truth on hold Posted September 15, 2010 Posted September 15, 2010 All I know is, if putting on a press badge allows a dude to go check out Maria Sharapova in the showers, 95% of the guys I know would sign up for that (I'm assuming the other 5% of guys I know are gay.) You telling me there aren't women who don't want in the men's locker rooms to check out some naked athletes? Heck, even Skip Bayless and the woman hosting the show on ESPN this morning said some of the reporters in the locker rooms were there to check out the players.
BuffaloBill Posted September 15, 2010 Posted September 15, 2010 Not sure how I'm explaining your job to you..... ....but anyway, where are all these good reports form these good reporters in the locker room? Point them out. Really? Idiotic? It's a simple question that goes to the heart of the subject: is it necessary for reprorters to infringe on the privacy of players? Some argue it is because of the interesting info that can be obtained only in that specific moment. I say it is not because I have not routinely seen (if ever) any interesting reportage as a result of this. It's not a specific judgement of jw or his performance. I'm sure almost all of his stories are written from info he accrues form everywhere but the locker room after a game. Look, if you ask a reporter if he or she thinks their access to this plum assignment should be limited, their response will be predictable and uniform. It's reasonable to disagree here (many in the public are, you know) and if jw was to "leave" because of my pointing this out ( I'm sure he won't).....come on! I have no "disdain" for his profession-- I, like you, read the production of it everyday. Just because jw is a friend of the Wall, shuld he be immune to criticsm of his position on this or other topics? Seems like no other member of the press enjoys that type of insulation here. You need to reconsider your anger and view things from another angle. No matter how you try to clean it up through follow up your first statement was a clear generalization and slam. It was neither debate nor was it in any way constructive in tone. BTW -I am in no way angry. No doubt it is ok in an internet forum to question, debate, criticise or comment about what reporters write. Your first comment - especially in connection with other posts that you made was a condemnation of reporters and their work. Why not admit that instead of rationalizing that it was something else?
Delete This Account Posted September 15, 2010 Posted September 15, 2010 let me try to explain a few things here because of this near-puritanical fear of nudity. 1) there are off-limits areas where players can get changed. 2) some players, very few, elect to get changed in front of reporters. also, i don't ever recall interviewing a player before they had some clothes on. 3) travel schedules are so tight that it becomes very difficult to get proper access to visiting team's players already, as they are rushing out the door to get to the bus. 4) the Bills players lounge is down the hall from the locker room. the trainer's room is in a different room, and completely walled off from the locker room. the equipment room can be seen from the locker room, but serves as a getaway place for some players who don't want to speak to reporters. 5) due to most building configurations, it would be next to impossible to establish yet another room where players can be made available. 6) anyone who's essentially done this job for as long as i have is generally immune to nudity. and waht's the big deal, really. i'd hope the strangeness of that wore off for most of you in 9th grade gym class. 7) anyone who is in the locker room to see nudity is generally weeded out and has their credentials revoked. it's doesn't do any good to have someone in the business do this. that said, i've known of only one occassion of that ever happening. 8) and Mr. WEO, even after acknowledging that i might be right on a thing or to, you continue to bang your silly one-note drum of "happiness." how is it that you seem to act like you know so much about something you are so unfamiliar with. jw
Hapless Bills Fan Posted September 16, 2010 Posted September 16, 2010 Yeah, but now do you have to wear hotpants to level the playing field with Ms Sainz? Oh Gawd. Now I'm getting a visual. No offense John.
truth on hold Posted September 16, 2010 Posted September 16, 2010 Sainz deal would be more appropriate in this kind of setting.
Bart Posted September 16, 2010 Posted September 16, 2010 I was having this debate with a friend yesterday and I also agree with a seperate media area. The players come off the field, go through a media area, and then into a seperate players only locker room. I am all for a woman being able to do any job a man can do, however, something seems broken about the current system. Women reporters are usually pretty attractive (say what you will about whether that is good or not, the fact is they are). Having an attractive women standing around talking to 50 naked men who just finished playing one of the most primal and manly sports seems like a recipe for trouble. Well said.
