Not a gimmick, not an angle (yet!), and done in the least showy way imaginable.
TMZ's cameras found Darren Young (real name: Fred Rosser) waiting for his bags at an airport, and asked him if he thought a gay wrestler could be successful. Young laughed, realizing this was how the first publicly gay wrestler was going to come out.
“Absolutely. Look at me. I’m a WWE Superstar and to be honest with you, I’ll tell you right now I’m gay and I’m happy. Very happy.”
"Does it matter to you?" Young asked the photographer, and everyone. "Does it change what you think about me?"
There have been gay wrestlers, of course, some of them out to their co-workers (from John Cena's comments, it seems like Young's orientation was no secret in the locker room). But the big-time promotions have never been particularly enlightened. More often, characters like Gorgeous George and Goldust resort to stereotypes for some cheap gay panic heat. Mid-carders like Chris Kanyon and Orlando Jordan have come out after leaving WWE, and backstage presence Pat Patterson came out only after his wrestling career ended*.
Darren Young is no superstar, though he's just 29 and has only been on the WWE roster since 2010, most of that time spent in a developmental territory. His announcement may not make waves beyond the wrestling community, but maybe that's appropriate: it's really no big deal.
ESPN's Jonathan Coachman worked for WWE for a decade. On a radio show earlier this year, he was asked if a gay wrestler would present any problems. He said absolutely not.
"There were several openly gay wrestlers and some of our old school guys as well. Never an issue and not only were we getting naked in front of each other, but we were wrestling each other in the ring and it wasn't an issue."
Update: WWE has released a statement in support of Young:
On TMZ this morning, WWE Superstar Darren Young revealed to the WWE Universe that he is gay. WWE is proud of Darren Young for being open about his sexuality, and we will continue to support him as a WWE Superstar. Today, in fact, Darren will be participating in one of our Be A STAR anti-bullying rallies in Los Angeles to teach children how to create positive environments for everyone regardless of age, race, religion or sexual orientation.
[TMZ]