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50 Cent is preparing a Netflix documentary on “Diddy”

While Diddy languishes in prison awaiting his trial, rapper 50 Cent is preparing a documentary, with Netflix, on the multiple complaints against his longtime rival.IMAGE: GETTY, MONTAGE: WATSON (photo was taken in Las Vegas in 2007)

Since Diddy’s (big) legal troubles, the rapper has been targeting his rival. As he prepares a Netflix documentary on the accusations against Sean Combs, we look back at a war that started twenty years ago, with an unsolved murder.

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The FBI stumbled upon “more than a thousand bottles of baby oil” while searching the property of Sean “Diddy” Combs. This information, revealed by the authorities shortly after the rapper’s arrest in New York ten days ago, continues to travel around the world. Incomprehension, disgust, anger and mockery often accompany reactions to this major detail of the indictment, which we now know concerns the rapper’s sexual escapades.

As Diddy awaits trial behind bars in Brooklyn Jail, one personality in particular was marked by the amount of baby oil found in the 54-year-old defendant’s home: 50 Cent.

It’s simple, the rapper behind the hit In yes Club can’t get over it, to the point of regularly adding a layer of it on social networks. After having stated, ironically, that he “doesn’t have 1,000 bottles of lube at home”he made fun of Diddy this week, by publishing a (fake) bottle of baby oil.

Why such relentlessness on the part of 50 Cent? You should know that the bad boy, rapper, businessman and now television producer, is a competitive provocateur, particularly on social networks. But he is also a man who has a definite interest in stirring up the sauce around the “Diddy affair”, because he is preparing a documentary on the indictments which threw Sean Combs in prison. When the news was made official, 50 Cent shared it on the X platform:

“I told you about all this weird shit, I DON’T do crazy parties. You didn’t believe me, but I bet you do now!”

50 Cent on X

If we don’t yet know the release date of this latest obsession, we have its (working) title, its director and its landing strip: the documentary will be released on Netflix and Alexandria Stapleton will be behind the camera. For Curtis James Jackson III (the real name of 50 Cent), this documentary must give back “a voice for people who don’t have one”.

In other words, the victims of Sean Combs. His production company, G-Unit, has already promised that “all profits would be donated to victims of sexual assault and rape”.

“This is a story that has a huge human impact. This is a complex narrative that spans decades and is not limited to the headlines or clips seen so far.

Alexandria Stapleton and 50 Cent, in a press release.

Internet users are already trying to invent a title and a poster:

It is also said that the rapper is crazy in the editing room, motivated as ever. Two reasons explain this effectiveness. Not only would 50 Cent quickly like to exonerate the rap world and prove that not everyone is “like Sean Diddy Combs”, but the two heavyweights of New York hip-hop have also been at odds for a good twenty years. years.

Like any war that comes to life in the music business, their story is opaque and winding. The two stars, who shared the same manager, Chris Lighty, found themselves on the same stage more than once, screwed up several big contracts together and rumor has it that 50 Cent wrote several songs for Diddy, to get over in action after being shot nine times in the chest in 2000, during a shooting.

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However, if they, each in their own way, shook up the world of rap from the beginning of the nineties, it was never true love. And, as always in hip-hop, it is through interposed pieces that they often distort their ego.

“Bitches say ‘Oh 50, you’re so witty/On the dick like they heard I write for P. Diddy’

50 Cent, on the song Guess Who’s Back?

And Curtis James Jackson III has always been the loudest when it comes to damaging his rival’s reputation. From innocent (and rather funny) little jokes to accusations of murder. In 2006, 50 Cent suggested that the enemy Diddy had something to do with the assassination of famous New York rapper The Notorious B.I.G. And it’s once again on a verse that it happens: “Who shot Biggie Smalls? / We didn’t stop them / They’re gonna kill us all / Man Puffy knows who hit that niggar.”

The Notorious B.I.G. avec Diddy, en 1995.Image: Corbis Entertainment

For those in the know, this increase in aggression is due to a failed deal a year earlier. In 2005, 50 Cent almost welcomed rapper Mase to his label. While this former pastor spent most of his career under the leadership of Diddy, the transfer window would have gone badly wrong. Later, 50 Cent will evoke the greed of his rival, who “did not want to let go of young Mase for less than two million dollars”.

In 2016, the sharp-tongued 50 Cent went so far as to claim that Diddy paid to have another hip-hop monster murdered: 2Pac. But he himself will admit that his brain sometimes expresses itself without thinking:

“I’ve been talking to a therapist to try to help me with the shit I’m saying… It’s some crazy shit in my head. Maybe I said that shit about Puffy because he got Tupac killed.”

50 Cent

Twenty years of a sprawling war that Diddy will sometimes try to defuse, like in 2018 when he swore that “I have nothing against Fif. He loves me. Do you really think it’s hatred between him and me?” Hatred or not, today 50 Cent is not the only one to hold a grudge against Sean Combs: dozens of complainants and the public prosecutor intend to send him the rest of his life behind bars.

And the documentary that the histrionic producer is putting together could well blow up some new cases.

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