SageAgainstTheMachine Posted September 16, 2010 Posted September 16, 2010 Yeah pretty sure you missed my attempt at a lame joke about WNBA players looking like dudes..... Thanks for clearing up what the "W" stands for in WNBA though. I know it's all in good fun Stl and I know you're a good guy, but I feel obligated to point out that women's basketball players at large are tired of the pot shots. I'm an announcer for the sport at Cornell, so some of my closest friends are lady ballers and I speak for all of them when I say that they're sick and tired of the "Oh, they're all just ugly dykes" mentality. I'll also add that many of them are WAY more attractive out of the context of the game, many of them are actually quite pretty. They just don't have the benefit of appealing outfits like tennis/golf/track/volleyball/field hockey girls do.
bowery4 Posted September 16, 2010 Posted September 16, 2010 The jets in the locker room http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rE4m6sjksgE
truth on hold Posted September 16, 2010 Posted September 16, 2010 youtube.com/watch?v=E9j3wqC66UY She should go away, as should that woman defending her. They're just trouble makers.
The Dean Posted September 16, 2010 Posted September 16, 2010 She should go away, as should that woman defending her. They're just trouble makers. Right. Sorry, the genie isn't going back into the bottle.
CodeMonkey Posted September 16, 2010 Posted September 16, 2010 She should go away, as should that woman defending her. They're just trouble makers. For about the 5th or 6th time in this thread, the reporter herself made no complaint about anything that happened. It was only the womens sports reporters organization. There is no reason that I know of to be hating on her at all.
shrader Posted September 16, 2010 Posted September 16, 2010 I know it's all in good fun Stl and I know you're a good guy, but I feel obligated to point out that women's basketball players at large are tired of the pot shots. I'm an announcer for the sport at Cornell, so some of my closest friends are lady ballers and I speak for all of them when I say that they're sick and tired of the "Oh, they're all just ugly dykes" mentality. I'll also add that many of them are WAY more attractive out of the context of the game, many of them are actually quite pretty. They just don't have the benefit of appealing outfits like tennis/golf/track/volleyball/field hockey girls do. To be fair, Cornell basketball players aren't the one's who wind up in the WNBA, so they don't have to worry about that pro stereotype.
truth on hold Posted September 16, 2010 Posted September 16, 2010 For about the 5th or 6th time in this thread, the reporter herself made no complaint about anything that happened. It was only the womens sports reporters organization. There is no reason that I know of to be hating on her at all. She said she wants the league to deal with it. She's endorsing the notion the players were wrong and locker room behavior needs to be addressed. YET she's the one baiting them with her provocative outfits and flirtatious manner. I don't care what the rule says, like any law they can't cover every scenario. And this is a clear example of someone taking advantage of them. Why should we have our football compromised because of her?
Lori Posted September 16, 2010 Posted September 16, 2010 No, they are not. In women's college sports, a male reported from the Minneapolis Tribune was trying to interview a star WNBA player and was ejected from the locker room. It's pure sexism, and then they complain. You can't have it both ways. Dead wrong. http://www.wnba.com/sparks/news/pressroom.html Pre and Post Game Interviews In accordance with WNBA policy, the Sparks and the visitors’ locker rooms will be open to members of the media for 30 minutes ending 1 hour before the start of the game (e.g., media access shall be granted from 5:30–6:00 P.M. for a 7:00pm game). Locker rooms are re-opened to the media after the game following a 10-minute cooling down period and will remain open for 30 minutes. Players and coaches are available for interviews at those times. Only working members of the press with valid credentials will be admitted to the locker rooms. Absolutely no autographs are allowed during media access. As usual, Sally Jenkins has an intelligent take: Women in locker rooms: a controversy only to those uninvolved If a locker room is a workplace, it's an inherently awkward one socially. Portis, for all of his silliness, did get at something real in his remarks, the central uneasiness of player-media relations in the locker room environment. In what other profession does one set of people do business with another while they're partially or wholly unclothed? He's right: It's unnatural. But that's not just about women. It's the job of the media to get inside a player's character and thoughts, to critique and document a team's progress and flaws, and to pass that knowledge on as accurately as possible to the public. It's vital to engage athletes in the locker room, where they experience their tempers and celebrations. It's an exposing situation - for everybody. But that's true whether we're talking about women covering the NFL, or men covering the WNBA (yes, they go into female locker rooms), or men covering other men. It requires a high level of professionalism - from everyone. Given the nature of the job, it's actually surprising there aren't more tensions between reporters and athletes. It's a testament to the professionalism on both sides that we get along