top & skirt  LAUREL & HECTOR leggings, AMERICAN APPAREL
story / Monica Wolfe
photos / Kristy Benjamin
styling / Tara Hunt
makeup / Vlada Haggerty
 If youâve seen Lacey Rogers as a finalist on the latest season of Americaâs Next Top Model, or if youâre one of her hundreds of thousands of social media followers, you know that she has a smile as sweet as her Arkansas drawl and sass as sharp as her jawline.
To her, the companionship of solitude is more appealing than your invitation to that afterparty. She can do without the validation of social media. And she doesnât want to be your BFF just for the security of having a chick-flick-worthy group of friends. âIâm not an LA beach bunny. Letâs put it that way,â she tells me. âI donât do well with that stuff.â
Her words reverberate with the undeniable modern-day echo of early 70s Joni Mitchell, as she talks about her frustration with faux friends and the ladder-climbing mentality. âI hate seeing people that want to shoot with me or be my âfriendâ just so they can grow their following on social media. I hate that. They do meet-ups. Like, no, I will be in my bedroom. I just like being alone.â
Rogers covers her feistiness with a semi-apologetic smile, and Joni seems to hum on in the background: âThereâs a lot of people asking for my time / Theyâre trying to get ahead / Theyâre trying to be a good friend of mine.â
It takes most people well into their twentiesâhell, their thirties if weâre being honest about our millennial lagâto realize the nonsense of fitting in and placing value on superficial relationships.
Sheâs barely out of high school, but sheâs sitting across from me reflecting on her past naivety as if these lessons have been marinating for decades: âI guess my junior year, I cut ties with people. It was kind of when something snapped. I was like, âI donât need a girl group. I donât really care. Iâm fine by myself.ââ She says all this while bubbling with Southern enthusiasm and scooping little spoonfuls of foam from the bottom of her mug of dirty chai. I canât decide whether sheâs a wise old woman or a teenage model-actress. She seems to be exactly both.
Even without the accent, youâd be able to tell she isnât from Los Angeles. It isnât so extreme that she showed up with Totoâs basket on her arm, but immediately upon meeting her, you notice she isnât shrouded in the fog of pretension and self-importance all too commonly found in the industry. Her disgust with helium-filled egos is evident. Sheâs staying grounded, she insists with the fervency of a small-town bonfire, and I believe her.
I ask her about the transition from El Dorado, Arkansas, population 18,000, to the selfie capital of the world. First, she politely corrects my attempted Southern pronunciationââIâm from El Dor-ay-doââand then goes on to explain, âI could never have seen myself staying there. Southern people, they like to stay where they are. And if you stay thereâif I wouldâve stayed there, I donât think I wouldâve ever gotten out. And itâs rare that people do. But Iâm so proud of the fact that I was raised there.â
Proud as she is of her hometown, she criticizes the conservative culture sheâs left behind. âSo many people are watching what I do from my hometown⊠and Arkansas is super conservative. And so being out here, Iâm shooting all these more editorial things, which isnât really accepted in the Southern eye. So if itâs, like, with less clothing on, Iâm scared to do that. Iâm totally okay with that, and it doesnât bother me⊠but Iâve gotten a lot of shame,â she says. âItâs been hard.â
Even as a 19-year-old model whoâs already effortlessly acquired a fawning fan base, sheâs open about self-doubt. âI never grew up wanting to be a model. I never saw myself being a model. I never thought I was pretty enough. My mom always wanted to put me in pageants, and I would get so mad at her every time she brought it up. Iâd be like, âNo! I canât!â And, you know, secretly I would want to, but I was a young girl. I didnât think I was good enough.â
I ask her how she feels about all the younger girls looking up to her and wanting to be her, and she answers in a way that bares her old soul. She says, âI feel like this generation of little girls is growing up so wrong. It kind of saddens me. They just want to be a model just because thatâs whatâs considered beautiful⊠I donât think they would really know [that they wanted to be a model] at such a young age. I think thatâs kind of toying with their confidence.â
She did grow up with dreams of Los Angeles, though. On the cafĂ© patio, we pause for a moment to wait for a mess of angry drivers to quit their honking contest, and then she explains, âI grew up acting, and then my dad kind of shot the dream down saying it wasnât realistic. I mean, when youâre from the South, acting, modeling, filmmaking, writingâitâs not realistic. Basically, the motto is, âYou have to sweat for your money.ââ Yet here she is, 2,000 miles from home, gracing magazine covers and beauty campaigns.
And she didnât forget that motto. Thereâs plenty of sweat to be found between those college courses, castings, auditions, and jobs. âYou donât ever just want to be a pretty face,â she adds.
With so many eyes on her, sheâs learning quickly what she does and doesnât want to be. Rebelling against both outdated Southern standards and LAâs begging for self-indulgence, sheâs found herself as this enigmatic cynical-saccharine powerhouse sitting before me, ready to shock the modeling and acting world with her staunch independence and Southern charm. âI think itâs gonna be a big year,â Lacey says, and if you doubt that in the least, sheâll welcome the challenge to prove you wrong.
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