'Next Top Model' Saleisha Stowers bucks trend

Don't let the girl-next-door looks and demeanor fool you. Saleisha Stowers, the latest winner of "America's Next Top Model," is one tough cookie.

"It takes a strong black woman to get out there and work the fashion industry," Stowers said in an interview with Newsday. "And I am a strong black woman."Stowers will need to be strong. The modeling world, which The CW's "Top Model" demonstrates repeatedly, is not for the faint of heart. It also doesn't seem to be the place where there are many African-Americans."I would love to see more African-American faces," Stowers says. "We are beautiful. There should be more of us on the runway."There aren't, though. And despite her win, Stowers' well-publicized strut into the world of high fashion has been controversial and somewhat wobbly.

Critics groused that the 5-foot-9 former receptionist from California had an unfair advantage over the other contestants because of her previous modeling experience and ties with Tyra Banks, who produces and presides over the show. Stowers attended Banks' T-Zone camp for girls when she was 14 and reportedly has appeared twice as an extra on Banks' talk show.Stowers says she got on the show "fair and square." Early on in the competition, she defended herself against two housemates who implied through their questioning that she did not deserve to be there.

"Honestly it's a competition," said Stowers, who was so riled that she lept onto a bed. "I don't care who attacks me. I'm here to win and I probably will."She did. With razor-sharp focus, a cheery personality and a knock-'em-dead strut, Stowers took down her competitors one by one, including Bianca Golden, who once called her "almost plus-sized" and Chantal Jones, a stunning blue-eyed blonde - who many fans thought was a shoo-in to win.Stowers is the third African-American model to win on the reality show. She received a management deal with Elite Model Management, a $100,000 contract with CoverGirl cosmetics, and the cover and a six-page fashion spread in the January issue of Seventeen magazine.

Still, Stowers knows that winning the TV show does not guarantee career success. You won't see her on the runway during the upcoming Fashion Week because her agency is not sending her to any castings."Saleisha already has commitments including CoverGirl and doing publicity for America's Next Top Model," says Jose Covarrubias, her booking agent at Elite. She also needs to become more seasoned, he adds. However, he says, "We will definitely send her to the next one."Stowers is up for the challenge. "'America's Next Top Model' is only a door-opener," she says. "I know it is up to me to make my career."

America's Next Top Model: More Accolades for Tyra

Top Model rubbed quite a few people the wrong way. Her previous connections with Tyra from her T-Zone camp smelled fishy to many. Some America's Next Top Model fans are disgruntled and actively considering not watching the show any longer.

But while her previous fans are finding themselves disenchanted with Tyra, she is still earning praise from a variety of different areas.

Tyra's daily take show has been nominated for a GLAAD Media Awards, presented by the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation. She, along with Oprah Winfrey, were nominated in the Outstanding Talk Show Episode category. Tyra was specifically chosen for her episodes titled "Gay Athletes & Rappers: It's Not in to be Out" and "Transgender Kids.”

GLAAD's president Neil Guiliano said, "This year's extraordinary nominees exemplify the important strides we have made as a community toward creating a truly inclusive society…GLAAD'S persistent, effective efforts to educate media professionals continue to yield a growing body of stories about lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people that are more compelling, more honest and more real than ever before."

The awards will be handed out on March 17 in New York.

Meanwhile, the America's Next Top Model host and judge continues to build credibility for her daytime chat show by landing some pretty major names. With the presidential race become more and more frenzied, she's managed to land Barack Obama, John Edwards, and Hillary Clinton. Tyra went out on a limb with Hillary by finally coaxing her to talk a bit more about the experience of living through the Monica Lewinsky ordeal.

Whether or not the fans she gained through America's Next Top Model will ever regain their initial affection for the former supermodel remains to be seen, but in the meantime, she might not always feel the love from ANTM fans, but she can definitely find it elsewhere.

Interview With America's Next Top Model Winner CariDee English

'Top Model' winner CariDee English on her modeling career and her battle with psoriasis.

Since winning the reality television series America's Next Top Model in December 2006, CariDee English, a small-town girl from Fargo, North Dakota, was plucked from relative obscurity to be the new look for CoverGirl Cosmetics, the newest fresh face on the cover of Seventeen, and affiliated with the largest modeling agency in the world, Elite Model Management.

However, she feels her greatest accomplishment is being the spokeswoman for the National Psoriasis Foundation, in which she is a motivational speaker and gives encouragement to psoriasis sufferers. CariDee has even lobbied in Congress for the passage of a bill which would ask the National Institutes of Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the Institute of Medicine to increase spending on finding a cure for psoriasis. You can read more about her role with the National Psoriasis Foundation here.

