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The saga involving music executives Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson and Sean “Diddy” Combs just took an interesting turn.
Diddy Gifts 50 Cent a Flower Bouquet
Combs and Jackson are fierce rivals. So imagine how surprising it was to the hip-hop community when they discovered that Diddy had recently sent 50 a gift. In a social media post on Friday (December 5), Jackson revealed that he had received a bouquet from the Bad Boy Records founder while he was in federal lock-up.
“What kind of gay s**t is this?,” 50 Cent asked in a social media post. “Why all the four play, you know I’m stupid.”
He also added: “Warning? I’m a grimy 90’s n***a you don’t warn me LOL.”
Fans in the comments section had mixed reactions to 50 receiving the arrangement from the founder of Bad Boy Records.
“Get the STRAP, this is a funeral arrangement, flowers,” one user wrote in the comments section of the Instagram post.
“N***a went from tryna take you shoppin 2 Sendin flowers s**t spooky,” another user added.
“Sending you funeral flowers when you’re already in prison is insane,” a third user said.
Music Mogul Takes Issue With Netflix Film
The bouquet comes at an interesting time. 50 Cent produced the new Netflix documentary, Sean Combs: The Reckoning. The film, which takes a deep dive into the years of crimes committed by the music mogul, has caused quite a stir in the hip-hop community.
Some people believe it is important for Combs’ years of abusive behavior to be exposed. However, others have questioned how ethical the film is.
Diddy’s legal team recently filed a cease-and-desist order to have the film removed from the streaming platform. Citing the irresponsibility of Netflix for having the film produced by Jackson. Combs’ longtime rival.
“ 50 Cent is a longtime public adversary who has mocked Mr. Combs for decades, posted fabricated accusations, and publicly celebrated his legal challenges,” Diddy’s legal team said in a statement. “Even Mr. Jackson has admitted he was ‘shocked’ Sean ever filmed some of these moments, which underscores that the footage is being exploited for entertainment rather than presented with fairness or context.”
However, as of writing, the film remains on the streaming platform.










