
Warning: Spoilers for The Traitors finale ahead.
Gabby Windey made headlines Wednesday after revealing on social media and in a Cosmopolitan interview that she had her partner, comedian Robby Hoffman, had secretly married in Las Vegas earlier this year.
The star of The Bachelorette and The Traitors posted adorable photos of she and Hoffman tying the knot and dancing down the aisle to Chappell Roan's "Hot to Go." She captioned the happy occasion with the wedding date: "1/11/2025," along with a ring and champagne emojis.
Windey shared that evacuating from the Los Angeles fires played a role in getting hitched, telling Cosmopolitan, "if the world is ending, we want to be with each other." But Windey also revealed another reason for the nuptials during a sit-down with Traitors host Alan Cumming during the hit Peacock reality competition's finale, which aired Thursday.
"What would winning mean to you?" the Out cover star asked Windey.
"It does make me emotional just because I think of my girlfriend. And I feel like she'll be so proud," Windey replied.
When asked by the stylish host to elaborate on the significance of taking the cash prize home, Windey added, "It would mean so much. Maybe we could get married."
Windey ended up triumphing in the competition in a win that made reality TV history. Four Faithfuls — Windey, Dylan Efron, Dolores Catania, Lord Ivar Mountbatten — each threw a packet into the fire emitting green smoke, signifying they all believed that the Traitors had been eliminated. Their trust paid off. For the first time, four Faithfuls — two of them, Mountbatten and Windey, are LGBTQ+ — split the prize pot of $204,300, which undoubtedly helped Windey's wedding winnings.
Congratulations to Windey and the other Faithful winners. As Mountbatten declared in the finale, "Good triumphs evil — every time."
And in Out's cover story, Cumming had also hinted at the happy ending. “For people who love drama, there’s a lot coming,” he teased in the January/February issue currently on newsstands. “But for people who love seeing that there’s good in the world — reflected in reality competition TV — then they’ll be happy too.”