Agreed. I never understood how this was allowed. I don’t know how cameras were ever allowed in the locker room. I played hockey and our locker room was players only. Coach didn’t even come in unannounced. Trainers were in and out all the time.
Sex of the interviewer shouldn’t even be the issue, because no reporters or CAMERAS should be in there. If people are changing, it should be a private space with no reporters, cameramen, or cameras.
It’s wild how entitled the media is about this issue. This shows what little respect they have for the players, their dignity and personal boundaries. This is an easy fix. Require all players to check in with media reps to see if an interview has been requested before they leave the facility. Post game interviews outside of the locker room are standard.
I never understood this to begin with, either. Locker rooms are private. People are changing. It’s where coaches have intimate conversations with players. I wouldn’t like it.
@@michaeljensen4650 I believe networks pay for the increased access. i also think there needs to be a balance. Allow cameras in to record giving game balls, speeches, celebrations. Having a designated time allotment for that, as I think capturing that is important. Following the games, all players requested for an interview must participate, in a setting outside the locker room. Here, the reporter doesn't lose access to players and coaches and teams keep their locker rooms. Most teams have social media, gathering content in the locker room. To be fair, if reporters are not allowed in the locker room, neither should social media.
Double standard. They (women, of course) won't allow men reporters in women's lockerrooms, yet they have been having women reporters in men's lockerrooms for interviews.
This is dumb.There is a whole press conference after the game where players are made available for the press.Why do they need to go into the locker room
That Senior writer is fighting a little too hard to stay in the locker rooms even though an interview right outside makes no difference.He is definitely giving off 🌈 vibes!!!
MANY talented male athletes have become DISCOURAGED from pursuing their desired sport because of female integration (especially wrestling, basketball, baseball, football, hockey, etc.) -- and they even abandon the idea of high school, collegiate, Olympic and professional sports due to the tolerance of female reporters in male locker rooms.
Siding with the players on this one. They are destressing from a game, and they need their moments. Interview should be conducted outside of the locker room.
Calvin Watkins argument for why reporter should be allowed in the locker room is obviously self-serving for reporters. If their objective is to get an interview why is it that the locker room is any more conducive to that than just outside the locker room. He's being completely disingenuous by suggesting that it's a level playing field no pun intended when players versus reporters occurs when players are most exposed. He is also being disingenuous when he neglect to illuminate that reporter is actually rely on that exposed moment to attempt to capture a gotcha hot mic moment often have nothing to do with actually extracting substantive commentary by players related to gameplay.
Modern society claims that the objectification of men is either perfectly normal or doesn’t exist. They talk endlessly in academia about the “Male Gaze” but conspicuously leave out the fact that women objectify men as well.
Double standard. If women have wanted equality for thousands of years, then get women reporters out of men's locker rooms. If you won't allow that, then make sure to put men reporters in women's lockerrooms for interviews. You want equality, not hypocrisy.
They should file a discrimination lawsuit because they don't permit journalists in women's locker rooms for women's sport but must do so for men. This is clear cut discrimination.
I believe its in the CBA. I think networks pay more increased access. As I understand it, networks want immediate post game reaction, as viewership is somewhat still there. Waiting 30-60 min would kill viewership. and declining revenues. Owners want more money, as they are not doing any work.
It’s not at all ethical, but it’s totally legal. Dino-laws from the days only the wealthy owned cameras...does your x hate being posted on the internet? Well, in most states it’s totally legal to just rob them of their anonymity and violate their life-long pursuit of being a Google zero-even if it puts them in danger- they, you, we have zero expectations to privacy outside our own homes...as expressed by law for everyone...and these guys signed a contract- but I hope they win so we can all win
Reporters that is fighting against Is very suspect If the players is requesting privacy Give them that privacy The interview can be held outside the locker room
I think this is the right call especially considering the fact that you definitely don't see a lot of this at the women's locker room. Men deserve privacy as well. Now I understand how important it is to get the story but it's not going to be the end of the world they could totally get it after they're done with the locker room give these men their privacy. This should have been a thing a long time ago.
Agreed! I was thinking the same thing after watching the baseball division series. Why do people need to see everything in the locker room? Is this done for college football, women's sports, etc., no!
Nascar boosted media access and viewership went up greatly. The more exposure, the more opportunity for eyes. This means the NFL can charge more for networks to air their games. Follow the money!
