Miss Venezuela 2008

Miss Venezuela 2008
Date September 10, 2008
Presenters Maite Delgado
Daniel Sarcos
Entertainment David Bisbal, Oscar D'León, Wisin & Yandel [1]
Venue Poliedro de Caracas, Caracas
Broadcaster Venevisión
Entrants 28[2]
Winner Stefanía Fernández
Trujillo
Congeniality Adahisa Peña
Apure
Photogenic Natasha Domínguez
Sucre

Miss Venezuela 2008, the 55th Miss Venezuela pageant, was held in Caracas, Venezuela, on September 10, 2008, after weeks of events. The winner of the pageant was Stefanía Fernández, Miss Trujillo.

The pageant was broadcast live on Venevisión from the Poliedro de Caracas in Caracas, Venezuela. At the conclusion of the final night of competition, outgoing titleholder Dayana Mendoza (Miss Venezuela 2007 and Miss Universe 2008) crowned Stefania Fernández of Trujillo as the new Miss Venezuela.[3]

The contest, whose winner will attempt to become the first woman to win a Miss Universe title for her country in consecutive years, was marked by the elimination of the titles of Costa Oriental and Peninsula Goajira (now represented solely by Zulia state) and the consequent reduction to 28 delegates.[4] On July 29, Osmel Sousa assumed further control of the selection process by directly appointing the 28 final contestants from a pool of 73 candidates. Although winners of regional and state contests have never been guaranteed participation in the final Miss Venezuela pageant, this direct selection resulted in the unprecedented elimination of the representatives of Falcón, Lara, Sucre, Vargas and Nueva Esparta. In addition to the two aforementioned titleholders from Zulia, a total of seven state winners were consequently stripped of their titles, which will be carried in the final pageant by other candidates.[5]

Schedule of events

Results

Final ResultsContestant
Miss Venezuela Universo 2008
Miss Venezuela Mundo 2008
Miss Venezuela International 2008
1st Runner-Up
2nd Runner-Up
Top 10

Special awards

Official delegates

[2]

StateContestantAgeHeightHometown
Amazonas Elia Karina Rivero Molnár 22 176 Valera
Anzoátegui María Milagros Véliz Pinto 22 178 Guacara
Apure Adahisa Peña Arteaga 25 176 Valencia
Aragua Ligia Elena Hernández Frías 23 177 Maracay
Barinas Yoselis María (Yosy) Meléndez Medina 22 180 Guatire
Bolívar Kenia Barreto González 19 174 Ciudad Guayana
Canaima Estefanía de los Angeles Guzmán Cuenca 18 176 Cabimas
Carabobo Gabriela Nidioska Concepción Guzmán 18 180 Puerto Cabello
Cojedes Jorelys Gabriela Quintana Pozo 20 176 San Cristóbal
Delta Amacuro Nathaly Andreína Navas Pérez 21 173 Caracas
Dependencias Federales Dayana Andreína Borges Mora 18 181 Cagua
Distrito Capital María Lourdes Caldera Méndez 25 172 Caracas
Falcón Fanny Domingues Da Assuncao 19 185 Caracas
Guárico Hildaly Dellanira Domínguez Núñez 21 174 Caracas
Lara Nusat del Valle Durán Pérez 20 177 Tovar
Mérida Alejandra Suan Sánchez Guerrero 19 178 Mérida
Miranda Viviana Lisbeth Ramos Puma 18 172 Guanare
Monagas Laksmi Rodríguez de la Sierra Solórzano 22 178 San Cristóbal
Nueva Esparta Natascha Alexandra Brandt Rodríguez 19 176 Caracas
Península de Araya Charyl Marlyz Chacón Ramírez 23 175 Maracay
Península de Paraguaná María Alessandra Villegas Azpúrua 21 174 Caracas
Portuguesa Verónica Susana Arcay Andrade 20 171 Valencia
Sucre Natasha Alexandra Domínguez Boscán 18 173 Caracas
Táchira Jennipher Katherine Bortolas Vargas 17 175 San Cristóbal
Trujillo Stefanía Fernández Krupij 18 177 Mérida
Vargas Marielis del Valle Ontiveros González 20 181 Caracas
Yaracuy Tiffany Denise Andrade Roche 19 178 Caracas
Zulia Gabriela Alexandra Fernández Ocanto 22 174 Maracaibo

Notes

References

  1. Archived June 30, 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  2. 1 2 "Internet Archive Wayback Machine". Web.archive.org. 2011-07-18. Archived from the original on September 27, 2011. Retrieved 2012-12-01.
  3. "Miss Trujillo Stefanía Fernández fue electa Miss Venezuela 2008". El Universal. Retrieved 2008-09-10.
  4. "Mundo Miss". Mundomiss.blogspot.com. Retrieved 2012-12-01.
  5. "Eligen las candidatas al Miss Venezuela". Panorama.com.ve. Retrieved 2012-12-01.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, January 24, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.