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Dr Disrespect
Dr Disrespect in 2018
Personal information
Born
Herschel Beahm IV

(1982-03-10) March 10, 1982 (age 42)
NationalityAmerican
EducationCalifornia State Polytechnic University, Pomona (BS)
Websitechampionsclub.gg
YouTube information
Channel
Years active2010–present
GenreGaming
Subscribers4.65 million[1]
Total views737.1 million[1]
100,000 subscribers2017
1,000,000 subscribers2019
Twitch information
Channel
Years active2011–2020
GenreGaming

Last updated: July 1, 2024

Herschel "Guy" Beahm IV (born March 10, 1982), better known as Dr Disrespect or The Doc, is an American live streamer who became known for playing battle royale games such as Apex Legends, Call of Duty: Black Ops 4, Call of Duty: Warzone, Fortnite, H1Z1, and PUBG: Battlegrounds.

In June 2020, Dr Disrespect was permanently banned from Twitch for then-undisclosed reasons.[2][3][4] He returned to streaming on YouTube a month later.[5] In June 2024, Dr Disrespect confirmed that the ban was the result of him sending "inappropriate" private messages to a minor using Twitch's Whisper feature in 2017.[6][7][8] Following this, YouTube suspended him from the platform's partner program and demonetized his channel.[9]

Early life

Herschel Beahm IV was born on March 10, 1982. He graduated in 2005 from California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, where he played NCAA Division II basketball.[10][11][12]

Beahm began playing Halo: Combat Evolved and Halo 2 in college and became known in the Halo community while using the gamertag "Diarrhea Panic" for his trash talk via the game's proximity chat.[13]

Career

Early career

On January 12, 2010, Beahm published his first YouTube video on the "Dr Disrespect" channel, which was a variation on then-popular Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 commentary videos. It mixed clips of his trash talking over gameplay footage with real-life footage of him in costume as the Dr Disrespect persona. Beahm had purchased the character's signature wig, mustache, and glasses from a costume shop. The video's success led to Dr Disrespect becoming a partnered creator with Machinima, Inc., which was then one of the most popular gaming channels on YouTube.[13][14]

In February 2011, Beahm announced that he was taking a hiatus because of his upcoming appointment on March 16, 2011, as the community manager of Sledgehammer Games.[13][15] At Sledgehammer, he expanded his role to include level design for the 2014 game Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare. He joined Justin.tv (which later became Twitch) while he was working at Sledgehammer, and quit Sledgehammer at the end of 2015 to focus on a full-time streaming career.[13]

Dr Disrespect gained a following for playing battle royale games, starting with H1Z1 before switching to PUBG: Battlegrounds and then moving on to Call of Duty: Black Ops 4.[16] His stream on February 5, 2018, reached a total of 388,000 concurrent viewers, nearing Tyler1's record of 410,000.[17][18][19][20] His popularity led to sponsorship deals with Gillette, Asus, Roccat, and Game Fuel.[21] On January 10, 2019, Creative Artists Agency signed Beahm as a client.[21] According to a June 2024 Rolling Stone article, Beahm had not been a client for some time.[22]

E3 bathroom filming incident

On June 11, 2019, Dr Disrespect's Twitch channel was suspended as he was livestreaming while attending the 2019 edition of the Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3) in Los Angeles, California. Dr Disrespect and his cameraman went into a public restroom (Dr Disrespect re-entered the bathroom on two occasions, with filming still going on) at the venue in violation of Twitch's privacy rules.[23][24] In addition, E3 organizer Entertainment Software Association revoked Dr Disrespect's E3 pass, banning him from the event.[23][25] Twitch reinstated his channel on June 25.[26][27]

Permanent ban from Twitch and fallout

Dr Disrespect signed a multi-year deal with Twitch in March 2020.[28] On June 26, 2020, his account was banned from Twitch. Twitch's official statement on the ban said, "As is our process, we take appropriate action when we have evidence that a streamer has acted in violation of our Community Guidelines or Terms of Service. These apply to all streamers regardless of status or prominence in the community".[29] That same day, Discord removed Dr Disrespect from their partnership program, citing violations of their Code of Conduct.[30] Neither platform released specifics for their punishments, and Dr Disrespect tweeted that he had not yet been informed of the exact reason for the ban.[31] On July 16, he broke his silence in interviews with PC Gamer and The Washington Post, insisting that he still did not know why Twitch banned him, stating that his contracts were still in good standing, debunking any "crazy speculation" or theory that had developed, and was focusing on his upcoming "Doc 3.0" personality.[30][32] On August 7, he returned to streaming via YouTube.[33][34]

In August 2021, Dr Disrespect stated that he knew the reason for his ban and was suing Twitch.[35] In March 2022, Dr Disrespect and Twitch announced that they had resolved their legal dispute, with neither party admitting to any wrongdoing.[36] In a follow-up tweet, he clarified that he would not be returning to Twitch.[37] In April 2024, Dr Disrespect called Twitch "slithery disgusting purple snakes" and criticized the ban for costing him "a lot of big deals, a lot of sponsorships; shit, we had Nike, we were talking to Oakley, and that's no joke: I can bring up Oakley prototypes right here".[38]

