"It really hurts our self esteem," Bridgeport Central senior Ariana Mesaros told the Board of Education, according to the Post. "I am embarrassed to stand up here dressed like this. Is this really how you want Bridgeport to be represented?"
For it's part, the Bridgeport Board of Education is moving quickly to quell the controversy, with the assistant superintendent of secondary schools telling the Post that black bodysuits would be purchased for the Central cheerleaders to wear under their uniforms.
Still, the incident raises a troubling disparity between what cheerleaders are expected to look like, and what might be most healthy for them. While the eating disorder study focused on college cheerleaders, there's little doubt that the findings are significant for high school cheerleaders, too.
The fact that one group of cheerleaders would advocate for more conservative uniforms while others would push to get their smaller uniforms green lighted speaks to the lack of standards among cheerleading uniforms.
If nothing else, the two divergent pleas provide an intriguing case study for why establishing national cheerleading uniform standards might be justified.