This isn’t even up for debate. Imagine your employer insisting that the public be allowed to wander about the bathrooms/changing rooms in your workplace trying to ask your questions.
I'm upset this is even a thing. Keep them reporters out of the locker room. Would you think it's acceptable to follow someone in the bathroom and interview them ?
Riley Gaines and company fail to mention these disparities when objecting to males in females' locker rooms (where female locker rooms usually have individual stalls for privacy).
Lady, your workplace is your desk. The locker room is the players, coach and staff workplace. Why can't you just wait to ask your questions until the post game presser
I always thought it was weird that the reporters go right in the locker room, right in the same area where the players change. You'd think they would've solved this issue by redesigning the locker rooms. Reporters want to come in the locker room - fine - but there should be a separate lounge area in the front where the reporters can go, that's separate from the area where they're showering and changing.
At most, allow cameras in for the first 10 mins. Allow them to capture a bit of post game celebration, the coach/player talking and the game ball being given away. Then boot the reporters out so players can change, shower, talk and hangout, until they are done. Have a liaison that grabs players for interview requests and allow the player to decide if they want to come out in their towel, or change into their clothes. Section off an area for interviews.
I remember years ago a reporter on ABC7 in Chicago was interviewing Walter Payton live on the news while Payton was naked fresh out the shower ,and the reporter told the cameraman while on TV "whatever you do don't pan down". I remember thinking as a kid, why don't they let the players get dressed before they start questioning them. I agree with the NFLPA, let's have some of these reporters interviewed in their bathrooms walking out of the shower with microphones and a camera crew recording.
That women saying how she doesn’t even want to go into the locker room yet pressing so hard to do so when the same questions can be asked on the other side of the door.
Just imagine if they were talking about women”s Locker rooms. It would be an entirely different story. Make reporters in women’s locker rooms would be arrested. That this story from the “media” doesn’t even mention such a key point in a story like this is so very typical of them. Just listen to the female reporter refer to the men’s locker rooms as “her work place” What a joke this woman is. Just imagine how she would react with roles reversed : “someone call 911!!!” Women are extreme hypocrites and it is so common almost no one complains.
The players shouldn't have to tiptoe/duck and dodge around the locker room. Where else are you doing interviews with people w/ towels on and no undergarments or swimwear and it be appropriate. It's weird, if they started doing this to high school and middle school athletes I hope everyone would be appalled. There are several locations to do post game interview. A collective of players say they are uncomfortable, respect them
Female reporters at the collegiate and h.s. levels HAVE been accessing male locker rooms (and it's taboo for males to object or speak opposition to this accepted practice)... Female reporters won a lawsuit in 1975 that enabled/entitled them to go into male locker rooms along with male reporters. MANY talented male athletes have become DISCOURAGED from pursuing their desired sport because of female integration (especially wrestling, basketball, baseball, football, hockey, etc.) -- and they even abandon the idea of high school, collegiate, Olympic and professional sports due to the tolerance of female reporters in male locker rooms. Females were eventually also allowed into males' public restrooms (especially if they had young male children -- under the auspices that [1] there are more facilities in males' restrooms and [2] they didn't want females' privacy to be violated by their male children). How can females’ privacy/dignity be violated when all of their toilets have individual stalls?? Males’ privacy/dignity are habitually violated by virtue of {a} the urinals usually being placed at the entrance AND across from the sinks where there are mirrors and {b} the individual urinals rarely being partitioned. The matter of "discrimination", "double-standards" and "disparity in equity" also occurs in medical settings... [1] Male patients, including boys, are NOT informed that they have the comfort RIGHT to same-sex practitioners and technicians, [2] male patients, including boys, are NOT informed of their right NOT to have female nurses or medical assistants unnecessarily in the clinical rooms, [3] males patients, including boys, are NOT informed that they may decline intimate parts of an exam, [4] female medical staff do NOT ask mother's of adolescent and teenage boys to leave the clinical rooms (but they insist father's leave) and [5] male patients, including boys, who advocate for their rights are OFTEN ostracized, ridiculed, shamed and punned. To paraphrase the U.S. courts: The desire of Americans to cover their naked bodies from the view of strangers, especially those of the opposite sex, is a matter of elementary self-respect, personal dignity, and fundamental right to privacy. Anyone who would usurp those rights plays the role of the tyrant. It's a strange doctrine, indeed, that would require a person to relinquish those rights by virtue of the misfortune of falling ill and having to enter a healthcare facility (e.g., Backus v. Baptist, EEOC v. Mercy, Jones v. Hinds). Regarding the locker rooms though, just have all non-staff and reporters (male and female) wait in another area and the athletes can come to them after they have showered and changed into street clothes. There should not be a double-standard for male and females athletes; Riley Gaines and company fail to mention these disparities when objecting to males in females' locker rooms (where female locker rooms usually have individual stalls for privacy).
