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Rugby Player Poses Naked, Tom Daley's New TV Show: Today In Gay Sports

“Diving and training are my first love, but I am looking forward to a break from the norm and discovering more about places I’ve never had the chance to explore before," says Daley. "And to do it all with my best friend will be amazing.”

Each episode, Daley will cross another item off his bucket list, including like flying a jet and bungee-jumping. Can we hope naked suntanning on Sydney's Bondi Beach is on Tom's list?

And that Lee, who already snapped Daley in the shower, will nab photographic evidence?


Matt Dooley

Notre Dame tennis player Matt Dooley came out publicly as gay in a heartwrenching essay on Outsports on Monday, revealing that he had attempted suicide in 2011 rather than confront his sexuality.

"That day I wanted nothing more than to escape the anguish of coming out to my family, my friends, and, in a way, myself," he wrote in the article. "Death was better than accepting — or revealing — that I was gay."

While he anguished over disclosing his sexuality, Dooley was met with universal support by family and his Notre Dame teammates. "There have been no awkward moments. If it's possible, it's brought us even closer together," he said.


Glenn_BurkeJamie Lee Curtis is hard at work producing a film about Glenn Burke, the first Major League Baseball player to come out as a gay. Deadline reports writer-producer Ross Katz (Trick, Lost in Translation, The Laramie Project) has just signed on to pen the script for Out at Home: The Glenn Burke Story, based on the memoir of the same name.

Burke, who died of AIDS complications in 1995, played for the Oakland A's and L.A. Dodgers in the 1970s, was out to his teammates but didn't discuss his sexuality in the press until a 1982 Today show interview with Bryant Gumbel, three years after he retired.

Credited with popularizing the high-five in pro sports, Burke faced tension in the bullpen during his four-year career in the majors: The Dodgers allegedly offered to pay for a honeymoon if Burke would marry a woman, and manager Tommy Lasorda was angry Burke befriended Lasorda's gay son. In Oakland he received little playing time and endured a homophobic environment created by infamous hothead Billy Martin.

"Prejudice drove me out of baseball sooner than I should have," Burke told the New York Times. "But I wasn't changing."


We can thank Cosmopolitan UK magazine for getting British rugby star Christian Wade to strip down for its April issue. It's not on the stands yet, but you can bide your time with this, ahem, revealing behind-the-scenes video.

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