On June 21, 2024, former Twitch director of strategic partnerships Cody Conners alleged on Twitter that Dr Disrespect had been banned for inappropriately messaging a minor on Twitch's Whispers messaging function and attempting to meet the minor at a TwitchCon event. Another former employee corroborated the story to The Verge. Dr Disrespect responded by stating that the legal case was settled and "no wrongdoing was acknowledged".[39] On June 24, Dr Disrespect ended his livestream, announcing that he was burnt out and considering leaving his business ventures. Shortly afterwards, Midnight Society, the gaming studio co-founded by Dr Disrespect, released a statement noting that after speaking with parties involved, it would be terminating their relationship with Dr Disrespect effective immediately.[40][41]

On June 25, Turtle Beach Corporation ended their partnership with Dr Disrespect that extended back to 2020.[42] The same day, Bloomberg News corroborated previous reporting with three sources, who said that the messages in question were sexually explicit. According to two of those sources, Dr Disrespect had asked a minor about her plans when attending TwitchCon. The messages were reported through Twitch's own reporting service. A spokesperson for Discord clarified that it had taken action against Dr Disrespect in 2020 after receiving a report from an unidentified "trusted industry peer".[43] Later that day, Dr Disrespect published a statement on Twitter, acknowledging that he had sent private messages to a minor using Twitch's Whispers messaging function in 2017 and admitted that these messages "sometimes leaned too much in the direction of being inappropriate".[6] After posting his statement, he made multiple edits to the post, firstly replacing the word "minor" with "individual", then adding the word "minor" back.[44]

On June 27, Rolling Stone published an article in which a former Twitch trust and safety employee with direct knowledge of the matter said that Dr Disrespect had been made aware of the minor's age, indicated that it was not a problem, and continued to send messages with a similar level of explicitness as before.[22] YouTube's former global head of gaming partnerships, Ryan Wyatt, said that Dr Disrespect was not offered a contract when he began streaming on YouTube in 2020 because they had become aware that Twitch's decision had been in relation to inappropriate messages to a minor, but YouTube did not have enough access to evidence that would justify a terms of service violation.[22] The next day, YouTube suspended Dr Disrespect from the platform's partner program and demonetized his channel.[9]

Video game development and other ventures

In August 2020, Dr Disrespect announced that he was writing a personal memoir called Violence. Speed. Momentum. The book was released on March 30, 2021.[45]

In October 2020, Dr Disrespect worked with Hi-Rez Studios to design a custom map and a Dr Disrespect character skin for the third-person shooter video game Rogue Company.[46]

In May 2021, Dr Disrespect backed Bright Star Studios in a $2 million investment deal for the company's massively multiplayer online sandbox game Ember Sword.[47]

In December 2021, Dr Disrespect announced the launch of a triple A gaming studio named Midnight Society,[48][49][50][51] which would be headed by him along with Call of Duty and Halo veterans Robert Bowling and Quinn DelHoyo, as well as Sumit Gupta acting as CEO. The studio's mission is creating a "day-zero" community experience, where the players will have the power to decide the games' "feature prioritization, pivotal design decisions, and fuel innovation in the shooter genre", and will focus on online player versus player multiplayer games.[52] Their currently in-development free-to-play battle royale title, codenamed Dead Drop,[53][54] sparked criticism around the sale of "Founder's Access" NFTs.[55][56] On June 24, 2024, Dr Disrespect was fired by Midnight Society surrounding his then-alleged sexting of a minor.[57][58]

A longtime fan of the San Francisco 49ers, Dr Disrespect collaborated with the San Francisco-based NFL team on several occasions. At the 2022 NFL draft, he announced in the 3rd round that the 49ers selected running back Tyrion Davis-Price from LSU.[59] He was seen at the wild-card game between the 49ers and the Seattle Seahawks on January 14, 2023, at Levi's Stadium, where he sounded the team's ceremonial foghorn.[60] Dr Disrespect featured in multiple of the team's social media posts between 2022 and 2023. In June 2024, the team officially cut ties with Dr Disrespect.[61]

Streaming persona

Dr Disrespect announcing his partnership with FanDuel in 2021

Dr Disrespect's on-stream persona is usually bombastic.[30] He is often regarded as an entertainer in the streaming industry, rather than a professional gamer. ESPN describes him as "a WWE character in the competitive gaming world" and he himself has said, "I created a character who plays multiplayer video games, and he's considered the most dominating gaming specimen".[62]

When playing the Dr Disrespect character, he wears a black mullet wig, sunglasses, a red or black long-sleeved athletic shirt, and a red or black tactical vest. He sports a mustache he has nicknamed "Slick Daddy" and "The Poisonous Ethiopian Caterpillar".[63] He collaborated with professional wrestler the Undertaker for a G Fuel commercial, which was portrayed as a "mystery" feud.[64][65] His family also played into the persona, with his wife using the moniker "Mrs. Assassin" while their child was nicknamed "Baby Assassin".[13]

Personal life

Beahm is married and has a daughter.[66] In December 2017, Beahm confessed on a livestream to having cheated on his wife. He temporarily left streaming before returning in February 2018.[67][68][69]

Filmography

Video games

Year Title Role Notes
2020 Rogue Company Dr Disrespect Voice
2021 PUBG Mobile Dr Disrespect Voice
2022 NBA 2K23 Dr Disrespect Voice; scheduled to be removed in an upcoming patch[70]

Awards and nominations

Year Award Category Result Ref.
2017 Esports Industry Awards Streamer of the Year Won [71]
The Game Awards Trending Gamer Won [72]
2019 Esports Awards Streamer of the Year Won [73]
2021 Nominated

References

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External links