"I understand where they coming from"- Calvin Watkins AKA MEAT WATCHER who gaslights to validate himself to be able to WATCH MORE MEAT!!! DON'T TAKE HIS MEAT AWAY 🤣🤣😂
I’m glad almost everyone can agree that the players at least deserve some privacy in the locker room lol the reporters that are fighting to stay in the locker room are weird for that
Yeah, I agree. It's weird. Every other time there's a lack of room. It's considered a private area for the team, except when it's at the most professional level?
Why does there even have to be an interview in the locker room? What do you get out of that that you wouldn’t get on the field or at a post-game conference? I don’t see any issue with stopping locker room interviews.
Yep I agree, I've always found it so bizarre that's its allowed, its a convention from an era in when people thought it was ok to smoke in theaters and airplanes
Riley Gaines and company fail to mention these disparities when objecting to males in females' locker rooms (where female locker rooms usually have individual stalls for privacy).
Weirdo reporter lady saying the locker room is her workplace. Does she feel the same about their bathroom? She wishes she could ask Kelce about his win while he drops a deuce.
I'm with the players. Give them some respect and privacy!!! Shouldn't be a debate. I always thought it was so invasive to always be all up in their face in the locker room.
It’s funny how they’re saying it’s their workplace but yet it can easily be solved by them waiting outside of their locker room. Tell they’re done changing.
I would honestly prefer outside of the locker room interviews. A job is a job but hello privacy is needed also. As long as I get to hear the players I like talk they could be in a damn jungle gym for an interview and I would be fine with it. I agree with the players on this one.
Why are players getting undressed right after the game? They know reporters are going to enter the locker room after the game to get responses about the game. Why can't the players just wait until after the reporters leave for the day.
I don’t know why that brother would be so against just interviewing in the hallway my man you making the brothers look bad you act like you wanna be in there for reason whatever you ask you can ask it in the hallway come on brother damn I expect that from the others but come on that ain’t a good look 0:08
Players have a right to privacy. There is no reason they need cameras in the changing rooms.
True, do it somewhere else
But it’s in those contracts that pay them a lot of money that they signed
You want to do it somewhere else fine but you have to do it somewhere
I disagree, you do away with your privacy rights when you become famous
@@juiceman_3true but their pay is based on their performance not what goes on in the locker room. Unfortunately that's a caveat
There's no legitimate reason to do an interview in a locker room
Facts
Big facts
Do they let men in women's locker rooms? They should do interviews at a podium after the players come out.
Lol, facts. Wers gender inequality😂
Absolutely.
Agreed. I never understood how this was allowed. I don’t know how cameras were ever allowed in the locker room. I played hockey and our locker room was players only. Coach didn’t even come in unannounced. Trainers were in and out all the time.
Sex of the interviewer shouldn’t even be the issue, because no reporters or CAMERAS should be in there. If people are changing, it should be a private space with no reporters, cameramen, or cameras.
There's a video of Rams locker after sb 53. A female reporter was there with naked players
If they want privacy in the locker room then give them privacy why does this even need to be up for debate.
Because they are entertainers, and not productive members of society.
Shut off the cameras and see how much scoring tds makes these guys.😅
@ oh one of you middle aged mayo men in the comments.
@@TonicofSonic lmao that's so much cope 😂😂 butthurt for what bro?
@@mclovin1546 I personally know an NFL star. This is facts you can't handle facts little boyeee?
They can ask those questions...anywhere else in the stadium.
Anywhere
Interviews in the locker room are too intrusive. The players are right.
It’s wild how entitled the media is about this issue. This shows what little respect they have for the players, their dignity and personal boundaries. This is an easy fix. Require all players to check in with media reps to see if an interview has been requested before they leave the facility. Post game interviews outside of the locker room are standard.
