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Here's a clip from the most dramatic eviction from one of the better TV talent shows of the year - Britain's Missing Top Model. In it, you'll see Jenny (who had just made someone cry, and was featured in the episode flirting ill-advisedly with one of the judges) getting booted off. Wayne wasn't pleased, neither was Mark. The fact they weren't pleased with each other is the key here. There's the clip after the jump.

For all our Britain's Missing Top Model news, reviews and interviews go here. For our Top 50 run down go here.

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If you've been reading our Top 50 this year (go here to have a look at what has been happening and what we have voted as our favourites... so far), you will know that we rated Britain's Missing Top Model very highly indeed. In fact, it came number nine in our chart. We interview the winner, Kelly Knox, and she said that nothing much has changed for the girls since the show, but Kellie Moody (semi-finalist) seems to be out and about. Kellie's people sent me a video story, which sees Kellie promoting Siemens hearing instruments. You can have a look at the story after the break, and we're happy to help raise awareness of a product that can genuinely help people.

Related: Our Britain's Missing Top Model news and reviews | This year's Top 50, including an interview with series winner Kelly Knox.

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As you read a bit earlier, we voted Britain's Missing Top Model in at number nine on our Top 50. I (and others) really enjoyed the show (well, it goes without saying... it was voted into our Top Ten after all), so I was keen to get back in touch with the winner of the talent contest, Kelly Knox. As ever, she was very honest and candid, so have a look at what she had to say after the jump...

To read all our Top 50 stuff, and have a look at the run-down so far, go here. To read all our Britain's Missing Top Model coverage, go here.

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Well, this was a bit unexpected. I'm not a fan of that bitchy America's Top Model oevre. To me those kind of shows feature a load of spoilt brats, squabbling over which one is the prettiest, how best they will make a name for themselves at the showbiz parties they will no doubt be photographed at and what they're going to do to maximise their 15 minutes of fame. So when I saw that BBC Three of all channels was going to do something similar, but with disabled women, I shuddered. Was this going to be television sinking to a new low and exploiting disabled people for a TV talent show? Thankfully, no. It turned out to be one of the most unexpected and enjoyable series of the year.

To catch up with this year's Top 50, go here. To read all our news and reviews of Britain's Missing Top Model, go here.

A few months ago we were enjoying Britain's Missing Top Model very much indeed. It was a TV competition along the lines of other modelling TV talent contests, but there was a twist - all the girls who entered were disabled in some way, and the show aimed to challenge preconceptions and asked whether the uber-image conscious fashion industry could embrace a disabled model. What could have been rubbish and exploitative was actually a great series, full of incredible, inspiring women. The winner, Kelly Knox, made her debut on the catwalk during the recent London Fashion Week. It was a show staged by the BBC's online fashion magazine Thread, and BMTM's people sent us some nice shots of Kelly strutting her stuff. She looks great! Simply click on the picture below to see her in action.

For all our Britain's Missing Top Model reviews and interviews, go here.

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Britain's Missing Top Model
has, for my money, been the surprise hit of the year. When seeing the trailers, my knee-jerk reaction was to yell 'exploitative rubbish!' at the telly. I tuned in to prove myself right and, quite spectacularly proved myself wrong. It has been a really good, interesting and entertaining series. Now we know the winner, surely we'd all... have on... I haven't paced this sentence right at all... erm... Britain's Missing Top Model: What Happened Next (BBC Three, Tuesday, 5 August, 9pm) everybody!

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Over the past five weeks we've brought you coverage of Britain's Missing Top Model - the series that saw eight disabled young women compete for a modeling assignment. It's been quite good, all in all, and has challenged viewers and contestants' preconceptions about disabilities. On Tuesday night, north Londonder Kelly Knox won the competition, and we managed to get a chat with her on the phone. Now, Kelly has always been a pretty no-nonsense sort of girl and the fact that she was born without a left arm never really seemed to bother her. It was this forthright approach, as well as the ability to look great in a photograph, that probably won her the competition. Let's see what she says...

