ANDREW GLAZER -- Reporter’s Notebook
ANDREW GLAZER
My credentials for judging a livestock fashion show Wednesday night
were fairly limited. For starters, I didn’t know what the hay a livestock
fashion show was.
But it was nice to doff my journalistic objectivity for an evening,
breathe sawdust and judge contestants and their sheep on their clothing,
behavior and poise.
The “Lads and Lassies Contest,” I learned, was sponsored by wool
farmers and designed to showcase wool clothing. The clothing, of course,
was worn by both sheep and sheep owner.
I was seated at a table with two other judges: Bonnie Pettey, a
teacher and veteran judge of sheep from Bloomington, and Michael Mann, an
affable 4-H youth advisor who lives in Irvine.
“I’m not a farmer and I don’t know much about agriculture,” Mann said,
easing some of my own insecurities. For this was certainly the closest
this Philadelphia-born and bred reporter had been to livestock.
For the hour I sat in the stands before the competition -- the Supreme
Ewe Contest ran late -- I wondered whether I would be a competent judge.
Would the roughly 200 mothers, fathers and grandmothers of the young
models seated in the bleachers judge me right back?
“Just check to see whether the dress the girl is wearing is
appropriate for her age,” said Bonnie, coaching the two novices. “How
does it look on them?”
OK, pretty obvious so far, I thought.
“Is it too tight? Are the hems crooked?”
Uh-oh. What’s a hem?
“Is it pressed correctly? Do the colors match as they should?”
Help.
“Are the animals well-groomed? Do they behave well?”
I think I just got paged. Must be breaking news. Gotta run!
But the music started -- I think it was Billy Joel’s “Piano Man” --
and the seven children in the ages 9 to 12 division lined up, sheep in
tow.
As each contestant walked down the runway, some smiled and maintained
an almost eerie eye contact, throwing the archetypal runway pose that you
can only learn after hours of training. Others looked as awkward as a 9-
to 12-year-old dragging a poncho-wearing sheep should.
I scribbled their marks on a scorecard, awarding points to the
well-trained models whose pleats were crisp, struts fluid and grins
frozen on their well made-up faces.
“Weren’t her cuffs a little long?” Bonnie asked as my top choice
strolled by. I started to erase my score, but then scrawled it back in
much darker. Would Justice Rehnquist back down to Justice Scalia? I think
not!
“Wasn’t she a little prissy?” Michael asked as someone I had
determined would be the next Brooke Shields floated down the runway. He’s
right, I thought and dropped her score a few points.
At least the sheep were easy to judge. Some were dirty while others
weren’t. Some high-stepped with the grace of a ballerina. Others bucked
and baaaah-ed like sheep.
And then the absurdity of the contest dawned on me: We were rewarding
the sheep that acted human and the humans who would best fit in a herd.
But then again, who am I to judge?
*
ANDREW GLAZER is a Daily Pilot staff writer.
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