I never understood this to begin with, either. Locker rooms are private. People are changing. It’s where coaches have intimate conversations with players. I wouldn’t like it.
@@michaeljensen4650 I believe networks pay for the increased access. i also think there needs to be a balance. Allow cameras in to record giving game balls, speeches, celebrations. Having a designated time allotment for that, as I think capturing that is important. Following the games, all players requested for an interview must participate, in a setting outside the locker room. Here, the reporter doesn't lose access to players and coaches and teams keep their locker rooms. Most teams have social media, gathering content in the locker room. To be fair, if reporters are not allowed in the locker room, neither should social media.
I agree 💯, I never understood why are reporters in there in the first place.
100% The Fans Support This Change.
They're right, gtfo of their locker rooms 🚫
They can wait 10min for players to get dressed smh. Weirdos
I've always thought that was gross. It's a glorified bathroom and players deserve privacy.
I agree with the players, male athletes should be afforded the same privacy as female athletes. It's extremely sexist not to do so.
100%. Men deserve the same respect and privacy. We all do as humans. I'm female.
Double standard. They (women, of course) won't allow men reporters in women's lockerrooms, yet they have been having women reporters in men's lockerrooms for interviews.
Also as a woman, I agree! I never understood this! It's ridiculous...
It just money grab men sports make alot more money and these reporters want to bank on these athletes
Arguing that I have the right to be in the room while someone is getting dressed is nuts… and intrusive. Give them ten damn minutes. 🧐🧐
This is dumb.There is a whole press conference after the game where players are made available for the press.Why do they need to go into the locker room
Its about time!!! If this were women it would have never happened.
It happens to Women’s teams too. Basketball
It's not a gender fight here... just basic human decency and respect. Everyone deserves it.
@@angelas831 absolutely not no men are allowed if they are in there naked
@@olgaaburto7934they will be soon. A man can put on a wig and go into a woman's bathroom now. pretty soon it will be locker rooms too. Lia Thomas?
It hasn't happened yet. Just talks
It's voyeurism. It's so unnecessary. They have a right to privacy.
How is this even a debate let them shower without a damn camera
That Senior writer is fighting a little too hard to stay in the locker rooms even though an interview right outside makes no difference.He is definitely giving off 🌈 vibes!!!
Since the WNBA is starting to bubble…imagine reporters in that locker room.
Well let's be real what male reporter wants to be in the locker room with a bunch of naked overly tall majority bull dykes lol
Exactly they won’t expose women to this type of behavior! Wait until a male report is caught watching a WNBA player nude, tittie watching! Lol 😐
The one guy begging to be in the locker room though😂😂😂😂
😂 he kinda sus for that lol
EXACTLY!! His insistense was creepy.
Definitely giving Diddy
@@Sicwitit_Squad called it disrespectful...🤣🤣
Get out of the locker room that's weird
I disagree. They get paid lots of money. They need to earn every penny
@@Ryan-yw8izthat doesn’t make any sense why reporters would be in the locker room.
@@Ryan-yw8iz so do the reporters dummy.
MANY talented male athletes have become DISCOURAGED from pursuing their desired sport because of female integration (especially wrestling, basketball, baseball, football, hockey, etc.) -- and they even abandon the idea of high school, collegiate, Olympic and professional sports due to the tolerance of female reporters in male locker rooms.
I'm just here so i dont get fined 😅
Classic line.
And people had the nerve to get mad. He became o e of my favorite players that day.
Let them shower, get dressed, get their thoughts together, then come to the mic dressed and ready. 100% good with this change
It’s very uncomfortable for the players
Siding with the players on this one. They are destressing from a game, and they need their moments. Interview should be conducted outside of the locker room.
Calvin Watkins argument for why reporter should be allowed in the locker room is obviously self-serving for reporters. If their objective is to get an interview why is it that the locker room is any more conducive to that than just outside the locker room. He's being completely disingenuous by suggesting that it's a level playing field no pun intended when players versus reporters occurs when players are most exposed. He is also being disingenuous when he neglect to illuminate that reporter is actually rely on that exposed moment to attempt to capture a gotcha hot mic moment often have nothing to do with actually extracting substantive commentary by players related to gameplay.
