In dust that is nothing less than the peak of 2023, the newly crowned Miss France is getting a lot of flak for being the first winner in the pageant's 103-year history with short hair and for being too thin.
“People who criticize me for my hair don't bother me, because I can change my hair,” Gilles told French newspaper Le Parisien after winning the contest. “I chose this hair, but I didn't choose my body or my metabolism. I don't understand how anyone can criticize a person for something they can't change.”
Eve Gilles, 20, from Nord-pas-de-Calais, looked lovely when she was crowned on Saturday, with a pixie cut that complemented her perfectly. It looks like he's using his haircut to make a political statement, though.
The length of her hair and her weight drew criticism on social media that blamed the judges support the “awakening” because they selected a candidate with an “androgynous” appearance. Gilles replied that every woman is different and that should be celebrated not ridiculed.
(Video credit: FOX 26 Houston)
“We are used to seeing beautiful ladies with long hair, but I chose an androgynous look with short hair,” she said after being crowned Miss France. Fox News. “No one should dictate who you are… every woman is different, we are all unique.”
“There is no one way to be Miss Universe or Miss France, and we embrace all looks that meet our stage. We represent the times, and being your unique confident self is the one thing we see reflected in all our winners,” a spokesperson for the Miss Universe pageant said in a statement. People Magazine.
The spokesman has also pointed it out the contest contestants she wore several hairstyles this year and claimed that the last winner of the title, Sheynnis Palacios, also had the shortest hair.
“We saw personal styles and hair of all kinds, and we love it! Short, long, curly,” the statement continued in defense of the hairstyle.
Congratulations to Eve Gilles #MissFrance2024 !! ✨ pic.twitter.com/2CDgQ7iyf5
— Miss France (@MissFrance) December 17, 2023
“Miss France is decided by a combination of a public vote and a jury of seven women. Although Gilles came in third in the public vote, the jury vote allowed her to rise to first place,” wrote Fox News.
Gilles publicly defended diversity after his victory, which seemed very “woke”.
“I want to be a strong woman, I want to be make people aware no matter where you start, no matter what path you take, you can achieve your goals. I want to show people that women are diverse, that we are all beautiful, that we are all different and unique. I'm not unique because of my hair, I'm unique because I'm Eve,” she declared, according to Fox News.
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✅75% PdA 15-34 ↗️ pic.twitter.com/x0yWKxSyw3— TF1 Pro (@TF1Pro) December 17, 2023
Paris-based financial researcher Philippe Herlin criticized Gilles on X: “Miss France 2024 doesn't look like much, but she says the right things. Do you want to bet that next year Miss France will be trans?”
“Are you ma'am or sir?” one commenter wrote to the Miss France official Instagram count seconds NBC news. Another commented: “They absolutely want to do away with classic female codes!”
This is the second year that the Miss France competition has introduced looser restrictions on the appearance of all contestants in the name of greater diversity. There is no longer an age limit for the pageant. too it does not prohibit women that they are married (which makes the title a misnomer), have children, or have tattoos.
FLASH | Miss Nord-Pas-de-Calais, Ève Gilles, is elected #MissFrance2024. pic.twitter.com/U8mZrmPhuO
— Cerfia (@CerfiaFR) December 16, 2023
“Gilles, who is studying maths and statistics at university, represents France's northern Nord-Pas-de-Calais region, the fourth contestant from the region to take home the crown in 10 years.” Euronews reported
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