WEATHER ALERT

Easy, breezy, beautiful

Fresh-faced Winnipegger hopes her Top Model win will help make her a cover girl

Advertisement

Advertise with us

We all know that triumph on reality TV doesn't necessarily translate into real-world success.

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Subscribe and receive a limited-edition Free Press branded hat or tote.

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $205*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*First annual payment billed as $205.00 + GST for one year. This annual subscription will automatically renew at $233.00 + GST every 52 weeks (10% off the regular annual price of $259.35). Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 16/07/2009 (6206 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

We all know that triumph on reality TV doesn’t necessarily translate into real-world success.

You can win Canadian Idol, for instance, and then vanish into obscurity.

But Meaghan Waller, the gorgeous Winnipegger who beat out more than 5,000 hopefuls to be named Canada’s Next Top Model on Tuesday, believes the reality show has positioned her to forge a career on the world’s runways and magazine pages.

SUPPLIED PHOTO
Meaghan Waller has won the third season of  Canada’s Next Top Model.
SUPPLIED PHOTO Meaghan Waller has won the third season of Canada’s Next Top Model.

"I think it for sure got me on the right track," the 19-year-old Waller says by phone from Toronto, the morning after the finale of the CTV series. "But to become the professional model that the girls on the show aspire to be, you need to make a name for yourself — you can’t rely on the show to do that all for you."

Part of Waller’s prize is a contract with Elmer Olsen Model Management. Today, she’ll be strutting her stuff with other models for scouts who could affect her destiny.

"(Olsen) brings in scouts from all over the world," she says. "Hopefully I’ll get scouted and come fall, I’ll be overseas or in New York, doing some runways."

Waller also won a $100,000 contract with Procter & Gamble for a Cover Girl cosmetics print ad (already shot during the series) and a spread in Fashion magazine, to be shot in Toronto this Saturday and appear in the October issue.

Waller, a retail clerk at both Swank and American Apparel and a second-year University of Manitoba student, had zero modelling experience when she got up at 4 a.m. one day in January to fly to Toronto and audition for the show (there was no local cattle call). Standing in line for five hours in high heels proved to be worth the ordeal. In the three seasons of Top Model, she’s the only Winnipegger to make the finals.

She spent seven weeks, from late February to early April, sharing a huge Toronto apartment, undergoing challenges and posing for photo shoots while one of the 11 girls was eliminated each week. When filming ended, she came home and had to keep her victory secret for three months.

The blue-eyed teen stands just under five-foot-10. She describes herself as "low-maintenance" and wears little makeup. Her hair was coloured golden blond during the competition. While it was obvious she had a model’s thin frame, "legs for days" and a classically beautiful face, she appeared shy, seemed to lack confidence and was taken to task by the judges for being self-conscious about the braces on her teeth.

The show’s producers asked her to get the braces removed and replaced with Invisaligns, worn at night. Her Winnipeg orthodontist, Babette Cohen, was a bit shocked. "She was a little upset at first," Waller says, "but she understands why I did it and she supported me."

During the Cover Girl shoot, Waller seemed to crumble under criticism. She says the series was accurate in showing that as her low point. "What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger. I’m a better person coming out of that. I know how to deal with situations like that now."

The model, whose little-used full surname is De Warrenne-Waller, was born in Thunder Bay and raised, with her younger brother, in Charleswood by parents Richard, a manager with Imperial Oil, and Val, an educational assistant.

She grew up as a lanky tomboy. A few years ago, people started telling her she should model. At Oak Park High School, she was involved in theatre and musicals. She also has a talent for visual art and took fine arts in her first year at U of M.

She was living with her grandmother, near her parents’ place in Charleswood, and taking the prerequisite courses for interior design/architecture at U of M when she had to withdraw for Top Model.

"At first my dad was upset. He’s a businessman, so he’s very ‘Education comes first.’ But they were behind me 100 per cent."

Waller didn’t get copies of the show ahead of time. "I had to wait and watch each week," she says. "For the premiere, we had a huge party at Earls at Polo Park…. I had a lot of Winnipeg supporting me."

For this week’s finale, Waller had to be in Toronto, but her family had "tons of people" over to watch. "I had them on speaker phone for the results. They were all cheering. My boyfriend said my mom and dad were both bawling their eyes out. I’ve never seen my dad cry."

 

alison.mayes@freepress.mb.ca

A model Manitoban

 

Where did Winnipeg’s Meaghan Waller get those runway-worthy genes? She’s Scottish on her mother’s side and a mix of Icelandic, Polish, Ukrainian and some unknowns on her dad’s.

 

It’s de rigueur for models to date rock stars. Waller has that covered: her boyfriend of two years, Nick Wiebe, is the lead singer in the local band Fame.

 

Just a month before Waller auditioned for Canada’s Next Top Model, the Free Press happened to photograph and interview her in Osborne Village for its Streetstyle feature in the Detour section. She looked like a model already (inset photo, left).

 

On a normal day in the Top Model apartment, Waller says, there were at least four cameramen and a whole roomful of production people monitoring the contestants’ every move. The models even had to wear microphones while sleeping. "I don’t really know what privacy is anymore," she says. "(Being filmed) became second nature to us. I think we did end up letting our guard down."

 

Waller’s favourite model is Britain’s Lily Donaldson. In terms of a career to emulate, "Kate Moss has a really great career. Her personal life, however, is a little bit of a train wreck."