Did you notice that creepy smile he had while he was speaking. I enjoy making people feel objectified against their will. Sinister grin.
He makes himself and look as if he is a voyeur and a pervert.
I'm pretty sure the don't let reporters into the women's locker room,but men have to go through it.🤔🤔
Modern society claims that the objectification of men is either perfectly normal or doesn’t exist. They talk endlessly in academia about the “Male Gaze” but conspicuously leave out the fact that women objectify men as well.
@@michaeljensen4650 Ah the forget teachings of the "Female Gaze"
Double standard. If women have wanted equality for thousands of years, then get women reporters out of men's locker rooms. If you won't allow that, then make sure to put men reporters in women's lockerrooms for interviews. You want equality, not hypocrisy.
@michaeljensen4650 we all do tbh
They should file a discrimination lawsuit because they don't permit journalists in women's locker rooms for women's sport but must do so for men. This is clear cut discrimination.
The reporters sound really weird you don't have to go in the locker room you choose to
Get fined for not wanting to talk to the media? That’s whack
I believe its in the CBA. I think networks pay more increased access. As I understand it, networks want immediate post game reaction, as viewership is somewhat still there. Waiting 30-60 min would kill viewership. and declining revenues. Owners want more money, as they are not doing any work.
It's in their contract. You don't like it,Don't play professional sports. 🤷
Media sexual abuse??? Ummm if it was an everyday person that would be a sentence
It’s not at all ethical, but it’s totally legal. Dino-laws from the days only the wealthy owned cameras...does your x hate being posted on the internet? Well, in most states it’s totally legal to just rob them of their anonymity and violate their life-long pursuit of being a Google zero-even if it puts them in danger- they, you, we have zero expectations to privacy outside our own homes...as expressed by law for everyone...and these guys signed a contract- but I hope they win so we can all win
I agree, it’s something everyone needs. Space, privacy and dignity.
How is this even a debate? Get em outta there!
So a man can go to a WNBA locker room? Please this garbage….
Reporters that is fighting against Is very suspect If the players is requesting privacy Give them that privacy The interview can be held outside the locker room
I think this is the right call especially considering the fact that you definitely don't see a lot of this at the women's locker room. Men deserve privacy as well. Now I understand how important it is to get the story but it's not going to be the end of the world they could totally get it after they're done with the locker room give these men their privacy. This should have been a thing a long time ago.
Now we need these reporters to start interviewing Roger Goodell and Jalen Reeves inside their bedrooms
Unfortunately, that locker room scene from “Any Given Sunday” comes to mind 😩😂😂
Don't they have press conferences after the game? Is that not enough?!
Gio and David Muir make a FINE COUPLE. Damn they are too fine to be together
Agreed! I was thinking the same thing after watching the baseball division series. Why do people need to see everything in the locker room? Is this done for college football, women's sports, etc., no!
Nascar boosted media access and viewership went up greatly. The more exposure, the more opportunity for eyes. This means the NFL can charge more for networks to air their games. Follow the money!
I have never liked the locker room interviews. It is a privacy issue.
Get out of the locker rooms!!!!!
This isn’t even up for debate. Imagine your employer insisting that the public be allowed to wander about the bathrooms/changing rooms in your workplace trying to ask your questions.
I agree get out of the locker room.
@@kreiner1 men don’t want reporters in their locker room. Women don’t want transgender people in their locker rooms. Makes perfect sense to me
5:02 DEFINITELY ON THE DOWN LOW
Get reporters out of the bathrooms. Ridiculous.
I'm upset this is even a thing. Keep them reporters out of the locker room. Would you think it's acceptable to follow someone in the bathroom and interview them ?
Imagine if the did this to women. Wouldn't even be a debate
These writers who think they are entitled to be in the locker room are gross. Just move the interview to outside the room it’s not a big deal
Riley Gaines and company fail to mention these disparities when objecting to males in females' locker rooms (where female locker rooms usually have individual stalls for privacy).
Is this same coverage happening in the women’s locker room?
Nobody watches women sports, so we'll never know.
No, its not. Always at the podium.
Get these cameras out of the locker rooms.
@@kakarotdragonball265🤣😹🤣
Lady, your workplace is your desk. The locker room is the players, coach and staff workplace. Why can't you just wait to ask your questions until the post game presser
I agree with them!
