I'm sorry, but I'm not the one here who's playing both sides of the coin here and then running from an opposition point because I'm not interested in real debate.
Also, what male journalist goes into a locker room wearing jeans? Hell, what FEMALE journalist goes into a locker room wearing jeans? Have you ever seen Erin Andrews, Andrea Kramer or Pam Oliver dressed in anything less than business casual? No. And don't give me the "well, they're not as hot as Sainz is", because while Kramer and Oliver certainly aren't lookers, Andrews is, and Andrews doesn't feel the need to play up how sexy she is to do her job.
The point is, Sainz purposefully sexes herself up to get attention. She felt like she was getting sexually harassed (not assaulted, but harassed, which no one really knows what happened in there actually) enough to complain about it, and then when the heat came down, she retracted it. If anything, she DAMAGES the case of anyone who legitimately gets sexually harassed on the job by acting like an attention whore.
Don't mistake my apathy towards this situation as mysogyny. If this happened to Andrews, you'd bet that I'd be more in her corner. Why? Because she isn't some disreputable attention whore. She's a professional. My apathy stems because the source is unprofessional and someone who right here is trying to have it both ways - trying to exploit her own sexuality and at the same time, demand the same respect that other journalists, male or female, receive. No, homey don't play that, and it's not sexist or chauvinistic to feel the same way.