You may be familiar with Daniel DiMaggio, no relation to Joe DiMaggio, as Oliver Otto on American Housewife (2016-21). I never heard of it, but I wouldn't have watched anyway. Who wants to watch a sicom about June Cleaver or Donna Reed?
He is presented as gay, with everything from pictures of muscular men on his bedroom wall to an interest in ballet, to a boyfriend, the wealthy, femme Cooper (Logan Bell). Everyone things they are boyfriends, anyway, including Cooper, who is upset every time Oliver claims that they are not dating. But then he backs off and gets a girlfriend.
Logan Bell (the femme one) is gay in real life, and states that he played Cooper as gay. So why five seasons of "crumbs" that led nowhere? Fans were irate when the showrunners were too cowardly to let Oliver come out.
Daniel already has two strikes against him (baseball metaphor, har har) for five years of queerbaiting. Let's check on his other projects.
He was born in 2003 in Los Angeles, and began acting at age nine in the short Geisho (2010): a man (Horatio Sanz) wants to become the world's first male geisha. Kind of gender-fluid.
Next, a 2013 episode of Burn Notice, which, I discovered today, is not about a hospital burn unit, in spite of the misleading title. It's about a spy who was "burned" (fired). How the heck are potential viewers supposed to know that? Daniel plays the young version of focus character Michael (Jeffrey Donovan).
More after the break
Then some standard voice work and guest spots, notably the young Kal-El (Superman) on a 2016 episode of Supergirl. Robert Gant, who is gay in real life, played his father, Zor-El.
And the Young Dusty, played as an adult by Mark Wahlberg, in Daddy's Home 2 (2018).
Daniel graduated from Providence High School in Burbank, a Catholic prep school, in 2021. I don't see any college listed in his bios, or any tv activity other than two guest spots:
A 2022 episode of NCIS: A group of teenage hoods breaks into buildings at Marine Base Quantico.
A 2023 episode of The Neighborhood, with Hank Greenspan as a gay-vague kid who gives us endless crumbs with no resolution. Sounds familiar. Daniel's character, Kiefer, does not appear in the episode synopsis.
His theatrical work includes acting in the plays at the Youth Playwrights Festival in Palm Springs every year. In 2025, he played Count Chocula in The Kellogg Murders, written by Peyton Taylor: cereal mascots Corn Flakes and Wheaties seek revenge on their mascot competitors.
A search for nude photos yields this bathroom selfie, but it looks a little off, as if someone else's lower body was photoshopped on.
This one looks a bit more realistic.
Next question: Is Daniel gay in real life? His instagram doesn't feature any hugging photos of men or women. When a follower asked "When are you going to come out?", he doesn't respond, but another follower answers with a curt "He's straight."
Looks like all we're going to get is queerbaiting and crumbs.
Riley Polanski: From Xanadu to Silverlake, with n*de photos and bonus Michael J. Fox
Gideon Gemstone's Secret Life, Part 1: Jimmy Olsen finds out that the Gemstones do it big. Mentions Superman.
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