Wikinews reporter Mike Halterman sat down and talked with CariDee earlier in the week to discuss her own issues with psoriasis, how she has helped other sufferers in her role as spokeswoman for the Foundation, as well as what it's like to be a new model in New York City and her thoughts on how the fashion industry operates today.

This is the second in a series of articles with America's Next Top Model contestants. Articles will be published sporadically


Intro and her Super Bowl pick

Mike Halterman: Hi! How are you doing today?

CariDee English: Fine! Doing good.

MH: So I heard you went to the Super Bowl last Sunday.

CE: Oh, no, I didn't get to go! I've been in New York for Fashion Week. Did someone tell you I went?

MH: Yeah, Jose [her manager at Elite Model Management] told me you had. Well, did you have a team to root for, anyway?

CE: Of course! I was going for New York! This was the first time that a team won in the state I was living in! I'm from North Dakota, and we don't have any professional teams, so it was pretty cool.


From North Dakota to the big city

MH: I'd imagine it's a big change moving from small-town North Dakota to New York City. What do you remember thinking in your first weeks in New York City?

CE: I don't know...it was kind of overwhelming! I remember being overwhelmed. There were trash and pigeons everywhere...and an endless amount of walking! But you know, I just love how big it is and how there are just...endless dreams. You have the opportunity to accomplish so much here.

MH: Did you miss home or ever think about just moving back to North Dakota?

CE: No, I could never move back to North Dakota. What would I do?

MH: Well, you were a fashion photographer, you could have went back there for some work...although I don't know how much you'd be in demand there.

CE: Yeah, it wasn't even an option! Not a thought.


On representing the National Psoriasis Foundation

MH: So you're currently a spokeswoman for the National Psoriasis Foundation. What have you found, in your interactions with others who have had the disease, are their reactions once the disease manifests itself?

CE: I think a lot of people try to hide away from it, and I want people to be comfortable in their own skin, no pun intended. I just want people to be comfortable with themselves, because I know I hid under clothes for years.

MH: In your experience as ambassador, what story touched you the most?

CE: It really makes me upset because there are a lot of great medications out there and the government won't fund payments for patients. There was a 9-year-old boy who was on a great medicine and then his insurance dropped him from it. It came back and it's now covered 95% of his body. You know, it's just heartbreaking to be able to be treated for it and then not be able to afford it.

MH: Were your reactions to psoriasis and discovering you had it comparable with those of other people?

CE: No, because I understood what it was when I had it. Other people may be scared of it when they discover they have it, because they might not know what it is.

MH: Did relating with others with the condition give you a personal boost?

CE: Oh, yeah, absolutely. Seeing a little boy, healing and still living life, that's an inspiration to me. We're all just trying to be here for each other. No one person is above anyone else, we're just trying to support each other and find a cure together.

MH: As an ambassador for psoriasis awareness, you've become a role model of sorts to young girls and women who are afflicted with the disease. What kind of advice have you given to people coping with the disease?

CE: "I have psoriasis, I don't let psoriasis have me." Don't live your life through your disease.

MH: Do you think that having had obstacles like your psoriasis and depression have helped you enter the industry more grounded than other girls who may not have had such rough experiences?

CE: Yeah, I mean, I only know my own experiences, but I didn't take anything for granted. I was grateful for being able to start in such a difficult industry and having that background to be able to overcome things on my own.


On her former photography work

MH: You've worked behind the camera before you stepped in front of it; has this helped you as a model?

CE: It's helped me to understand the relationship and connection you need to have between a model and photographer, and what the photographer wants out of the model, like what art they want to create, and the importance of it.

MH: Would you like to step back behind the camera at some point?

CE: For fun, absolutely. I love doing that for fun, and...recreational, for sure. It'll always be a hobby of mine.

MH: Experiencing both the photography side of the spectrum as well as being in front of the cameras, what do you deem extraordinary in terms of the aesthetic? What is beauty to you?

CE: Beauty is having confidence. If a woman is confident in front of the camera, and exudes that confidence, then there's no room for error. So, confidence, definitely.


Top Model and her modeling career

MH: Obviously your experience on Top Model was very positive. However, has the experience impacted you negatively at all?

CE: I think the only negative thing about it is that fans seem to think that if you're not on the cover of all these magazines, that you're not getting work. Not everything is covered equally. It's a different age now that a lot of celebrities are on the covers of magazines, and people go "Oh, well, this show hasn't produced a Top Model!" We've been doing a lot of work in a lot of different things and I think people forget that.

