Dr Disrespect

Herschel "Guy" Beahm IV (born March 10, 1982), better known as Dr Disrespect or The Doc, is an American online streamer. He had over 4 million followers on Twitch when he was active on the site,[2] and 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.

Dr Disrespect
Dr Disrespect in 2018
Born
Herschel Beahm IV

(1982-03-10) March 10, 1982
Other names
  • The Doc
  • The Two-time
  • Doc
  • The 6' 8" gaming great
Years active2010–present (YouTube)
2011–2020 (Twitch)
YouTube information
Channel
Genres
  • Gaming
  • comedy
Subscribers4.51 million[1]
Total views450 million[1]
100,000 subscribers2017
1,000,000 subscribers2019

Last updated: July 5, 2023
Websitechampionsclub.gg

In June 2020, Dr. Disrespect was banned from Twitch and his channel was removed from the site for reasons that were never explained.[3][4][5] Sources have reported that the ban is permanent.[3][6] He returned to streaming a month later on YouTube, with one stream peaking at over 510,000 simultaneous viewers.[7] As of December 2022, he has over 4 million subscribers on YouTube.

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.[8][9]

Career

On March 16, 2011, Dr Disrespect was appointed as the community manager of Sledgehammer Games.[10] He joined Justin.tv (which later became Twitch) while he was working at Sledgehammer, and quit Sledgehammer in 2015 to focus on a full-time streaming career.[11]

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.[12] His stream on February 5, 2018, reached a total of 388,000 concurrent viewers, just shy of beating Tyler1's record of 410,000.[13][14][15][16] His popularity has led to sponsorship deals with Gillette, ASUS, Roccat and Game Fuel.[17]

On January 10, 2019, Creative Artists Agency signed Dr Disrespect as a client.[17] He signed a multi-year deal with Twitch in March 2020.[18] On August 17, 2020, he announced that he was writing a personal memoir called Violence. Speed. Momentum. The book was released on March 30, 2021.[19]

In October 2020, Dr Disrespect worked with Hi-Rez Studios to design a custom map and a Dr Disrespect character skin for Rogue Company.[20]

In December 2021, Dr Disrespect announced the launch of a triple A gaming studio named Midnight Society,[21][22][23][24] which will 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.[25] Their currently in-development free-to-play battle royale title, which is codenamed Dead Drop,[26][27] sparked criticism around the sale of "Founder's Access" NFTs.[28][29]

Style

Streaming persona

The "Doc" announcing his partnership with FanDuel

Dr Disrespect's on-stream persona is usually ruthless, quick-witted, and 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".[31]

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".[32] He's also collaborated with "The Undertaker" for a GFUEL commercial, which appeared as a 'feud' which is still a 'mystery'.[33][34]

Discontent for controller "aim-assist"

He has repeatedly made known his discontent with "aim-assist" mechanics in first-person shooters (a feature intended to make aiming easier) that only apply to players using a controller but are active during cross-play against mouse-and-keyboard players like himself.[35][36][37] He argues that controller-wielding players who enable it have an unfair advantage over mouse-and-keyboard players, making claims that it reduces the skill involved such that it's "so easy you can close your eyes"[38] and even going as far to compare the mechanic to cheating by calling it "like a version of hacks".[39][40] Fellow streamer TimTheTatman has publicly suggested in response "if controller is so broken then play controller" as there is nothing technically "illegal" about the mechanic as it is a developer-implemented feature.[41]

Controversies

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.[42][43] In addition, E3 organizer Entertainment Software Association revoked Dr Disrespect's E3 pass, banning him from the event.[42][44] Twitch reinstated the DrDisrespect channel on June 25.[45][46]

Permanent ban from Twitch

On June 26, 2020, the DrDisRespect Twitch 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".[47] No specific details have been released. On June 27, Dr Disrespect tweeted that he had not yet been informed on the exact reason for the ban.[48] On July 16, 20 days after he was banned, he broke his silence and was interviewed by PC Gamer and The Washington Post; insisting that he still does not know why Twitch banned him from the platform, that his contracts were still in good standing, debunks any "crazy speculation" or theory that developed and is focusing on his upcoming "Doc 3.0" personality.[49][50]

