ("I would say to the people who were making the wars, 'Now you stop that. You settle this problem yourselves like grown-ups. Our children want peace.'") and Claire says that her greatest hope is that Santa Claus is real. Karen says that if her house were on fire, she would save her stuffed cat, her blanket, as many toys as she could carry, and finally her brother Andrew or her pen that writes in three colors. Sabrina does the "global peace" answer and Margo goes after and freezes up since Sabrina stole her stock answer.

Myriah ends up coming in second with Sabrina first – just like when Lisa Simpson enters the Little Miss Springfield contest. Of course, Sabrina isn't struck by lightning, causing Myriah to take up her duties.

The girls learn that while Myriah should have won, Sabrina had the look that the judges like and the make-up of a twenty-five-year-old. Claudia realizes that she forced Charlotte to participate. Jeff calls and seems to be in a better place after moving.

I didn't hate this one as much as I thought I would. Some of the reasoning for the BSC to participate in the pageant is flimsy, but Mallory and Jessi were always there to point out the stupidity and sexism of the whole endeavor. Beauty pageants are a common storyline from many episodic shows (and book series), from Parks and Recreation to the aforementioned The Simpsons. Just like those properties, the beauty pageant participant usually learns that it's not about the one with the most talent, but the prettiest.

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