Dr. Disrespect—aka Guy Beahm—has been in the news again, nearly four years after he was banned from Twitch in 2020, the online streaming platform where he made a found fame and notoriety. Now it sounds like the popular streamer may be calling it quits indefinitely.
The reason for the ban was never revealed by Twitch or Dr. Disrespect, though the latter took the streaming platform to court over the ban, while the former paid out Beahm’s contract. Years passed. History became legend. Legend became myth.
Then, on June 22nd, 2024 former Account Director of Strategic Partnership at Twitch, Cody Conners, tweeted “[Dr. Disrespect] got banned because [he] got caught sexting a minor in the then existing Twitch whispers product. He was trying to meet up with her at TwitchCon. The powers that be could read in plain text.”
Beahm responded to this allegation on Twitter:
“Listen,” he tweeted, “I’m obviously tied to legal obligations from the settlement with Twitch but I just need to say what I can say since this is the [bleeping] internet.
“I didn’t do anything wrong, all this has been probed and settled, nothing illegal, no wrongdoing was found, and I was paid.”
He also responded to media personality Jake Lucky with a strange non-denial, tweeting: “Jake seriously… I get it, its a hot topic but this has been settled, no wrongdoing was acknowledged and they paid out the whole contract.”
Then, during a stream on June 23rd, Dr. Disrespect received a message that appeared to dispirit the streamer. During the end of the Elden Ring: Shadow of the Erdtree session, Beahm indicated that he might be stepping back from streaming altogether, explaining that “I’m just feeling burnt out.”
“Maybe it’s time to start something new, something different,” he told his viewers.
“But I think, first and foremost though, I did have a bit of a planned vacation coming up, but I might extend that starting today. It is what it is. People get fatigued. To be honest, I don’t know how long my vacation is, but maybe I extend that. We’ll see.”
This came just before the game studio he co-founded, Midnight Sons, announced it would be severing ties from the streamer. The company’s statement reads:
On Friday evening we became aware of an allegation against one of our co-founder’s Guy Beahm aka Dr Disrespect.
We assumed his innocence and began speaking with parties involved. And in order to maintain our principles and standards as a studio and individuals, we needed to act.
For this reason, we are terminating our relationship with Guy Beahm immediately.
While these facts are difficult to hear and even more difficult to accept, it is our duty to act with dignity on behalf of all individuals involved, especially the fifty-five developers and families we have employed along with our community of players.
As with the Twitch ban nearly four years ago, much of this remains shrouded in mystery. Twitch has not commented on the matter, and Beahm has certainly announced that he’s quitting before—whether that’s streaming or just streaming specific games like Call Of Duty. He always seems to come back. Some have also called into question tweets made by Conners promising to reveal why Dr. Disrespect was banned if Conners sold out three of his upcoming shows last year. However, another former Twitch employee backed Conners’ statement—as an unnamed, anonymous source—to The Verge.
Whether the allegations are true or not, or the motives behind the allegations are pure, we can’t possibly say. Beahm’s own statement is a weird non-denial but that could be chocked up to poor phrasing or legalese. Taking a break from streaming could be seen as admission of guilt, or just an indication of the toll this kind of drama takes. At this point, it’s all speculation. If the allegations are true, obviously this is very serious and indefensible.
But I think it is always important to remember that people are innocent until proven guilty. That may not strictly apply to the court of public opinion—and certainly Disrespect has made a name for himself by courting public opinion, often controversially—but we are wise to resist snap judgments and to hew to caution; wisdom, like patience, is in short enough supply.
How none of this has come out in nearly four years is another big question, and more than a little shocking in an age of online leaks and gossip.