That should be against the law
It's weird all the reporters that are defending having to continue to go into locker room. It's like oh, we know who the meat watchers were.
The sense of entertainment by those reporters..
*entitlement
5:21 bro want to be in the locker room so bad😂 it’s their locker room.. you need to get out!
I honestly never understood why they had to do interviews in the lockerroom in the first place. I was always like so nobody finds this weird?
There is no debate lmao. This should have been taken care of
Pretty funny that there is any pushback on this.
Why the heck would Calvin Watkins want to be the spokesman for “let me in! I want to see these guys junk!” Dude…this is not a hill to die on.
I always thought it was weird that the reporters go right in the locker room, right in the same area where the players change. You'd think they would've solved this issue by redesigning the locker rooms. Reporters want to come in the locker room - fine - but there should be a separate lounge area in the front where the reporters can go, that's separate from the area where they're showering and changing.
They shouldnt be allowed in there. It invades personal space. Just do it on the outside or have a designated room for that
What specific information are you getting by going into the locker room that you can’t get right outside the door?
Not sure why this would be an issue at all to change. Give them the privacy they request and deserve!
Reporters fighting back is weird. You can do your job outside the locker room. I do love the locker room celebrations, but i understand the players.
About time. They need their space.
Here's the deal. If you want to interview someone naked, the journalist also has to be naked.
At most, allow cameras in for the first 10 mins. Allow them to capture a bit of post game celebration, the coach/player talking and the game ball being given away. Then boot the reporters out so players can change, shower, talk and hangout, until they are done. Have a liaison that grabs players for interview requests and allow the player to decide if they want to come out in their towel, or change into their clothes. Section off an area for interviews.
Amendments should be standard when it comes to any and all processes. Getting rid of the locker room interview is long overdue.
I remember years ago a reporter on ABC7 in Chicago was interviewing Walter Payton live on the news while Payton was naked fresh out the shower ,and the reporter told the cameraman while on TV "whatever you do don't pan down". I remember thinking as a kid, why don't they let the players get dressed before they start questioning them. I agree with the NFLPA, let's have some of these reporters interviewed in their bathrooms walking out of the shower with microphones and a camera crew recording.
Reporters should only be allowed in the press conferences and in the stadium, reporting the game.
That women saying how she doesn’t even want to go into the locker room yet pressing so hard to do so when the same questions can be asked on the other side of the door.
“its my work place” hahaha no its a players changing room.
Just imagine if they were talking about women”s Locker rooms. It would be an entirely different story. Make reporters in women’s locker rooms would be arrested. That this story from the “media” doesn’t even mention such a key point in a story like this is so very typical of them. Just listen to the female reporter refer to the men’s locker rooms as “her work place” What a joke this woman is. Just imagine how she would react with roles reversed : “someone call 911!!!” Women are extreme hypocrites and it is so common almost no one complains.
If it was any other business the lawsuits would've already shut this down. GTHO of their private space weirdos
The players shouldn't have to tiptoe/duck and dodge around the locker room. Where else are you doing interviews with people w/ towels on and no undergarments or swimwear and it be appropriate. It's weird, if they started doing this to high school and middle school athletes I hope everyone would be appalled. There are several locations to do post game interview. A collective of players say they are uncomfortable, respect them
Female reporters at the collegiate and h.s. levels HAVE been accessing male locker rooms (and it's taboo for males to object or speak opposition to this accepted practice)... Female reporters won a lawsuit in 1975 that enabled/entitled them to go into male locker rooms along with male reporters. MANY talented male athletes have become DISCOURAGED from pursuing their desired sport because of female integration (especially wrestling, basketball, baseball, football, hockey, etc.) -- and they even abandon the idea of high school, collegiate, Olympic and professional sports due to the tolerance of female reporters in male locker rooms.
Females were eventually also allowed into males' public restrooms (especially if they had young male children -- under the auspices that [1] there are more facilities in males' restrooms and [2] they didn't want females' privacy to be violated by their male children). How can females’ privacy/dignity be violated when all of their toilets have individual stalls?? Males’ privacy/dignity are habitually violated by virtue of {a} the urinals usually being placed at the entrance AND across from the sinks where there are mirrors and {b} the individual urinals rarely being partitioned.
