Patricia Rogers has been a police officer employed by the City of Chicago since 1985. Rogers filed a two-count complaint against the City alleging that she suffered sexual harassment in the form of a hostile *750 work environment and, after she complained, retaliation. Rogers appeals from the district court’s entry of summary judgment for the City, and she also challenges several evidentiary rulings. We affirm.
I.
Because this case comes to us after summary judgment in the City’s favor, we review the record in the light most favorable to Rogers.
Cowan v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am.,
(1) a comment by Kelenyi to Rogers that he would “like to be that FOP [Fraternal Order of Police book] in [her] back pocket”;
(2) when Rogers appeared to be slipping on the stairs, Kelenyi said “don’t fall,” caught hold of Rogers, and then asked Rogers whether she had a boyfriend or needed one;
(3) a comment by Kelenyi to Rogers and Mark Kelly, one of Rogers’s partners, during an evening check off, when they were turning in their daily reports of activity (that showed high activity), that “[y]ou guys are the real police. What are you trying to do, get on the TAC team?”;
(4) Kelenyi’s interference with Rogers and Kelly’s response to a domestic violence call;
(5) Kelenyi’s threatening remarks to Rogers and Kelly that he had a problem with the two of them;
(6) Kelenyi’s remark to Rogers, while exiting a locker room, that “Your breasts look nice in that turtleneck, that red turtleneck”;
(7) Kelenyi’s frequent appearance on jobs and calls of Rogers even when he was not her assigned Sergeant;
(8) Kelenyi’s refusal to process, or to turn back, reports prepared by Rogers and Kelly;
(9) Kelenyi’s ordering Rogers to put a document in a box at the end of the room, stating, “Put this in the bin so I can watch you walk over and put it in”; and
(10) Kelenyi’s interference with the work of Rogers and another one of her partners in a robbery case.
On January 24, 1997, subsequent to these incidents, Rogers complained to her lieutenant, Daniel Sehrager, about Kele-nyi’s behavior. Sehrager then submitted a written report of the matter to the Police Department’s Internal Affairs Division, which in turn conducted an investigation pursuant to the Department’s policy for looking into claims of sexual harassment. Sehrager was unhappy with Rogers’s complaint, telling her that she would “get the backlash from this,” which caused Rogers to tremble to the point that she “thought she was having a panic attack.” Two months after Rogers filed her complaint, the Department placed Rogers in the Behavioral Alert Program (“BAP”), which is a program for employees with performance problems that requires participants to undergo a medical examination. The Department’s stated reason for this decision was her excessive use of medical leave.
On March 21, 2001, the district court excluded, under Fed.R.Civ.P. 37, Rogers’s *751 evidence of a pattern and practice of discrimination. On December 21, 2001, the district court issued an order that: (1) excluded from evidence the affidavit of Rogers supporting her factual allegations; (2) excluded from evidence the testimony of Rogers’s expert; and (3) granted the City’s motion for summary judgment. Rogers challenges all four rulings on appeal.
II.
A. Evidentiary Rulings
We begin with the evidentiary issues. In order to prove that she is entitled to relief because of the exclusion of evidence, Rogers must show not only that the district court erred, but also that the exclusion prejudiced her “substantial rights.”
Nachtsheim v. Beech Aircraft Corp.,
As to Rogers’s evidence of a pattern and practice of discrimination, nowhere does she identify exactly what this evidence was. It appears from Rogers’s motion to reconsider before the district court that she is referring to “[d]oeuments in Plaintiffs counsel’s possession pertaining to Plaintiffs counsel’s former clients” who had discrimination suits against the City of Chicago. Given that Rogers never explained what these documents were or how they could have aided her case, her argument as to this stricken material fails.
Regarding Rogers’s affidavit, as the district court meticulously delineated, this document contained numerous paragraphs that contradicted, in self-serving respects, her deposition testimony, contained inadmissible hearsay, or relied often on unauthenticated documents. Rogers argues that some paragraphs of this affidavit were nonetheless admissible, but this contention misses the mark. The district court was under no obligation to scour Rogers’s affidavit in order to glean what little admissible evidence it may have contained.
See Little v. Cox’s Supermarkets,
In a similar vein, Rogers’s expert witness would likely have done little to aid her cause. The expert testimony of Dorothy Steward concerned the Department’s investigatory procedures. But, in a case in which Rogers adduces no competent evidence of harassment occurring after she formally complained to the Department, *752 the Department’s method of investigating harassment would seem to be of little moment to the issue of harassment. Steward’s testimony might have been relevant to the issue of an adverse employment action under Rogers’s theory of retaliation but, as will become clear below, the retaliation claim fails to survive summary judgment even if we assume arguendo that the Department took an adverse action against Rogers. We finally note that Steward’s affidavit and deposition contradicted one another, which further undermines any argument that excluding this evidence may have been prejudicial.
B. Sexual Harassment
We now turn to the district court’s granting of summary judgment as to Rogers’s claim of sexual harassment in the form of a hostile work environment. This court reviews the district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo,
construing all facts in favor of Rogers, the nonmov-ing party.
Commercial Underwriters Ins. Co. v. Aires Envtl. Services, Ltd.,
As to the theory of sexual harassment in the form of a hostile work environment, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of the City because Kelenyi’s conduct, as an objective matter, “did not rise to the level of harassment.” We agree. In order to prevail on her claim of a hostile environment under Title VII, Rogers must establish that,
inter alia,
the environment of which she complained was objectively offensive.