as well as we do. The vast majority of men in locker rooms are extremely polite, and that includes Portis, whom I've never known to be anything but respectful. (To be honest, the worst sexists I ever met were a couple of editors in suits at Sports Illustrated, not half-clothed players.) There have been just a handful of serious incidents of sexual harassment in locker rooms that I can think of in the past 25 years, the most notorious in 1990 when Zeke Mowatt of the New England Patriots hurled vulgarities at Boston Herald reporter Lisa Olson after she had written some critical pieces. Almost invariably, the debate about women in the locker room is carried on most fiercely by outsiders - from the fans who harassed Olson to the commentators who have opined on Sainz' wardrobe. What all the outsiders ignore whenever the locker room controversy awakens, as it does every 10 years or so, is that male athletes and female reporters have thousands upon thousands of amiable professional dealings each week, without incident. They talk; they interview. They argue; they swap jokes, and trade insights. It's uncomfortable at times, sure. But it's not that big a deal. All it takes is a little courtesy, a little humor, and some terry cloth. And from her Washington Post colleague (and a Buffalo guy, IIRC), Dan Steinberg: A few words on women in NFL locker rooms Look, I don't know where you work, but imagine being there, and then imagine there were suddenly 300-pound naked men thrust into the picture. Would that make your life easier? Would the level of workplace arousal go up? Do you think reporters, whatever their gender, decided en masse that their lives would only be complete if they could do their jobs while in the presence of nakedness? I'm pretty sure 99.7 percent of reporters would say "hell yes" if offered the chance to only interview fully dressed people. But more important than comfort is speed, especially after night games like last week's. All our reporters had to file stories within 30 seconds of the final whistle, run down to the locker room, and then refile as quickly as possible to have any chance of getting post-game quotes into a few hundred thousand papers. If teams told players to stay dressed until interviews were done, I'm sure we'd all be thrilled. But players have places to go, and they're in a hurry, and we have deadlines, and we're in a hurry, and so some of the players get shower and get changed while others of them talk to reporters. It's not controversial, or strange, or sexualized, or prurient. It's just life.
DrDawkinstein Posted September 16, 2010 Posted September 16, 2010 She said she wants the league to deal with it. She's endorsing the notion the players were wrong and locker room behavior needs to be addressed. YET she's the one baiting them with her provocative outfits and flirtatious manner. I don't care what the rule says, like any law they can't cover every scenario. And this is a clear example of someone taking advantage of them. Why should we have our football compromised because of her? I get the fact that you have to hate on beautiful women to make yourself feel better since theyd never talk to you. But now you are just making stuff up. I've posted a link to two videos which report that she had no problem with what went down and how none of this is on her. She filed NO complaints, and thought it was all in good fun as well. Yet you still want to "blame" her because "your football is being compromised"?!? You're looking like a very small, pathetic man right now.
shrader Posted September 16, 2010 Posted September 16, 2010 Almost invariably, the debate about women in the locker room is carried on most fiercely by outsiders{/quote] Can't that be said for just about every debate in the history of mankind? This isn't exactly a new idea.
truth on hold Posted September 16, 2010 Posted September 16, 2010 I get the fact that you have to hate on beautiful women to make yourself feel better since theyd never talk to you. But now you are just making stuff up. I've posted a link to two videos which report that she had no problem with what went down and how none of this is on her. She filed NO complaints, and thought it was all in good fun as well. Yet you still want to "blame" her because "your football is being compromised"?!? You're looking like a very small, pathetic man right now. " ... Sainz says she has no plans to make changes to the way she dresses. Instead she's calling on the Jets and the NFL to make changes in the locker room." She's not doing a thing to address a perceived issue, putting it all on the Jets and the NFL. As to your name calling, I'm not even going to bother.
papazoid Posted September 16, 2010 Author Posted September 16, 2010 taken from Lori's post.... a great read from a woman reporter: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/09/15/AR2010091504653.html
DrDawkinstein Posted September 16, 2010 Posted September 16, 2010 " ... Sainz says she has no plans to make changes to the way she dresses. Instead she's calling on the Jets and the NFL to make changes in the locker room." She's not doing a thing to address a perceived issue, putting it all on the Jets and the NFL. As to your name calling, I'm not even going to bother. show me a link to a direct quote from her stating there is/was a problem with the Jets/NFL that needs to be fixed. What you posted is someone else's opinion of the situation. a situation, i remind you, that was FABRICATED by the media you are quoting.
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