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http://www.thedailybeast.com/articl...ed-to-go-lgbt.html?via=desktop&source=twitter
Anyway, what do you think? A gay character would be welcome as long as they didn't go too far with it, but the idea could be doomed from the start, unfortunately. Because despite technically being a global brand, WWE is still very much an American-based company and they cater almost entirely to the American audience (hence all the ever-prevailing jingoistic storylines about the Good Guy American Hero versus The Evil Foreigner that have happened over the years) and given how many homophobes still exist in America, I can't imagine that it would go over well with a lot of folks.
Then again, people as a whole are becoming more acceptable of homosexuals and the gay lifestyle, the supreme court has even ruled that gay marriage is now legal all across the board, and gay/bisexual characters within film and television are becoming a little more frequent, so all the good publicity (especially from GLADD) that comes out of it could easily end up overriding the bad.
In August of 2013, WWE wrestler Darren Young took a leap and came out publicly as the company’s only active and out gay athlete, propelling pro wrestling along with him into a progressive new future. Like most historic moments in celebritydom, it was captured at an LAX baggage claim by TMZ.
“I’m a WWE superstar and to be honest with you, I’ll tell you right now—I’m gay. And I’m happy. I’m very happy,” Young said, a few well-timed days before one of wrestling’s biggest pay-per-view events of the year.
The WWE—home to generations of pumped up performers hyping packed arenas with thinly veiled homoerotic ring theatrics and occasional homophobic slurs—issued a statement of support. Young turned face that Monday, four days after his landmark revelation. Critics and fans wondered if and when Young’s orientation would be written into the show.
Two years later, they’re still waiting for the WWE to fully embrace its only current out-of-the-closet superstar. In Los Angeles for the ESPYs last week, WWE’s Chief Brand Officer and sometimes-onscreen villainess Stephanie McMahon hinted that Young’s wrestling coming-out party is still on the table.
“Darren Young was the first WWE superstar to really come out as being homosexual, but his character in the show is not,” she told The Daily Beast. “At least, we haven’t done anything with it either way—just yet.”
A former WWE scribe thinks it’s even less likely we’ll see an LGBT storyline now.
Cheering ESPYs guest of honor Caitlyn Jenner for courageously coming out as trans on the world’s stage, McMahon suggested that a gay character could yet still make an entrance into the WWE. That is, when it makes business sense. “It could very well pop up in WWE because we are all about what’s relevant, and what’s pop culture, and what people want to see,” she said. “So if there is an opportunity, we might just take it.”
Anyway, what do you think? A gay character would be welcome as long as they didn't go too far with it, but the idea could be doomed from the start, unfortunately. Because despite technically being a global brand, WWE is still very much an American-based company and they cater almost entirely to the American audience (hence all the ever-prevailing jingoistic storylines about the Good Guy American Hero versus The Evil Foreigner that have happened over the years) and given how many homophobes still exist in America, I can't imagine that it would go over well with a lot of folks.
Then again, people as a whole are becoming more acceptable of homosexuals and the gay lifestyle, the supreme court has even ruled that gay marriage is now legal all across the board, and gay/bisexual characters within film and television are becoming a little more frequent, so all the good publicity (especially from GLADD) that comes out of it could easily end up overriding the bad.
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