Big booty gay men locker room
![big booty gay men locker room big booty gay men locker room](https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-R6sT4bAjAxc/WGgf9J0Y4gI/AAAAAAAAGik/NMgtfPXFNXURzZ5kNq5exUP6eCo_plSQwCPcB/w1200-h630-p-k-no-nu/13413671_10209890340321299_4068750841438103166_n.jpg)
Silver was prodded on the issue again, to which he responded: Of course, he seeks to also ban men for the reasons women once were banned, which is now good because, um, uh, hm, well…anyone wanna ask about the wide range of charities the NBA contributes to? It’s dizzying to absorb the dissonance of Silver’s politically correct instincts seeping in as he explains the need to, again, oust women from this private male space. So, preventing women from being in the locker room around the changing men was an anachronism, but now having both genders in the locker room while men change is an anachronism. Then there's also - I'm not sure if we were designing a system from scratch today, we would say come stand next to the players at their lockers as they're dressing, and that's the appropriate forum to interview them. To me, there are two issues: There's just the health and safety issues for the players and for all of you as well. I think it's something, there is an association that you are all members of, that we should sit down and work together. I think there are different expectations of privacy, but at the same time I recognize we have to create an environment where you all can do your jobs. At least from my standpoint, I never hear about those issues anymore. I mean, it used to be, for those that have been around a while, in the old days it was about female reporters, and we all got past that issue. I also think it's a bit of an anachronism to have reporters in the actual room where players are dressing. I think that depending on where we see this virus, potential variants, you know, I think creating a little bit of distance may make more sense for the foreseeable future. In regard to reporters returning to locker rooms, I recognize what I am about to say may not be so popular with this group. Later, I’ll get into the real concern that Silver is attempting to launder through the concern he offered, but for now, let’s look at the entirety of his meandering thoughts, bolded for emphasis:
![big booty gay men locker room big booty gay men locker room](https://hips.hearstapps.com/hmg-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/images/2015/03/42-21252685-1451579402.jpg)
Silver’s comments from this All-Star Weekend on potentially ending locker-room media access were muddled and self-contradictory, but also unintentionally revealing.
![big booty gay men locker room big booty gay men locker room](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/e6Y2uQn_wvc/0.jpg)
No, on this issue, he’s been focused on the bodily privacy, just like Players Association head Michele Roberts is. That isn’t what NBA commissioner Adam Silver is fixating on, though, when it comes to media reforms. Every moment is potentially captured on a phone and every stray interview could be taken out of context. My former existential dread aside, it’s hard to blame players for feeling surveilled and overanalyzed. When I was fired by ESPN less than a month later, I took it as a blessing.
![big booty gay men locker room big booty gay men locker room](http://s3.crackedcdn.com/phpimages/article/1/8/5/163185.gif)
By the end, I was rummaging through slips of the Like button to please my bosses. At the start of the beat-writing journey, I was writing in-depth features. He could tell I didn’t want to ask and I could tell he didn’t want to be asked, nice though he was to answer. I remember feeling a pang of self-hatred when, in the locker room, I asked Steph Curry to explain an Instagram post he liked about LeBron’s then-Cavs struggling. That insatiable demand for stories can inspire some stupid ones. These guys, especially the superstars, are living in a panopticon where they’re constantly observed and discussed at a scale beyond their control. Sure, star players have always chafed at criticism, but this era is uniquely paranoia inducing. Their unhappiness with the media is understandable. A lot of that push is coming from the players, who are increasingly unhappy in general, and especially unhappy with media coverage. One of the reasons I quit my media job and started HoS was because I believed that the NBA, in a Shock Doctrine maneuver, would use the pandemic as a pretext for further restrictions on reporters. Right now, it would appear that the NBA is attempting to take locker-room access away from reporters permanently. In this post, I’ll try to explain two things that haven’t been well-explained by NBA commissioner Adam Silver: Why locker-room access exists and why players want to end it.