Miss Universe 2005

Miss Universe 2005

Date 31 May 2005
Presenters Billy Bush, Nancy O'Dell
Venue Impact Arena, Bangkok, Thailand Thailand
Broadcaster NBC
Entrants 81
Placements 15
Debuts Latvia
Withdrawals Austria, Botswana, Cayman Islands, Chinese Taipei, Estonia, Ghana, St. Vincent & the Grenadines, Sweden
Returns Albania, Indonesia, Mauritius, Namibia, Sri Lanka, United Kingdom, US Virgin Islands, Zambia
Winner Natalie Glebova
 Canada
Congeniality Tricia Homer
 US Virgin Islands
Best National Costume Chananporn Rosjan
 Thailand
Photogenic Gionna Cabrera
 Philippines

Miss Universe 2005, the 54th Miss Universe pageant, was held on 31 May 2005 at Impact Arena in Bangkok, Thailand. Natalie Glebova of Canada was crowned by Jennifer Hawkins of Australia at the event's conclusion. 81 contestants competed in this year.

Results

Countries and territories which sent delegates and results
Impact Arena in Bangkok, Thailand

Placements

Final results Contestant
Miss Universe 2005
1st runner-up
2nd runner-up
3rd runner-up
4th runner-up
Top 10
Top 15

Special awards

Awards Contestant
Miss Congeniality
Miss Photogenic
Best National Costume

Semi-final scores

Delegate Evening Gown Swimsuit
 Canada 9.442 (1) 9.064 (4)
 Puerto Rico 8.644 (9) 8.828 (5)
 Dominican Republic 9.224 (2) 9.450 (2)
 Mexico 9.004 (3) 9.541 (1)
 Venezuela 8.833 (6) 9.250 (3)
 Peru 8.860 (5) 8.650 (6)
 Latvia 8.645 (8) 8.641 (7)
  Switzerland 8.954 (4) 8.596 (8)
 Israel 8.411 (10) 8.280 (9)
 USA 8.680 (7) 7.950 (10)
 Greece 8.404 (11)
 Indonesia 8.394 (12)
 South Africa 8.211 (13)
 Norway 8.141 (14)
 Trinidad & Tobago 8.094 (15)

     Winner
     First runner-up
     Second runner-up
     Third runner-up
     Fourth runner-up
     Top 10 finalist
     Top 16 semi-finalist
(#) Rank in each round of competition

Order of announcements

Top 15

  1. Mexico
  2. Latvia
  3. Dominican Republic
  4. Canada
  5. South Africa
  6. Venezuela
  7. Norway
  8. Switzerland
  9. USA
  10. Indonesia
  11. Trinidad & Tobago
  12. Israel
  13. Peru
  14. Greece
  15. Puerto Rico

Top 10

  1. Puerto Rico
  2. Canada
  3. Peru
  4. Switzerland
  5. Latvia
  6. Dominican Republic
  7. USA
  8. Mexico
  9. Venezuela
  10. Israel

Top 5

  1. Mexico
  2. Puerto Rico
  3. Dominican Republic
  4. Canada
  5. Venezuela

Judges

Final telecast

Contestants

Notes

Debuts

Returns

Last competed in 1996:

Last competed in 1999:

Last competed in 2000:

Last competed in 2002:

Last competed in 2003:

Replacements

^ Cheryl Ankrah was originally crowned Miss Trinidad and Tobago Universe but was dethroned after she was accused of not fulfilling her duties and becoming overweight.[1] Although Ankrah initially got an injunction to prevent another pageant being held, a Judge overturned that and a second Miss Trinidad and Tobago pageant was held.[1] The winner of the second pageant, who represented Trinidad & Tobago at Miss Universe, was Magdalene Walcott.

Crossovers

Miss World
Miss International
Miss Earth
Miss Intercontinental

Miss Tourism International
  • 2009:  Croatia - Jelena Glišić (Semi-finalist)
Miss Teen International
Reina Sudamericana
Reinado Internacional del Café
Miss Europe
Miss Baltic Sea
Miss Scandinavia
Miss Asia Pacific World
  • 2013:  Egypt - Meriam George (1st runner-up)
Elite Model Look

Host city

Thailand publicized its bid to host the pageant 10 July 2004, during a visit by Jennifer Hawkins, Miss Universe 2004, to the country.[2] At the time, Chile, China, and Greece were also being considered to host the event.[2] One month later, it was announced that Bangkok, Thailand had been informally selected to host the competition, at a cost of US$6.5 million.[3] The cost was to be funded by the Thai government in an attempt to boost tourism.[4] In October the proposal faced difficulties when the Thai government were slow to provide the promised funds, which discouraged prospective sponsors,[5] leading Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra to become personally involved to make sure that plans were not derailed.[6] The organization awarded official hosting rights to the Matching Entertainment company in December 2004, after an unsuccessful attempt by a different company, Showcase Thailand 2005.[7]

In February 2005, after the Thai government confirmed plans to back the pageant, the Deputy Prime Minister refuted claims that the event would be held in Khao Lak, a resort town devastated by the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami, but confirmed that Southern Thailand would host events prior to the final competition.[8]

2005 was the second time the pageant was held in Bangkok.[9] The city also hosted the Miss Universe 1992 competition, won by Michelle McLean of Namibia.

International broadcasting

These are some of the networks outside the United States (telecasted on NBC and Telemundo) that showed the 2005 Miss Universe pageant live (or recorded earlier) in their respective countries and territories:

Note: In Latin America, TNT took the Miss Universe television rights for basic cable. However, this contract didn't affect the rights acquired for the traditional free-to-air networks, such as Brazil's Band, Colombia's Caracol TV, Mexico's Televisa or Venezuela's Venevisión.

References

  1. 1 2 Brown, Loren (2005-03-21). "Trinidad's local Miss Universe franchise can hold new pageant to select replacement, judge rules". Associated Press.
  2. 1 2 "Thailand proposes to host next Miss Universe contest". Organisation of Asia-Pacific News Agencies. 2004-07-10.
  3. "Thailand to host Miss Universe pageant in 2005". Agence France Presse. 2004-08-10.
  4. "Miss Universe pageant in Thailand to push tourism". Hindustan Times. 2004-08-11.
  5. Intarakomalyasut, Nondhanada (2004-10-23). "Thailand slow to fund Miss Universe 2005 event". Bangkok Post.
  6. "Miss Universe bid gets push from Thailand prime minister". Bangkok Post. 2004-11-06.
  7. "Matching Entertainment to host Miss Universe". fnWEB. 2004-12-14.
  8. "Govt denies plans to stage Miss Universe in tsunami resort". OANA. 2005-02-18.
  9. "TAT gears up for Miss Universe 2005". The Nation. 2004-08-18.

External links

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