Cerros v. Steel Technologies, Inc.,
In Baskerville, we held that the plaintiff could not establish an objectively severe environment even though, over a seven-month period, the plaintiffs supervisor had: called her a “pretty girl”; grunted “um um um” when the plaintiff wore a leather skirt to the office; told the plaintiff that her presence made the office “hot”; suggested that all “pretty girls,” a category that presumably included the plaintiff, “run around naked”; told the plaintiff that he left the company Christmas party early because he “didn’t want to lose control” at the sight of “so many pretty girls”; and suggested to the plaintiff that the solitary vice was his chief consolation in his wife’s absence. Id. at 430. After reviewing the record in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, we observed that the plaintiffs supervisor was “not a man of refinement,” but we concluded that no reasonable jury could find the environment plaintiff endured to be objectively offensive and *753 therefore held that the defendant was entitled to summary judgment. Id. at 431.
Here, the incidents of harassment, which we have delineated in detail above, are no more egregious than the statements and actions that we found in Baskerville to be insufficient as a matter of law to constitute an objectively offensive environment. Like the plaintiff in Baskerville, Rogers can prove little more than that she encountered a number of offensive comments over a period of several months. Although Rogers, unlike the plaintiff in Baskerville, experienced one incident of physical contact when Kelenyi caught her as she appeared to be falling, Rogers herself admits that she looked to be falling when Kelenyi caught her, and she does not argue that Kelenyi’s touching of her was in any way sexual. We thus place little emphasis on this occurrence. Moreover, this case is even less severe than Baskerville because only four of the ten incidents Rogers lists were sexual in nature. 1 In short, this case is an even stronger candidate for summary judgment than was Baskerville, and we affirm summary judgment as to Rogers’s claim for a hostile environment.
C. Retaliation
We turn finally to the question of retaliation. Under Title VII, unlawful retaliation occurs when an employer takes an adverse employment action against an employee for opposing impermissible discrimination.
Fine v. Ryan International Airlines,
A plaintiff has two means of proving Title VII retaliation: the “direct method” and the “indirect method.”
Logan v. Kautex Textron N.A.,
The City argues, simply because Rogers lacks direct evidence, that the direct method is unavailable to her, and that she must therefore proceed under the indirect method. This contention is incorrect as a matter of law because, as discussed above, plaintiffs may proceed under the direct method provided that they adduce
either
direct evidence
or
circumstantial evidence that would entitle a jury to conclude that the employer acted because of a forbidden animus. There are several cases that arguably conflate the direct method with direct evidence.
See, e.g., Grayson v. City of Chicago,
Bearing those principles in mind, we must determine whether Rogers is entitled to reach a jury under the direct method of establishing retaliation. Rogers puts forth no direct evidence of retaliation. That is to say, Rogers has no evidence that a decisionmaker essentially admitted that he took action against Rogers because she complained of discrimination.
Rogers does, however, point to circumstantial evidence in the form of the deposition testimony of Sgt. Bradford Woods. Woods worked under Commander William Powers, who oversaw the BAP, and testified that Schrager had recommended Rogers’s placement in the program to Powers. The problem with Rogers’s position is that, as discussed above, under the direct method a plaintiff must provide direct or circumstantial evidence that the
decisionmaker
has acted for a prohibited reason. A decisionmaker is the person “responsible for the contested decision.”
Chiaramonte,
We now turn to the question of whether there is an issue of fact under the indirect method. There has been a recent clarification as to how a plaintiff goes about proving retaliation under the indirect method. In
Stone v. City of Indianapolis,
show that after filing the [complaint of discrimination] only he, and not any similarly situated employee who did not file a charge, was subjected to an adverse employment action even though he was performing his job in a satisfactory *755 manner. If the defendant presents no evidence in response, the plaintiff is entitled to summary judgment. If the defendant presents unrebutted evidence of a noninvidious reason for the adverse action, he is entitled to summary judgment. Otherwise there must be a trial.
Id.
at 644. This clarified rule is a variation of the familiar burden-shifting method found in
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
Rogers does not follow the method mandated by
Stone,
but instead briefs extensively the issue of whether there was a causal link between her placement in the BAP and her complaint of discrimination. There are several cases, some of which were published since
Stone
was issued, that followed the former rule for adjudicating retaliation cases and required evidence of a causal link.
See Franzoni v. Hartman Corp.,
Under the indirect method as enunciated in
Stone,
Rogers must first establish a prima facie case. One of the elements of that case is that only she, “and not any otherwise similarly situated employee who did not complain, was ... subjected to an adverse employment action.”
Stone,
III.
Rogers fails to explain why the district court’s evidentiary rulings prejudiced her substantial rights, and we therefore decline to disturb the district court’s judgment on evidentiary grounds. Because Rogers adduces no evidence from which a jury would be entitled to find that she suffered an objectively offensive environment, we affirm summary judgment as to her claim for sexual harassment. Finally, because Rogers does not produce evidence sufficient to establish retaliation either by the • direct or indirect method, we affirm summary judgment as to Rogers’s theory of retaliation.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Those occurrences were Kelenyi’s: (1) comment about the FOP book; (2) asking Rogers whether she had a boyfriend or needed one; (3) comment about Rogers's breasts; and (4) telling Rogers that he wanted to watch her walk across the room and put a document in a box.
. Rogers does refer to other incidents of retaliation in her reply brief, but we shall not consider argument withheld until the reply brief; Rogers is limited to the arguments made in her opening brief.
Wilson v. O'Leary,
