Miss USA 2000
Miss USA 2000 was the 49th Miss USA pageant, held at The Grand Palace, in Branson, Missouri on February 4, 2000. At the conclusion of the final competition, Lynnette Cole of Tennessee was crowned by outgoing titleholder Kimberly Pressler of New York.
Miss USA 2000 | |
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Date | February 4, 2000 |
Presenters | |
Entertainment | |
Venue | Grand Palace, Branson, Missouri |
Broadcaster | CBS, KOLR |
Winner | Lynnette Cole![]() |
Congeniality | Michelle Kaplan![]() |
Photogenic | Paige Swenson![]() |
The pageant was held in Branson for the second and final time, at the 4,000 seat Grand Palace Theatre, and was the last pageant held in February. Lynnette Cole becomes the fifth former Miss Teen USA state delegate to win or inherit the Miss USA title in six years and the third to win it outright.
Carson Daly hosted the event for the only time, and color commentary was added for the third time by Miss USA 1996 Ali Landry and Julie Moran. Entertainment was provided by Christina Aguilera, Lou Bega, Brian McKnight and Mark Wills.
Results
Placements

Final Results | Contestant |
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Miss USA 2000 | |
1st Runner-Up |
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2nd Runner-Up |
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Top 5 | |
Top 10 |
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Special awards
Award | Contestant |
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Miss Congeniality |
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Miss Photogenic |
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Style Award |
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Best in Swimsuit |
Final competition scores
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Delegates
The Miss USA 2000 delegates were:
Alabama – Jina Mitchell
Alaska – Laurie Miller
Arizona – Heather Keckler
Arkansas – Whitney Moore
California – Rebekah Keller
Colorado – Tiani Jones
Connecticut – Sallie Toussaint
Delaware – Jennifer Behm
District of Columbia – Juel Casamayor
Florida – Kristin Ludecke
Georgia – Patti Dunn
Hawaii – Michelle Kaplan
Idaho – Brooke Jennifer Gambrell
Illinois – Constance Stoetzer
Indiana – Kristal Wile
Iowa – Jensie Grigsby
Kansas – Tiffany Meyer
Kentucky – Jolene Youngster
Louisiana – Jennifer Dupont
Maine – Jennifer Hunt
Maryland – Christie Davis
Massachusetts – Rosalie Allain
Michigan – Jill Dobson
Minnesota – Paige Swenson
Mississippi – Angie Carpenter
Missouri – Denette Roderick
Montana – Brandi Bjorklund
Nebraska – Valarie Cook
Nevada – Alicia Carnes
New Hampshire – Bridget Jane Vezina
New Jersey – Michelle Graci
New Mexico – Christina Ortega
New York – Carrie Tucker
North Carolina – Portia Johnson
North Dakota – Amie Hoffner
Ohio – Cheya R. Watkins
Oklahoma – Amanda Penix
Oregon – Elizabeth Heitmanek
Pennsylvania – Angela Patla
Rhode Island – Heidi St. Pierre
South Carolina – Lisa Rabon
South Dakota – Vanessa Short Bull
Tennessee – Lynnette Cole
Texas – Heather Ogilvie
Utah – Keri Hatfield
Vermont – Katie Bolton
Virginia – Crystal Jones
Washington – Jamie Kern
West Virginia – Tara Wilson
Wisconsin – Samantha Picha
Wyoming – Rebecca Smith
Historical significance
- Tennessee wins competition for the first time and surpasses its previous highest placement from the previous year. Also becoming in the 27th state who does it for the first time.
- New Hampshire earns the 1st runner-up position for the first time and surpasses its previous highest placement in 1980, becoming its highest placement ever at the pageant.
- Alabama earns the 2nd runner-up position for the fourth time. The last time it placed this was in 1960.
- Georgia finishes as Top 5 for the third time. The last time it placed this was in 1992. Also had its highest placement since 1993.
- Kansas finishes as Top 5 for the second time. The last time it placed this was in 1992. Also had its highest placement since 1996.
- States that placed in semifinals the previous year were Michigan, New York, South Carolina and Tennessee.
- Michigan placed for the third consecutive year.
- New York, South Carolina and Tennessee made their second consecutive placement.
- Alabama last placed in 1997.
- Kansas last placed in 1996.
- Georgia and Iowa last placed in 1993.
- Colorado last placed in 1989.
- New Hampshire last placed in 1980.
- California and Virginia break an ongoing streak of placements since 1998.
Crossovers
Fourteen delegates had previously competed in either the Miss Teen USA, Miss America or Miss World pageants or would later compete in one of them.
Delegate who previously competed at Miss World was:
- Sallie Toussaint (Connecticut) - US representative to Miss World in 1997 (Top 10 Semifinalist at Miss World 1997)
Delegates who had previously held a Miss Teen USA state title were:
- Lynnette Cole (Tennessee) - Miss Tennessee Teen USA 1995 (Top 6 Finalist at Miss Teen USA 1995)
- Tiffany Meyer (Kansas) - Miss Missouri Teen USA 1994 (Top 6 Finalist at Miss Teen USA 1994)
- Amanda Penix (Oklahoma) - Miss Oklahoma Teen USA 1997 (Top 6 Finalist at Miss Teen USA 1997)
- Angie Carpenter (Mississippi) - Miss Mississippi Teen USA 1994 (Top 12 Semifinalist at Miss Teen USA 1994)
- Heather Keckler (Arizona) - Miss Arizona Teen USA 1992
- Paige Swenson (Minnesota) - Miss Minnesota Teen USA 1994
- Jennifer Lyn Hunt (Maine) - Miss Maine Teen USA 1994
- Alicia Carnes (Nevada) - Miss Nevada Teen USA 1995
- Laurie Miller (Alaska) - Miss Alaska Teen USA 1997
- Jennifer Dupont (Louisiana) - Miss Louisiana Teen USA 1998 (Dupont competed in the Miss USA pageant less than two years after competing at Miss Teen USA. The youngest in the competition, in 2004 she became a Triple Crown winner, for holding state titles for Miss Teen USA, Miss USA and Miss America)
Delegates who had previously held a Miss America state title or would later win one were:
- Rebekah Keller (California) - Miss California 1997 (4th runner-up and Preliminary Swimsuit award at Miss America 1998)
- Jennifer Dupont (Louisiana) - Miss Louisiana 2004 (1st runner-up and Preliminary Swimsuit Award at Miss America 2005)
- Brooke Gambrell (Idaho) - Miss Idaho 1995
- Kristen Ludecke (Florida) - Miss Florida 1995
- Cheya Watkins (Ohio) - Miss Ohio 1998
- Vanessa Shortbull (South Dakota) - Miss South Dakota 2002
See also
External links
- Miss USA official website Archived 2006-09-18 at the Wayback Machine