Rapper 50 Cent had been one of the most vocal celebrities who had voiced their take against Diddy amid the allegations against him. In an exclusive interview with US Weekly, 50 Cent, aka Curtis Jackson, shared why he wanted to make a docu-series on his long-time rival. In a recent interview, the rapper said,
"I’m the only person in hip-hop culture that has produced any hit television. Why wouldn’t I be the person to produce it."
He additionally mentioned,
"And I’m not on the tapes. See, some of the people who have been around in the culture who are not saying anything—that’s because they’ve been to the parties... They don’t know what part of their experiences are on tape."
Trigger warning: The article has references to s*xual assault and r*pe. Readers' discretion is advised.
He further claimed that he was only the rapper who had kept saying for several years that "something wasn't right." The tapes that the rapper was talking about were those that included Diddy's party scenes and were confiscated by law enforcement from the music mogul's residence.
50 Cent had further hinted at the involvement of other hip-hop stars. Back in March, he lashed out at Jay-Z, claiming that the latter had been hiding since the allegations against the mogul surfaced.
50 Cent has been one of the most vocal celebrities after allegations against Diddy came up
Music mogul had found himself in the middle of several lawsuits and allegations related to s*xual abuse and assault. Later, several celebrities stood up and weighed in on the matter. One of them who had been the most vocal in his stance against Diddy was 50 Cent. Since the time the mogul faced the allegations last year, Curtis Jackson has spoken against him.
As mentioned, the rapper had also pointed fingers at Jay-Z, back in March. A then uploaded Instagram post said,
"Anybody seen Jay LOL Puff said the n---- ain’t answering his phone. LOL.
In another post,
"Here is Jay-Z last reported seen waving at Puffy jet LOL."
About two months later, the rapper further uploaded another post, in which he wrote,
"Jay in hibernation he ain’t coming outside till this sh*t with Puff blow over. No brunch, no lunch, No dinner. LOL I’M ALL YOU GOT IM OUTSIDE!"
TMZ had further reported that Netflix had won the bidding for the rapper's docu-series. The platform had further claimed that the docu-series will be about the s*xual assault, abuse, r*pe, and human trafficking allegations against the music mogul.
While so many allegations had been made against Sean "Diddy" Combs, he had denied most of them initially. For the unversed, he later posted an apology video in connection to the video of him assaulting Cassandra Ventura. He, however, had later wiped off his entire Instagram account, including the apology post.