MH: I've been following your career, and I've noticed you haven't been doing a lot of runway work as opposed to print modeling, which you've done a lot of. Do you have any fashion shows lined up in the near future?

CE: I've actually done a lot of runway work, but the thing is that the runway work never gets as much press as the print work does, so I've done a lot more shows than what people have seen on the Internet. It's difficult now too, because a lot of girls have to be skinny skinny now, and I think I have a good walk and a good spring/summer look, but you know, I'm a size 0. 0 or a 2. I went in to see a fashion designer for the winter designs and I knew I wouldn't be thin enough for this job, and I'm 125 pounds at 5'10". I'm a grown woman, I'm not prepubescent anymore, so if that means I'm not thin enough and that means I'll lose a job, then you know, I'll take that risk. I'm healthy.

MH: What is more fun to you, photoshoots or runway?

CE: I love photoshoots. Runway is great because you do quick hair, makeup, wardrobe, and you get a huge rush from that, but with photoshoots there's a sense of accomplishment, I can see what I've done and get totally "in my zone."

MH: We know you as wacky and fun-loving on Top Model. Since you've come to New York, what's the wackiest thing you've done?

CE: It's a hard question! I can't think of any...every moment is wacky in New York! I think one good moment was when my brother and I went out to Times Square at maybe 2:30 in the morning. We went to this 24-hour Starbucks and drank all this coffee, and then we had an artist sketch our picture, and then we went on a buggy ride and we didn't end up getting back home until 5 in the morning. It was a lot of fun.

MH: How do you reconcile the demands of a potentially busy modeling day with the need to let loose and be free-spirited?

CE: I'd just jump off the Empire State Building with a parachute. [laughs] No, I like to go out with friends, go dancing, hit the clubs, but if I have a photoshoot the next day, I just want to stay in with my boyfriend.


Looking back and what's coming next

MH: It's been over a year now since you won Top Model. Was 2007 all you hoped it would be?

CE: Yeah, and more! It was great. It was the best year so far.

MH: What one achievement was your favorite?

CE: Honestly, being the spokesperson for the National Psoriasis Foundation. Not just in the United States, either; I've been to Canada, all over Europe, I loved Switzerland, and then down to Argentina. I'm a global spokesperson for psoriasis, and that's fun to do.

MH: Anything coming up work-wise you want to share with us?

CE: Yep! I'm starting my own show with MTV, where I'll be the executive producer and host.

MH: What's it going to be about?

CE: I can't say anything yet! But it'll be very funny.

MH: And finally, do you have any special words for all the Top Model fans out there?

CE: Oh, Gosh, I have millions of words! [thinks about what to say] I feel like I'm accepting an award! I want to thank all of you for supporting me and I lean on you guys more than you realize.

America's Next Top Model: Tyra Banks Talks About Her Personal Life

The theme song for America's Next Top Model has creator and host Tyra Banks purring “Wanna be on top?” She's made it there, but she's saying that it is in fact, as the cliché indicates, quite lonely to be at the pinnacle of success.

She's been working at a fevered pace for several years, turning America's Next Top Model into a reality TV powerhouse, and growing her daily talk show. She admits, though, that her success has definitely cost her some peace in her personal life.

She talked to Essence magazine about her current life, saying "I'd go to work and women would be crying in my arms on the talk show. But then I'd go home and put my key in my door and ... nothing: no friends, no husband, no children. I feel so full when I'm at work but so empty when I come home."

She's talked recently about wanting to adopt, but admits she's lost sight of that goal over recent years, saying, "After the talk show started, and I had [Americas Next] Top Model at the same time, it engulfed me so much that it dulled my maternal instinct…I hope that when I get more of a handle on my life it comes back."
Although she might talk of loneliness, Tyra has been romantically linked to investment banker John Utendahl, age 50, but it would appear she's not at a place where her relationships would take precedence over her career. In response to the speculation that she moved to New York from Los Angeles in order to pursue her relationship, she responded, "I'm very insulted by that rumor. I employ a lot of people; their livelihoods rest on my shows. The move to New York was a decision I made with my manager. It was not about a man."

International versions

Afghanistan: Afghanistan's Next Top Model

Aruba: Aruba Model Search

Australia: Australia's Next Top Model — aired on FOX8 and the first two cycles were hosted by Australian supermodel Erika Heynatz. The third cycle aired in March 2007 and was hosted by Jodhi Meares. Casting for Cycle 4 is complete and the season is now in production.

Belgium: Top Model Belgium 2007 — currently airing first cycle; hosted by Belgian supermodel Ingrid Seynhaeve.