On August 6, after 42 days without streaming, he tweeted a link to his YouTube channel with the caption "Tomorrow, we arrive".[51] He went live on YouTube at the same time, but the stream only showed a looping video of a custom Champions Club gas station. He also confirmed that he would show up on stream at noon PDT on the following day.[52][53] On August 7, Dr Disrespect returned to his stream at 1 pm PDT. The reason for his ban has yet to be announced.[54]

On August 23, 2021, Dr Disrespect revealed that he has known "for months" the reason for his ban and his intentions to litigate due to suggested major damages.[55]

On March 10, 2022, Dr Disrespect and Twitch each announced that they had resolved their legal dispute with neither party admitting to any wrongdoing.[56] In a follow-up tweet, he clarified that he will not be returning to the Twitch platform.[57]

Controversy during launch of Bethesda's Starfield

On September 3, 2023, Dr Disrespect became involved in a controversy after saying that Bethesda didn't want to work with him for Starfield's release due to "past controversies". Some users on Twitter accused Dr Disrespect of transphobia for saying that pronouns are a "political" issue, to which DrDisrespect responded by saying his words were taken out of context.[58]

Personal life

Beahm is married and has a daughter.[59] In December 2017, he took a two-month hiatus from streaming to focus on his marriage after he admitted to being unfaithful to his wife.[60]

Beahm stated that an unknown person shot at his house with a BB gun and hit an upstairs window on September 11, 2018. This was reportedly the second time that someone shot at his house.[61][62]

Filmography

Video games

Year Title Role Notes
2020 Rogue Company Voice Actor (Himself)
2021 PUBG Mobile Voice Actor (Himself)
2022 NBA 2K23 Voice Actor (Himself)

Awards and nominations

Year Award Category Result Ref.
2017 Esports Industry Awards Streamer of the Year Won [63]
The Game Awards Trending Gamer Won [64]
2019 Esports Awards Streamer of the Year Won [65]
2021 Nominated

References

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  3. Thier, Dave (June 26, 2020). "Report: Dr. Disrespect Permanently Banned From Twitch". Forbes. Retrieved June 26, 2020.
  4. Chalk, Andy (June 26, 2020). "Dr Disrespect has been suspended from Twitch for some reason". PC Gamer. Retrieved June 26, 2020.
  5. McWhertor, Michael (June 26, 2020). "Twitch bans popular streamer Dr Disrespect". Polygon. Vox Media. Retrieved June 26, 2020.
  6. Sheehan, Gavin (June 26, 2020). "Dr Disrespect Reported To Be Permanently Banned From Twitch". Bleeding Cool. Retrieved June 26, 2020.
  7. Hale, James (2020). "Half A Million People Watched Dr. DisRespect's First Post-Permaban Live Stream On YouTube". TubeFilter.
  8. "National Collegiate Winter Championships" (PDF). NCAA.org. November 1, 2003. Retrieved May 2, 2018.
  9. "Season Schedule/Results & Leaders (2003-04)". broncoathletics.com. Cal Poly Pomona. Retrieved June 3, 2019.
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  11. Cusick, Taylor (March 5, 2019). "Everything you need to know about DrDisRespect – Who is the man behind the violence, speed, and momentum?". dotesports.com. Gamurs.
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  48. Herschel "Guy" Dr Disrespect IV [@drdisrespect] (June 27, 2020). "Champions Club, Twitch has not notified me on the specific reason behind their decision... Firm handshakes to all for the support during this difficult time. -Dr Disrespect" (Tweet). Archived from the original on June 28, 2020. Retrieved June 27, 2020 via Twitter.
  49. Interview: Dr Disrespect talks about his Twitch ban, the rumors, and his future
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