ms. youngstown. ms. district of columbia. omarosa: you got me. i'm a former beauty queen. i confess.that's what we do. in highway, the boys play football, the girls throw batons -- twirl batons, get into beauty pageants. very wholesome upbrings. i had a teacher, a librarian. but she also taught speech. i was tomboyish. she thought, you're a great athlete, rough around the edges. she told me about the pageant, the ms. buckeye pageant, the first pageant i entered. thank god i did not win. i'm so competitive, i wanted to figure out, how do you win? being first runner-up was not nough. so i entered the next year and i won. i was the first african-american woman to be ms. youngstown and represent youngstown at the miss highway and miss america pageant. pageants were great for me. taught me a lot of incredible lessons. people will judge you by how you look and how you walk and how you talk. to be sharp on your feet that fitness was important. and to be congenial. i learned a lot about those skills while i was competing in he pageants. host: when did you first meet donald trump? omarosa: se