If you value coverage of Manitoba’s arts scene, help us do more.
Your contribution of $10, $25 or more will allow the Free Press to deepen our reporting on theatre, dance, music and galleries while also ensuring the broadest possible audience can access our arts journalism.
BECOME AN ARTS JOURNALISM SUPPORTER Click here to learn more about the project.

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

Brandon cautiously optimistic as Assiniboine crest looms

Abiola Odutola 4 minute read Preview

Brandon cautiously optimistic as Assiniboine crest looms

Abiola Odutola 4 minute read Yesterday at 6:45 PM CDT

BRANDON — The Assiniboine River continued its gradual rise Sunday, leaving some city streets under water.

As of 7 a.m. Sunday, the river level at First Street measured 1,179.23 feet, an increase of 1.62 feet over the previous 24 hours. The river was expected to peak Sunday, the City of Brandon said, and crews continue to monitor dikes, lift stations and other flood protection.

By Sunday afternoon, rising water had forced the closure of northbound First Street. Traffic was directed in both directions using the southbound lane, where water had already covered portions of the road. Motorists were asked to use extreme caution, allow extra travel time and consider alternate routes.

Mayor Jeff Fawcett said the city remains on track with flood forecast.

Read
Yesterday at 6:45 PM CDT

Goldeyes beat RailCats to stretch win streak to four games before break

Mike McIntyre 5 minute read Preview

Goldeyes beat RailCats to stretch win streak to four games before break

Mike McIntyre 5 minute read Yesterday at 5:47 PM CDT

Perhaps the only thing that can slow down the Winnipeg Goldeyes these days is the American Association schedule.

The club is playing its best baseball of the season, rattling off four straight wins including an 8-5 decision on Sunday afternoon over the Gary SouthShore RailCats at sweltering Blue Cross Park in front of 2,688 sun-soaked spectators.

Winnipeg is now 25-26 on the year, which represents the closest they’ve been to .500 since back in early June.

However, the pursuit of a fifth straight triumph will have to wait until Friday. A four-day break is now upon them to allow for the league’s all-star game which will be played on Wednesday in Lincoln.

Read
Yesterday at 5:47 PM CDT

Sea Bears stumble to first home loss against struggling Surge

Joshua Frey-Sam 6 minute read Preview

Sea Bears stumble to first home loss against struggling Surge

Joshua Frey-Sam 6 minute read Yesterday at 6:52 PM CDT

This time, the Winnipeg Sea Bears couldn’t find that late-game magic.

Winnipeg’s pro hoops squad has found a way to the finish line so many times this season it almost became expected that they would overcome their shooting woes and gut out another imperfect victory, but on Sunday afternoon at Canada Life Centre, a different fate prevailed.

Despite a struggling club entering their den, the Sea Bears fell flat in the second half of an 85-80 loss to the Calgary Surge.

Winnipeg’s hopes of clinching a fourth-consecutive berth in the Canadian Elite Basketball League playoffs were put on hold for at least one more game, and their perfect streak at home ended at seven as it dropped to 11-6.

Read
Yesterday at 6:52 PM CDT

Three charged in drug trafficking probe

1 minute read Yesterday at 10:56 AM CDT

Two men and a woman have been charged after police seized drugs, weapons, a gun and cash after executing a warrant at a Centennial neighbourhood residence Saturday.

Police obtained a search warrant for a residence on the 600 block of Elgin Avenue while officers were conducting a drug trafficking investigation in the city’s central downtown area, the Winnipeg Police Service said in a Sunday news release. 

A handgun with an “obliterated serial number” was seized, as was ammunition, a machete, bear spray, 40 individually packed bags of crack cocaine (with a street value of about $800), 2.8 grams of powder cocaine (worth $300) and $565 in cash.

A 69-year-old man, 30-year-old man and 26-year-old woman were charged with multiple drug trafficking and weapon offences. 

Bombers go the distance, get under Argos’ skin to secure win

Taylor Allen 6 minute read Preview

Bombers go the distance, get under Argos’ skin to secure win

Taylor Allen 6 minute read Saturday, Jul. 11, 2026

Now that looked like Winnipeg Blue Bombers football.

It wasn’t always pretty, but the Blue and Gold finally sent their droves of paying customers home happy with a 30-21 win over the visiting Toronto Argonauts on Friday.

“Osh was on it all week that we had to have a great three-phase game and tonight we did that,” said left tackle Stanley Bryant.

“If we can do that each and every week, we will be a great team.”

Read
Saturday, Jul. 11, 2026

Five ATV deaths renew mandatory safety course debate

Morgan Modjeski 4 minute read Preview

Five ATV deaths renew mandatory safety course debate

Morgan Modjeski 4 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 11:27 AM CDT

A high number of ATV fatalities in Manitoba has longtime riders wondering what measures can be taken to prevent deaths, including the possibility of mandatory safety courses.

So far this year, five riders have been killed in the province. The latest tragedy took place Thursday when a 59-year-old woman died in South Indian Lake, located about 770 kilometres north of Winnipeg. RCMP arrived to find her lying on the road, while her ATV was in the ditch.

Dave Lee, the president of the All-Terrain Vehicle Association of Manitoba, said one death is too many.

“Someone has lost their loved one,” he said. “It’s devastating for a family. The first question I always ask is: ‘Why did this happen?

Read
Updated: Yesterday at 11:27 AM CDT