The matter of "discrimination", "double-standards" and "disparity in equity" also occurs in medical settings... [1] Male patients, including boys, are NOT informed that they have the comfort RIGHT to same-sex practitioners and technicians, [2] male patients, including boys, are NOT informed of their right NOT to have female nurses or medical assistants unnecessarily in the clinical rooms, [3] males patients, including boys, are NOT informed that they may decline intimate parts of an exam, [4] female medical staff do NOT ask mother's of adolescent and teenage boys to leave the clinical rooms (but they insist father's leave) and [5] male patients, including boys, who advocate for their rights are OFTEN ostracized, ridiculed, shamed and punned.
To paraphrase the U.S. courts: The desire of Americans to cover their naked bodies from the view of strangers, especially those of the opposite sex, is a matter of elementary self-respect, personal dignity, and fundamental right to privacy. Anyone who would usurp those rights plays the role of the tyrant. It's a strange doctrine, indeed, that would require a person to relinquish those rights by virtue of the misfortune of falling ill and having to enter a healthcare facility (e.g., Backus v. Baptist, EEOC v. Mercy, Jones v. Hinds).
Regarding the locker rooms though, just have all non-staff and reporters (male and female) wait in another area and the athletes can come to them after they have showered and changed into street clothes. There should not be a double-standard for male and females athletes; Riley Gaines and company fail to mention these disparities when objecting to males in females' locker rooms (where female locker rooms usually have individual stalls for privacy).
"I understand where they coming from"- Calvin Watkins AKA MEAT WATCHER who gaslights to validate himself to be able to WATCH MORE MEAT!!! DON'T TAKE HIS MEAT AWAY 🤣🤣😂
Facts..he a bati boi
He definitely loves watching meat smh
He is definitely enjoying the show.
They should make him report in the nude and see how he likes it
@@ShermCity half of Jamaica too lol so many sissies
I’m glad almost everyone can agree that the players at least deserve some privacy in the locker room lol the reporters that are fighting to stay in the locker room are weird for that
I'm in agreement with the violation of privacy and loss of decency
Just wait for a better time, plus it gives reporters more time to prepare
There's a podium for interviews.
These sports industries are worth billions. They can't set aside some space outside the locker room to hold interviews?
the players need to be respected and their privacy upheld in the locker room. if they want an interview they can wait in the press room
They can wait for the press conference to interview the players
It's very weird to want to talk to people in a locker room.
Yeah, I agree. It's weird. Every other time there's a lack of room. It's considered a private area for the team, except when it's at the most professional level?
Why does there even have to be an interview in the locker room? What do you get out of that that you wouldn’t get on the field or at a post-game conference? I don’t see any issue with stopping locker room interviews.
STAY OUT OF THE LOCKER ROOMS, ESPECIALLY THE WOMEN REPORTERS!!
Yep I agree, I've always found it so bizarre that's its allowed, its a convention from an era in when people thought it was ok to smoke in theaters and airplanes
Why does the interview HAVE to be in the lockeroom!?!?! !?!?!?
Riley Gaines and company fail to mention these disparities when objecting to males in females' locker rooms (where female locker rooms usually have individual stalls for privacy).
Weirdo reporter lady saying the locker room is her workplace. Does she feel the same about their bathroom? She wishes she could ask Kelce about his win while he drops a deuce.
That beastmode interview is a classic lol
I'm with the players. Give them some respect and privacy!!! Shouldn't be a debate. I always thought it was so invasive to always be all up in their face in the locker room.
It’s funny how they’re saying it’s their workplace but yet it can easily be solved by them waiting outside of their locker room. Tell they’re done changing.
I'm with the players.
Its disgusting that its written into their contract, and they'll be fined if they don't.
I would honestly prefer outside of the locker room interviews. A job is a job but hello privacy is needed also. As long as I get to hear the players I like talk they could be in a damn jungle gym for an interview and I would be fine with it. I agree with the players on this one.
Totally agree with the players.
Post game media interviews are completely pointless. Get rid of them
Why are players getting undressed right after the game? They know reporters are going to enter the locker room after the game to get responses about the game. Why can't the players just wait until after the reporters leave for the day.
I don’t know why that brother would be so against just interviewing in the hallway my man you making the brothers look bad you act like you wanna be in there for reason whatever you ask you can ask it in the hallway come on brother damn I expect that from the others but come on that ain’t a good look 0:08