Brazil: Brazil's Next Top Model — The host is Brazilian supermodel Fernanda Motta.

Canada: Canada's Next Top Model: Cycle 1 aired in the summer of 2006. It was hosted by Canadian supermodel Tricia Helfer. Cycle 2, hosted by Jay Manuel, began airing on May 30, 2007 and ended on July 18.

Central America: Super Model Centroamérica — Currently airing; hosted by Costa Rican supermodel Leonora Jimenez

China: China's Next Top Model (CNTM閃亮模坊)— produced by Shanghai Media Group's Dragon TV and filmed in Shanghai. First cycle aired in January 2008 on Sichuan Satellite; hosted by Chinese model Li Ai

Croatia: Supermodel on Nova TV; will air from November 2007 to January 2008

Denmark: Denmark's Next Top Model

Finland: Suomen Huippumalli Haussa or "Looking for Finland's Top Model" will start airing in the spring of 2008 on Nelonen.

France: France's Next Top Model — first cycle aired; hosted by French supermodel Odile Sarron. The second cycle was hosted by Adriana Karembeu.

Germany: Germany's Next Topmodel — finished its first two cycles; hosted by German supermodel Heidi Klum. Third cycle begins January 2008.

Ghana: Top Model Ghana — first African version of the franchise.

Honduras: Amiga Top Model — Has finished airing its first cycle.

Hungary: Hungary's Next Top Model — finished its first cycle; hosted by Hungarian supermodel Viktória Vámosi and later by Panni Epres.

Israel: The Models — called HaDugmaniot, it has finished two cycles. Third cycle will start in January 2008.

Italy: Italia's Next Top Model — first cycle aired in the fall of 2007.

Kazakhstan: Я красивая, or "I'm Beautiful", finished airing in October 2005 on Hit TV. The show was associated with the Russian version of ANTM.

Malaysia: I Wanna Be A Model [20][21] The first Top Model franchise featuring both genders; has finished 2 cycles; hosted by Lynn Lim and Dylan Liong.

The Netherlands: Holland's Next Top Model — currently completed 3 cycles, cycle 4 will be expected March 2008; hosted by Dutch supermodel Daphne Deckers.

Nigeria: Nigeria's Next Top Model — second African version of the franchise.

Norway: Norway's Next Top Model — was originally part of Scandinavia's Next Top Model; hosted its own version in 2006 and 2007.

Philippines: Philippines’ Next Top Model — aired in 2007; hosted by Filipina beauty queen Ruffa Gutierrez-Bektas.

Russia: Russia's Next Top Model — airs on CTC, hosted by Russian director Fyodor Bondarchuk (Федор Бондарчук) and has finished three cycles. It is currently in its fourth cycle.

Scandinavia: Scandinavia's Next Top Model — consists of contestants from Norway, Denmark and Sweden. It is broadcast on TV3 and is hosted by Kathrine Sørland, Anne P, and Mini Anden (Cycles 1 & 2) and Malin Persson (Cycle 3), each from Norway, Denmark, and Sweden respectively. Due to 3 countries being involved, the format differs from the original. It has completed three cycles.

Slovakia: Slovakia's Next Top Supermodel — called H'lada sa Supermodelka, the first cycle aired from January to March 2007.

Spain: Supermodelo— its first cycle was aired on Channel Cuatro; the first two cycles Supermodelo 2006 and Supermodelo 2007 have finished airing.

Sweden: Sweden's Next Top Supermodel — was originally part of Scandinavia's Next Top Model; has finished its first individual cycle; hosted by Swedish model Vendela Kirsebom.

Switzerland: Switzerland's Next Supermodel — currently airing.

Taiwan: Taiwan Supermodel No. 1 — Second Top Model franchise that featured both genders.

Thailand: Thailand's Next Top Model — has finished its first cycle; hosted by Thai supermodel Sonia Couling.

Turkey: Turkey's Next Top Model — called "Top Model Turkiye's", has finished one cycle, hosted by Turkish model Deniz Akkaya.

United Kingdom: Britain's Next Top Model — has completed three cycles; originally hosted by model Lisa Butcher, but since Cycle 2, it has been hosted by supermodel Lisa Snowdon.

