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How does Huddle feel about female reporters?


Cat Fanboy

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You really think shes goin to be in Playboy?

Yes, I genuinely believe she will do a round of talk shows like Oprah or The View, then do some sort of Dancing With The Stars or Celebrity Apprentice, and will end up with some $2,000,000 Playboy spread, not necessarily in that order. I'm not hating, make your money boo boo. Ain't nobody paying me poo to see me naked. I'm 5'10", have a little beer gut, and I'm not exactly packing heat, so I respect that she does what she can. My lady is a dancer so I don't judge women who use their sexuality to get paid.

And unless you're a stripper or a hooker, wearing shoes that have laces wrapping around your legs up to your knees, is NOT considered professional attire.

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League reminds teams of policy regarding female reporters

Posted by Mike Florio on September 15, 2010 8:16 PM ET

In the wake of Saturday's it's-too-bad-Hard-Knocks-ended-last-week incident in the Jets' locker room and comments from players like Redskins running back Clinton Portis and Cardinals defensive tackle Darnell Dockett, the NFL has reminded all teams of league policy regarding equal access and conduct.

"Women are a common part of the sports media," the memo said, per Barry Wilner of the Associated Press. "By law, women must be granted the same rights to perform their jobs as men. Please remember that women reporters are professionals and should be treated as such."

Aiello also told Wilner that Portis' comments from Tuesday were "clearly inappropriate, offensive, and have no place in the NFL."

In a Tuesday posting on the Association of Women in Sports Media's website, Amy Moritz confirmed that "equal access to the locker room is supported by law, and several court cases support this dating back to 1977."

Moritz points to a lawsuit filed by Time, Inc. after former baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn denied locker-room access to Melissa Ludtke of Sports Illustrated. A federal judge ruled that male and female reporters should have equal access to the locker room.

In the NFL, both the Buccaneers and the 49ers have faced legal action (for the Bucs it was only threatened, not filed) to ensure that the locker room would be open to female reporters.

So to all of you who have suggested that the easy answer to the Ines Sainz situation would be to ban females from locker rooms, the law prohibits this.

Still, NFL teams should expect male and female reporters to behave as "professionals," and access should be denied to specific persons and/or organizations who fail to adhere to the standards respected by the vast majority of reporters. At the root of the not-so-subtle (and inappropriate) suggestion that Ines Sainz "asked for it" is the more valid question of whether she truly was operating as a professional reporter, or whether she was merely hoping to create a stir. If it was the latter, she never should have been there.

PFT

Sainz's claim to fame is her ass. IMO, it's almost TOO big.

Can you imagine how big and W-I-D-E it's gonna be in a couple of years? :eek:

For sure it could be in the "lard ass" catagory by then.

Butt, butt....in the mean time:

Sainz-on-Twitter.jpg

galeria-de-ines-sainz_imagenGrande1.jpg

600full-ines-sainz.jpg

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All will be right in the world the moment male reporters can go into womens' locker rooms...

Then all is right in the world. They already can.

But I bet than if a man walked into a women's dressing room dressed like Party Boy, this story would have a totally different slant.

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I think Andy Rooney said it best...

Women reporters in football are like hair and butter. While he loves a woman's hair and finds it a huge part of the beauty of women, and he loves butter used during cooking.

He doesn't like hair AND butter at the same time.

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You wouldn't mind a half naked guy (who is reasonably attractive and in great shape)in tho women's locker room? But what if party boy said he was being made uncomfortable by Lisa Leslie checking him out after a WNBA game? What did he expect? He's got his package hanging out in front of God and the towel girl. Is he really a victim? Party Boy should have the right to dress however he chooses and still be treated like a professional!

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