The Diddy and 50 Cent beef goes back to 2006 when 50 dropped “The Bomb,” which featured sounds of gunfire and his allegation that Combs knew the identity of the killer of Christopher Wallace, a rapper known as The Notorious B.I.G., who was both a protégée and best friend to Combs.
Biggie was gunned down in Los Angeles in March 1997 as he and his crew, which included Combs, were traveling in a caravan. Combs was in a different vehicle from the one he was in at the time biggie was shot.
No one has ever been charged with the murder though. In his diss track, 50 raps, “I guess this means I won’t be invited to the white parties in the Hamptons,” referencing Combs’ famous soirees held in the upscale New York community.

It was considered trolling until Diddy was sued in November 2023 by Ventura, who in a now-settled civil complaint alleged that Combs raped her in 2018 and abused her over the more than decade they were in an off-and-on relationship. After that federal investigators searched Diddy’s homes in Miami and Los Angeles in March, 50 Cent posted on X, “Now it’s not Diddy do it, it’s Diddy done. They don’t come like that unless they got a case.”
P Diddy on the other hand has always denied the beef with words like “I don’t have no beef with Fif. He loves me,” Combs said. “Y’all can’t see that he loves me? You really think that’s hate? … You know he loves me.”
He added that he didn’t take the things 50 Cent says about him seriously.
“When he does that it’s like funny to me,” Combs said. “I don’t really take it personal. I know he has a different sense of humor, and he’s just not in my life. We don’t have to never cross paths, and I will never say nothing negative about him, you know, because that’s just not me.”

50 Cent has long trolled Diddy on social media, especially after CNN’s publication of surveillance video showing Combs assaulting his then-girlfriend, Cassie Ventura, in 2016.
Now the rapper, actor and producer has taken it up a notch with his latest project, a Netflix docuseries about Combs.
Curtis Jackson AKA 50 Cent, is a producer on the four-part series “Sean Combs: The Reckoning” which droped Tuesday.
According to the director, Alexandria Stapleton, the project was inspired in part by Ventura. She testified against Combs in a federal sex trafficking trial this year, in which Combs was convicted on charges of transportation to engage in prostitution.
besides all that Combs has previously denied all allegations of wrongdoing. That hasn’t stopped 50 Cent from trolling him on social media since the allegations went public.
On the evening of Netflix releasing a highly anticipated docuseries about Sean “Diddy” Combs produced by his longtime rival Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson, Diddy’s lawyers have sent a cease-and-desist letter to the streaming company, demanding it to not release “Sean Combs: The Reckoning.” In a statement provided by the spokesperson for Combs also accused Netflix of using “stolen footage that was never authorized for release” in what they called a “shameful hit piece.”
The footage that Combs’ representative is referring to is shown in Netflix’s official trailer for the project, which was released on Monday morning.
“We need to find someone who will work with us who has worked in the dirtiest of dirty businesses,” Combs says in the one-minute trailer. “We are losing.”
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