Show Statistics

Winners

Oldest winner: Yoanna House (Cycle 2), 23 years old
Youngest winner: Nicole Linkletter (Cycle 5), 19 years old
Tallest winners: Yoanna House (Cycle 2), Danielle Evans (Cycle 6) & CariDee English (Cycle 7), all 5'11" (180 cm)
Shortest winner: Eva Pigford (Cycle 3), 5'6.5" (168 cm)
Heaviest winner: Yoanna House (Cycle 2), 138 lb (63 kg)
Lightest winner: Jaslene Gonzalez (Cycle 8), 110 lb (50 kg)
Most consecutive challenge wins: Naima Mora (Cycle 4) & Saleisha Stowers (Cycle 9), both 2 wins
Most collective challenge wins: Naima Mora (Cycle 4), 4 wins
Most consecutive first call outs: Eva Pigford (Cycle 3) & Jaslene Gonzalez (Cycle 8), both 2 times
Most collective first call outs: Jaslene Gonzalez (Cycle 8), 4 times
Fewest first call outs: Adrianne Curry (Cycle 1), Yoanna House (Cycle 2), Nicole Linkletter (Cycle 5) & Danielle Evans (Cycle 6), all 1 time
Most collective bottom two appearances: All winners appeared twice except for Naima Mora (Cycle 4, once) & Jaslene Gonzalez (Cycle 8, none)
Most consecutive bottom two appearances: Eva Pigford (Cycle 3) & Danielle Evans (Cycle 6), both 2 times
No bottom two appearance: Jaslene Gonzalez (Cycle 8)
Fewest challenge wins: Nicole Linkletter (Cycle 5) & Danielle Evans (Cycle 6), both 0 wins
Most CoverGirl of the Week wins: Naima Mora (Cycle 4), 10 wins
Fewest CoverGirl of the Week wins: Nicole Linkletter (Cycle 5) & Saleisha Stowers (Cycle 9), both 0 wins

All Contestants

Total number of contestants: 129
Oldest contestants: Robin Manning (Cycle 1) & Jade Cole (Cycle 6), both were 26 years old
Youngest contestants: 18 contestants were 18 years old — the show's minimum age — at the time of taping.
Most-represented state: California, 21 contestants
Tallest contestant: Lisa Jackson (Cycle 9), 6'1.5" (186 cm)
Shortest contestants: Eva Pigford (Cycle 3), 5'6.5" (168 cm)
Heaviest contestant: Diana Zalewski (Cycle 8), 198 lb (90 kg)
Lightest contestant: Shandi Sullivan (Cycle 2), 106 lb (48 kg)
Most consecutive challenge wins: Yaya Da Costa (Cycle 3), 5 wins
Most collective challenge wins: Yaya Da Costa (Cycle 3), 5 wins
Most collective bottom two appearances: Ann Markley (Cycle 3), Bre Scullark (Cycle 5) & Jade Cole (Cycle 6), all 5 times
Most consecutive bottom two appearances: Lluvy Gomez (Cycle 4), Bre Scullark (Cycle 5), Whitney Cunningham (Cycle 8) & Jenah Doucette (Cycle 9), all 3 times
Most consecutive first callouts: Joanie Dodds (Cycle 6), 3 times
Most collective first callouts: Joanie Dodds (Cycle 6), 5 times
Most CoverGirl of the Week wins: Naima Mora (Cycle 4), 10 wins
No bottom two appearance: Joanie Dodds (Cycle 6) & Jaslene Gonzalez (Cycle 8)
Contestants part of a double elimination: Rebecca Epley & Tiffany Richardson (Cycle 4)
Contestants part of a non-elimination: Jayla Rubinelli & Nicole Linkletter (Cycle 5)
Contestants who quit: Cassandra Whitehead (Cycle 5) & Ebony Morgan (Cycle 9)
Contestant eliminated outside of the judging panel: Magdalena Rivas (Cycle 3)
Contestants who refused to participate in photo shoots: Robin Manning & Shannon Stewart (Cycle 1), Anna Bradfield (Cycle 2) & Monique Calhoun (Cycle 7)

Pictures from Americas Next Top Model




The Show

America's Next Top Model (often shortened to Top Model or abbreviated as ANTM) is a reality television show in which a number of girls compete for the title of America's Next Top Model and a chance to start their career in the modeling industry.


The show was created and is hosted by television personality, former supermodel and talk-show host, Tyra Banks, who also serves as the lead judge and executive producer of the show. The first "cycle" premiered in May 2003 and was one of UPN's highest rated shows. The show's seventh cycle was the first of the shows among regular programming on UPN's successor network, The CW, and thus far is the network's highest rated series. The show will continue until at least the 2009-10 season. The opening theme is performed by Tyra Banks and is produced by Rodney "Darkchild" Jerkins. Banks co-produces the show with Ken Mok and Anthony Dominici. For the 2006-2007 television season, ANTM was the #1 show in average viewers on The CW