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Dr Disrespect takes damage: YouTube to demonetize channel over ‘serious allegations’

A man with a dark mustache, a dark mullet and sports sunglasses in a red long-sleeve shirt standing amid sports fans in blue
Streamer Dr Disrespect asserts, “I’m no f— predator or pedophile,” after revealing that Twitch banned him four years ago for messaging a minor.
(Tony Gutierrez / Associated Press)
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The Dr Disrespect fallout continues.

YouTube has decided to cut monetization for the popular gaming streamer’s channel, days after he publicly admitted that he privately messaged a minor in 2017, The Times confirmed. A YouTube spokesperson said the decision comes amid “serious allegations against the creator,” and that his channel is no longer eligible to earn revenue.

The spokesperson alleged that Dr Disrespect (real name Herschel “Guy” Beahm IV) violated the terms of its Creator Responsibility Guidelines, noting that creators may face consequences if their “off-platform behavior harms our users, employees, or ecosystem.”

“While these behaviors are rare, they can cause widespread harm to the YouTube community, and potentially damage the trust among creators, users and advertisers,” the spokesperson said.

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YouTube’s decision to suspend monetization on Beahm’s channel is the latest blow to his streaming career. Earlier this week, he faced backlash from the online creator community shortly after revealing that his messages with the minor were what prompted Twitch to cut ties with him four years ago.

On Tuesday Beahm, 42, tweeted a lengthy statement responding to a reports by the Verge and Bloomberg that detailed his June 2020 Twitch exit. The Verge report, citing two former Twitch employees, alleged that Beahm had used the platform’s now-defunct Whispers private messaging feature in 2017 to “exchange messages with a minor and initiate a conversation about meeting up at TwitchCon.”

Dr Disrespect hopes to become a pioneer in the online gaming community and recently signed an exclusivity agreement to stream on Twitch.

March 26, 2020

Before the report’s publication, Beahm had denied the allegations by tweeting last week, “No wrongdoing was acknowledged and [Twitch] paid out the whole contract.” Amid the allegations, game studio Midnight Society announced Monday that it had parted ways with Beahm, its co-founder.

This week, the San Francisco 49ers, gaming headset company Turtle Beach and basketball game franchise “NBA 2K” also reportedly cut ties with Beahm.

On Tuesday, Beahm admitted exchanging messages with a minor in 2017, when he was 35.

“These were casual, mutual conversations that sometimes leaned too much in the direction of being inappropriate, but nothing more,” he said. “Nothing illegal happened, no pictures were shared, no crimes were committed, I never even met the individual.”

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Beahm had edited the statement multiple times, according to X. In the second version, he did away with the word “minor” and swapped it with “individual.” In the most recent version, he restored “minor.” In all versions of his missive, Beahm asserted that he did not engage in criminal activity and that his feud with Twitch was a “civil dispute” that was “resolved by a settlement.”

He continued: “Now, from a moral standpoint I’ll absolutely take responsibility. I should have never entertained these conversations to begin with. That’s on me. That’s on me as an adult, a husband and a father.”

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As his message went viral, fellow streamers recoiled. Popular Twitch stars, including Kai Cenat, Valkyrae, Codemiko, Hasan Piker and MoistCr1TiKaL, condemned Beahm.

“Dr Disgusting,” Valkyrae wrote.

“He was 35.... dude how do you not know that’s wrong at that age?” Codemiko shaded Beahm.

“Oh my god my boy, go take that break bro,” Cenat said during a stream Tuesday. In a snippet shared online, Cenat can be seen unfollowing Dr Disrespect on X (formerly Twitter).

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Subathon” streamer Ludwig Ahgren took a more subtle approach to addressing Beahm’s confession. He voiced support for Midnight Society and its upcoming game, noting that the studio “made the right decision and they made it quickly.” He did not name Beahm.

Nickmercs and TimTheTatMan, who have often streamed “Call of Duty” games with Beahm, both condemned their colleague. Nickmercs, who received support from Beahm amid a “Call of Duty” controversy last year, said in a video statement that Dr Disrespect’s actions were “inexcusable” and “unacceptable.”

He added: “I can’t support it. I can’t defend it.”

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TimTheTatMan expressed shock at Beahm’s confession. “If he knew that was a minor and those were the messages being sent, I cannot support that. I can’t,” he said in a video, adding, “This is awful.”

Beahm addressed critics Tuesday in his expletive-laden statement and declared: “I’m no f— predator or pedophile.

“Anyone that truely [sic] knows me f— knows where I stand on those things with those types of people. F— that,” he said. “That’s a different level of disgust that I f— hate even hearing about. Don’t be labeling me as the worst of the worst with your exaggerations.”

Beahm, who previously caught heat for livestreaming inside a bathroom while attending video game showcase E3 in 2019, once touted himself as “the face of Twitch.” He told The Times in February 2020 (four months before his Twitch ban and eventual pivot to YouTube), “I want to build something legendary.”

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Beahm now says he will step away for “an extended vacation with my family.” After that, he says he will return “with a heavy weight off my shoulders” — and, it seems, with fewer money-making opportunities.

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