Kamie Crawford has become an MTV staple thanks to her co-hosting gig on Catfish: The TV Show, however, as many would see it, she deserves acknowledgment by a more extensive crowd. Crawford has worked towards turning into a hotshot for quite a long time, carrying her special voice and viewpoint with her.
First snatching headlines when she acquired the title of Miss Teen USA in 2010, Crawford stretched out her image to turn into a well-known stunner vlogger, model, and media personality. She has never presented anything less than an authentic self to her fans.
She declared “CEO of facial expressions” is a badass, and it’s more obvious than any time in recent history now that she strengthens one of MTV’s longest-running shows.
Catfish’s lasting co-host
For the initial seven seasons of Catfish: The TV Show, hosts were Nev Schulman and Max Joseph. Ultimately, Joseph left the show to focus on his movie career in 2018. After his leave, the makers got a revolving door of visitors while looking for the correct individual to fill the spot.
In the wake of springing up various events by well-known interest, Crawford was formally approached to be Catfish’s lasting co-host. Along with Schulman ahead of season eight. From that point forward, the show’s quality has extraordinarily improved.
Crawford has given the show a perspective that most didn’t understand was missing a woman’s point of view. Her instinct alone has most likely tackled more issues between a catfish and their victim than actual investigations. She can tell if an individual is lying just by how they text!
Standing Up For Herself
Crawford, who went to class for communication and media studies, figures out the real story into the nuance of what the show’s subjects are saying. Logic minded Schulman has required that crisp reasoning and their joined qualities have delivered a really engaging show.
Catfish Ashley was shockingly impolite to Crawford. Presenting the kind of fierce conduct we hadn’t seen on the show in years. She considered Crawford a bitch on various occasions. A bird, and, most upsettingly, “the help.” Crawford stayed cool and shielded herself before being the bigger person and leaving.
Around the finish of the episode, Crawford let her realize that they “don’t need to be companions,” yet they should be respectful. She didn’t stand ridiculing and the underlying homophobic comments heaved at catfish victim Red.
“We are growing women”
Also, in episodes that include women tearing each other down (like the “Brooklyn and Jason” episode), Crawford tried to keep the harmony as well as to educate. “We are growing women,” she said. “We gotta grow the f*ck up. Women are supposed to be coming together. We shouldn’t be doing all of this, particularly not over some boy who’s not even acting right!” This is one of the numerous significant messages that she raises on the show.
Since Crawford joined the show, she and Schulman have acknowledged and engaged with an on-camera conversation. About the injustices against Black people occurring in the world. Presently, there’s been an open exchange about what’s happening in the nation.
Having a Black lady join the team was an enormous advance for the show. Crawford shouts out, shares the Black insight, and gets down on injustices with ways to right them. That can be so effective to see in a major organization network show.
She is exceptionally vocal
She is exceptionally vocal about her views outside of the show too. Regardless of whether people are available to tune in or get annoyed by her solid opinions, she ensures the right information is out there.
Crawford leaves no questions unanswered and no stone unturned. She is the boss Black female representation that Catfish: The TV Show required, and most can hardly wait to see what she does next.
Opinions expressed by AsianBlurb contributors are their own.
Maham Qasim is an English Literature and Economics student at Forman Christian College University with an interest in writing. Maham was born in Pakistan and raised in Saudi Arabia and is now pursuing her education.