Inside 50 Cent’s Explosive Diddy Documentary: The Footage No One Expected

50 Cent has been working on this documentary for nearly two years — and according to those who’ve seen early cuts, the footage he’s obtained is unbelievable. The people he convinced to speak on camera about Diddy? Even more shocking.

And then there’s the location he chose for his first major interview: ABC News.
Not by accident.

50 later revealed on Instagram that he chose ABC because it’s one of the very few channels inmates can watch in prison. He wanted Diddy to see it — personally.
That smile on his face says everything.

Stolen Footage, Secret Sources, and a Cease & Desist

The documentary includes footage that Diddy’s team claims was stolen. NBC News confirmed Combs’ legal team sent Netflix a cease-and-desist letter, calling it a “shameful hit piece” that relies on unauthorized video.

But as the producers said on camera:
This will be the first time Diddy and his lawyers realize that footage exists.

50 Cent Addresses Their “20-Year Feud”

When pressed about whether this documentary was motivated by personal beef, 50 didn’t hold back.

He reminded everyone of the story where Diddy once told him:

“Let me take you shopping.”

50 interpreted it as a bizarre, uncomfortable “test.”
Not personal — just disturbing.

He emphasized:
This documentary isn’t about gossip. Not every participant accused Diddy of wrongdoing. The goal was storytelling, not a montage of salacious allegations.

The Shocking 25% Bad Boy Story

One of the most jaw-dropping segments features Kirk Burrowes, who co-founded Bad Boy Records and owned 25%.

He claims:

75% was in Diddy’s mother’s name

25% under his own name

Diddy allegedly forced him — under threats — to sign over his share

Burrowes says Diddy promised to return it

He never did

When Burrowes attempted to challenge it in court, he was dismissed as “mentally unstable”

This was the man who handled the deals. And after losing everything, he vanished from the company’s story.

The City College Stampede — Diddy’s First Taste of Fame

Most people have never heard of this incident.
34 years ago, at only 19, Diddy organized a celebrity basketball event in New York. The crowd surged.

Eight people were crushed to death. A ninth later died.

Diddy held a press conference that same day — a moment that catapulted him into the public eye. It built his reputation as the biggest promoter in the game.

A tragedy became his launchpad.

The Tupac & Biggie Segments: The Most Disturbing Part

Greg Kading — the lead investigator in the Tupac murder case — appears in the documentary. He plays recordings of Keefe D, who claims:

Diddy allegedly offered $1 million to kill both Tupac and Suge Knight

They only succeeded in killing Pac

They allegedly received $500,000 instead

The payment reportedly went to one person — not the crew

And unbelievably, Diddy later released a song bragging:

“I’ll drop a million dollars on your head.”

The documentary highlights the lyrics and timing — pointing out how recklessly close they are to the allegations.

Biggie’s Death: A Cancelled Flight and a Paranoid Warning

Another story claims:

Biggie felt he was in danger in Los Angeles

He had a flight booked to the UK right after the LA show

Diddy allegedly ordered an associate to cancel Biggie’s flight

Biggie stayed in LA

Hours later, he was killed

Diddy then used Biggie’s earnings to fund the funeral, released “I’ll Be Missing You,” and became larger than ever.