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Roker makes beauty call on
Miss USA
Reported July 12, 2005
By RICHARD HUFF
DAILY NEWS TV EDITOR
Miss USA 2006, Tara Elizabeth Conner, celebrates her win.
Until recently, the only chicken cutlets Al Roker knew about went on a
grill.
He now also knows that the rubber, removable breast enhancers used in beauty
pageants are also called chicken cutlets.
"I'm thinking Perdue," said Roker of learning about the nonedible cutlets.
He got firsthand experience with the beauty trick as the executive producer
of "Uncovered: The Hidden Lives of Miss USA," a new documentary airing
tomorrow night at 9 on E! Entertainment.
The program goes behind the scenes at the Miss USA Pageant of 2006. Roker
and his crews spent three weeks leading to the annual pageant, culminating
with the show itself.
"I always took these things for granted," Roker said. "It's kind of like,
you may like sausage, but you don't want to see it made. You may like Miss
USA, but I think you'll actually enjoy what goes on."
"Miss USA," for the record, airs on NBC - the same network of Roker's
morning home on "Today" - and is produced and owned by Donald Trump.
The NBC connection had nothing to do with the show, Roker said. Instead, it
stems from a chance meeting at a fund-raiser, with 2004 Miss USA Shandi
Finnessey. The beauty gave Roker insight into the show and he was taken with
the fact that Miss USA shares a New York apartment with Miss Universe, and
Miss Teen USA.
"I thought, lo and behold, this is a reality show," Roker said. "And if it
does well enough, it could wind up a series."
Roker said the E! show includes some beauty aspects, some drama and some
humor.
"It's one of those shows that has a little something for everyone," said
Roker, who produced the show with Lisa Sharkey and Sara Nichols.
There's no set timetable for a reality series based on the Miss USA Pageant,
Roker explained.
And it won't be the first. Recently, the people behind the Miss America
Pageant said they would launch a reality show tracking contestants up to the
ceremony, which now airs on CMT.
Still, Roker said there are stark differences between the two events.
"I think there is more of a sense of fun with the Miss USA pageant," Roker
said. "It's not quite steeped in Americana. The problem the Miss America
folks had was it didn't evolve. They got left behind. Miss USA has more of a
sense of humor, a sense of fun."
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