From Miss USA to Super Bowl Legend: The Southern Belle Who Turned a Doritos Crunch into a Hollywood Career

It was just a few seconds — one crunch, one smile, one moment — but it changed everything. During the 1998 Super Bowl, a Doritos commercial featuring a confident Southern beauty with a mischievous grin aired between plays, and America instantly wanted to know: Who is she?
That woman was Ali Landry, Miss USA 1996 from Breaux Bridge, Louisiana. In that instant, she became a pop-culture phenomenon. The camera loved her, the audience couldn’t forget her, and the now-iconic “Doritos Girl” was born.
Nearly three decades later, Landry has transformed that flash of fame into a multifaceted life — one that includes acting, producing, fashion design, motherhood, and a wellness empire. But more importantly, she’s turned her journey into a lesson in resilience, reinvention, and grace.
The Southern Charm That Started It All
Before she became a Super Bowl sensation, Ali Landry was already no stranger to hard work or ambition. Born and raised in a small Cajun town in Louisiana, she grew up surrounded by family, faith, and southern hospitality.
“I had big dreams,” she later said. “But I also had parents who taught me that success comes from gratitude, humility, and showing up for people.”
After studying mass communications at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, she entered — and won — the 1996 Miss USA pageant, representing her home state. The victory launched her into the national spotlight, leading to modeling contracts, appearances on talk shows, and invitations to Hollywood events. But nothing could have prepared her for what would happen next.
The Crunch Heard Around the World
In 1998, PepsiCo’s Doritos team cast Landry in a 30-second Super Bowl spot that would go down as one of the most memorable commercials of the decade. The concept was simple — a woman in a laundromat seductively munching on Doritos while turning heads — but Landry’s natural charisma made it unforgettable.
“It was just fun,” she recalled years later. “I had no idea it would become this huge thing. I thought, ‘It’s a chip commercial, how big could it be?’”
The commercial aired during the game’s first quarter — and immediately became the talk of the night. Viewers were captivated by the brunette beauty with the radiant smile, and her name became one of the top-searched terms in America that week.
The ad didn’t just sell chips — it launched a career. Landry was quickly dubbed “The Doritos Girl”, a title that followed her for years but also opened the doors to Hollywood.
From Commercial Star to Screen Presence
After her Super Bowl breakout, Landry began making appearances on hit TV shows, including Felicity, Nash Bridges, and Two Guys and a Girl. But it was her comedic timing that really stood out. In 2000, she landed a recurring role on Eve and later appeared in Felicity and Popular, showcasing her effortless charm and approachable humor.
She also took on film roles, including the comedy Repli-Kate and the cult favorite Beautiful, where she played — appropriately — a pageant coach with Southern sass and heart.
Audiences responded not just to her beauty, but to her warmth — a quality that seemed to radiate through every role she played. “Ali had this everywoman quality,” one director recalled. “She wasn’t just glamorous. She was someone you wanted to have coffee with.”
Fearless on ‘Fear Factor’
While many celebrities avoided reality TV in its early days, Landry leaned in — and proved she was more than just a pretty face. She joined Fear Factor: Celebrity Edition in 2006, where she faced her fears and surprised audiences with her grit and determination.
“I’ve always been competitive,” she laughed. “People see the pageant girl or the actress, but I grew up climbing trees, playing sports, and being one of the guys. I’m tougher than I look.”
Her appearance on Fear Factor became a fan favorite, cementing her reputation as someone who could blend glamour with guts.
Life Behind the Camera — and Beyond the Spotlight
As her career evolved, Landry began to focus on life beyond acting. She married filmmaker Alejandro Gómez Monteverde in 2006, and the couple went on to have three children. Together, they navigated both personal triumphs and public heartbreak, always with quiet strength and grace.
Becoming a mother shifted Landry’s priorities — but not her ambition. She transitioned into producing, launching projects that reflected her values, and became a powerful advocate for women’s wellness and family balance.
In 2021, she founded Reshape by Ali Landry, a lifestyle and wellness brand that empowers women to feel strong, confident, and intentional at every stage of life. Through podcasts, online communities, and live events, she’s built a network that champions authenticity over perfection.
“I’ve lived in the spotlight, and I know how easy it is to lose yourself in it,” she says. “But I’ve also learned that true beauty — true success — comes from how you live when no one’s watching.”
Fashion, Faith, and Fulfillment
Landry also returned to her roots in fashion, creating collections inspired by her Louisiana heritage and global travels. Her designs combine elegance with practicality — just like her own life.
Faith remains a cornerstone for her, too. “I don’t think I could have survived this business without it,” she admits. “My faith reminds me that everything has purpose — even the hard seasons.”
And though she’s stepped away from full-time acting, she’s never really left the screen. Landry continues to make guest appearances on lifestyle programs, serves as a red-carpet correspondent, and uses her platform to promote health, family, and hope.
Still That Southern Girl at Heart
Despite her fame, Landry never lost her Louisiana roots. She returns home often, bringing her kids to Breaux Bridge to experience crawfish boils, zydeco music, and family gatherings.
“Home grounds you,” she says. “Hollywood can make you forget who you are, but Louisiana reminds me of where I came from — and why I started dreaming in the first place.”
Her story, in many ways, is a celebration of reinvention — how a single Super Bowl crunch turned into a lifelong lesson about staying true to yourself.
From Icon to Inspiration
Today, Ali Landry stands as a testament to longevity in an industry obsessed with the next big thing. She’s been the model, the actress, the mom, the entrepreneur — but through it all, she’s remained authentically herself.
“If you had told that small-town girl from Louisiana that one Doritos commercial would change her life, she wouldn’t have believed you,” she laughs. “But I’ve learned that sometimes, God’s plan starts with something as small — and as crunchy — as that.”
From Miss USA to Super Bowl legend, Ali Landry proves that success isn’t about a single moment in the spotlight — it’s about what you build after the lights fade.
And more than 25 years later, the world still remembers that crunch — and the woman behind it.