ap

Skip to content
Miss Colorado Katie Layman, right, visits with Nicole Miner, Miss New Mexico, during rehearsals for the Miss America pageant last week in Las Vegas. The pageant airs Saturday on TLC.
Miss Colorado Katie Layman, right, visits with Nicole Miner, Miss New Mexico, during rehearsals for the Miss America pageant last week in Las Vegas. The pageant airs Saturday on TLC.
Author
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your player ready...

Katie Layman is 24, lives in Aurora, studies at the University of Colorado Denver, wants to be a teacher and really wants to be Miss America.

You can watch her on the Miss America Pageant @ 6 p.m. Saturday on the TLC network.

Layman spent the week at Planet Hollywood in Las Vegas, where the contestants have been rehearsing. “It’s been the experience of a lifetime,” she says.

And she’s done a lot in her lifetime. She’s been a Denver Broncos cheerleader, and she’s been a Rockette in the Radio City Christmas Spectacular. Her pageant talent is contemporary lyrical dance. But Layman knows the minefield at a pageant is the Q&A at the end.

She already received a preliminary grilling from Rush Limbaugh and Vivica Fox — and that’s a wild duo to pepper you with queries.

Layman is well aware of the famous flub from Miss South Carolina at the Miss Teen USA 2007 pageant. Here’s Caitlin Upton’s answer to a question about why one-fifth of Americans can’t find the United States on a map. It’s been viewed more than 35 million times on YouTube: “I personally believe that U.S. Americans are unable to do so because, uh, some people out there in our nation don’t have maps and, uh, I believe that our, uh, education like such as, uh, South Africa and, uh, the Iraq, everywhere like such as, and, I believe that they should, our education over here in the U.S. should help the U.S., uh, or, uh, should help South Africa and should help the Iraq and the Asian countries, so we will be able to build up our future for our children.”

Layman says, “They can ask you anything they want. You just have to be honest and go with your heart. It’s really something when you are on that stage and the whole world is watching. It can go either way.”

So good luck kid. We’ll be watching, and 50 friends and family members will be waving Colorado flags and cheering in the audience.

Too sexy.

The New York Post last week named Aspen the sexiest ski resort — with the fancy stores and flashy hotels to prove it. No. 2 is Park City, Utah, followed by Whistler, B.C.; Jackson Hole, Wyo.; and Sun Valley, Idaho.

Maybe it is Aspen’s sexiness that made Steamboat Springs’ Dagny McKinley drive over for opening day of the X Games on Thursday. She planned to hug as many people as she could as they entered the games. She’s hoping to snuggle up with more than 5,000 to set a world record.

There’s a Moose in my drink.

I bet plenty of families show up to the Pajama Brunch on Sundays at Second Home in the JW Marriott. But not me. Clayton the Moose will keep the kids happy when he isn’t scaring them; kids eat free if they’re wearing pajamas; and little ones might get a sugar rush at Clayton’s Pancake and Waffle Bar featuring fun toppings such as M&Ms and Gummi bears. Grownups can order the Bottomless Mimosa and get a stack of Graceland Pancakes with bananas, peanut butter, whipped cream and bacon. Urp.

City spirit.

It looked like Hollywood at Fillmore Plaza on Tuesday afternoon. A film crew was making a commercial for the Colorado Lottery. . . . Sez who: “I now have only good days or great days.” Lance Armstrong

Bill Husted’s column appears Sunday, Tuesday and Friday. You can reach him at 303-954-1486 or at bhusted@denverpost.com. Take a peek at Husted’s next column at .

RevContent Feed

More in Entertainment