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Maybe it was the holiday I've just come back from, but I really wasn't expecting the fifth episode of Britain's Missing Top Model to be the final. Next week's series closer, you see, is a catch-up thing, and sees how the girls have been getting on since the show finished. So it was the final, then. Blimey. We had Sophie (wheelchair-bound paraplegic), Kelly (who had no left arm) and Jess (who suffered from a myriad of illnesses and conditions). Who would win? As in all these TV talent contests, everyone has their own favourites and I was no different. But, wash my feet, there was all sorts going on last night. Where to begin?

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Last night Kellie Moody was eliminated from Britain's Missing Top Model. Deaf from birth, Kellie started the competition in red-hot form; winning some challenges and impressing the judges in her photo shoots. But the thorny question of whether being deaf represented an explicit visual disability was always hanging around, and Kellie was always fighting a battle against the other girls and the judges on this score. There was no animosity between her and the girls, and she seemed well liked, but last night her performance in a speaking television advert - and her declining standard in photos - meant that she was given the push. We managed to catch up with her, so have a look after the jump for what she's got to say.

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You'd expect that the real story in a TV talent contest would revolve around the person who got eliminated. Not in this show. Although the woman who did get eliminated had her own story, last night's episode revolved around Jess, her disabilities and her relationship between the rest of the remaining girls. Over the weeks, there has been rumblings - mostly from wheelchair-bound Sophie - that Jess isn't pulling her weight and is perhaps a little bit needy. Last night was the night when it all started to come out in one, big mascara-painted splurge and Jess got a fearful caning.

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If you've been reading my posts on Britain's Missing Top Model, you'll know that I've been enjoying the show so far. And I normally hate all that America's Top British Model kind of stuff. Tuesday's night show saw the elimination of Jenny (click here to read the review of that episode) - the American who, five years ago, was involved in an horrific car accident, rendering some of the most simple things many people do in their day-to-day lives very difficult indeed. A model before the accident, Jenny was so determined to succeed in this competition. I managed to bag an interview with her (now back in her native Seattle and very open and honest and lovely she was too). It's worth a read...

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This week in Britain's Missing Top Model, the stakes were raised even higher. The remaining girls' task was to feature in a full-blown catwalk show, alongside able-bodied models, and family and friends and judges. As their minder and all-round guru Jonathan said, there would be no hiding place. For Sophie, wheelchair-bound, the catwalk would represent her biggest challenge. For Jenny, who we've seen glimpses of, this was the episode where it all kicked off for her. After an horrific car accident five years ago, she now suffers from ataxia, which basically means her body won't do what her brain tells it to. She's been very unsteady on her feet up till now, and she really wasn't looking forward to this challenge. Could she, and the rest of the five, pull it off?

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Oh man, I'm hooked already. Second week into this model talent show featuring eight (or this week seven) young women with disabilities, and the ante was most definitely upped, which forced the girls to examine their own self-consciousness and even their own ideas of what having a disability means (I'm guessing that sort of thing happens in every episode of this series). This week's big shoot was lingerie based, and to get them in the mood the shows asked the girls to stand in the window of a high street shop and pose in their bra and pants. For anyone who was shy about their body, or attention drawn to their disability, this taskette was very definitely not for them.

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Three quarters of the way through this brand-new talentrealityTVthingywithdisabledpeople, the four judges (there are always judges in these types of things) started to argue about what they were actually supposed to be judging. You'd have thought that they would have known after they took the job on, but wait. They had just looked through eight sets of photographs from eight different disabled young women, and the question was... are they looking for someone who would be a spokesperson and an inspiration to other disabled models as well as a model; or were they looking for someone who could be a model full-stop, regardless of their disability. I have to say I hover somewhere in between with a sight leaning towards the model-first argument (making a big deal of someone's disability is some sort of weird discrimination?), but in this segment of a very enjoyable and emotional series opener, this is surely a microcosm of the attitudes shown towards disabled people in every day life. But this was a reality TV show, there's no room for that sort of thought-provocation. Well, hold you horses on that one.

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