In Season 2, Episode 3 of Parks and Recreation , titled "Beauty Pageant," the show moves beyond simple office humor to tackle the systemic absurdity of gender standards. The episode centers on Leslie Knope’s role as a judge for the "Miss Pawnee" pageant. What begins as Leslie’s idealistic attempt to celebrate "substance" quickly devolves into a satirical critique of how society quantifies a woman’s worth.
In the 2026 series The Beauty , Episode 3 (titled "Beautiful Christopher Cross") takes a darker turn. It explores a world where an STD makes people physically perfect but eventually kills them, using the "pageant" of elite society to show how the obsession with looks leads to literal destruction.
The conflict arises from Leslie’s disagreement with her fellow judges. While Leslie champions Susan, a candidate with a piano talent and a genuine interest in community service, the other judges—primarily men and the cynical Jessica Wicks—are enamored with Trish, a contestant whose only "talent" is her physical appearance. The episode highlights the "impossible bar" set for women: Leslie demands intellectual perfection, while the system only rewards aesthetic perfection. Episode 3: Beauty Pageant
The concept of a beauty pageant episode is a staple in television, used across various genres to explore different themes:
In Parks and Recreation , the pageant is a vehicle for feminist critique and satire of small-town politics. In Season 2, Episode 3 of Parks and
In Euphoria , Maddy Perez’s history as a child beauty pageant contestant is used to explain her hyper-feminine "armor" and her complex relationship with being watched and judged.
Draft an on the real-world controversy of child beauty pageants. In the 2026 series The Beauty , Episode
Ultimately, the pageant is revealed as a farce. Trish wins not because of her merits, but because the criteria for "beauty" in Pawnee are shallow and commercial. By the end of the episode, even the "cool" character April Ludgate, who entered the pageant ironically for the prize money, realizes the game is rigged when she discovers the $600 prize is actually just gift cards for a fence company. "Beauty Pageant" serves as a microcosm of the show’s larger theme: that even the most well-intentioned civic institutions are often built on ridiculous, outdated, or outright corrupt foundations. The "Beauty Pageant" Trope in Media 📺