Author Topic: 50 Cent made Diddy Documentary about to break the fuccin internet  (Read 196 times)

TraceOneInfinite

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This the hottest shit that has came out of hiphop since the NWA movie and Compton soundtrack in 2015!

This shit is red hot because 50 Cent is behind it.  So he kept it real and did it right and also represented for Death Row since he has so many homies that were on Death Row and he’s always had beef with Diddy.  Yet at the same time 50 Cent is from the East Coast and obviously respected over there and throughout the industry—this shit is fuccin fire 🔥

And I’m saying this as someone that supports Puffs innocence.  Like, so far the only part I didn’t like was the part about the girl who played the role of his hoe and Puff played the pimp in some music video from the early 90’s uptown days, she was clearly down with Puffy and going all over with him and of course came out the woodwork to go after him and his money as if she’s not responsible for where her two feet took her.  Diddy didn’t go out and capture anyone and drag them to his parties they all went willingly.

But I don’t want to get caught up in debating the case cause this is way more than that…

—shows ol school hiphop like late 80’s when Puff was coming up
—shows the Jodeci breakthru which is my fav R&B group
—goes into all the biggie bad boy death row 2pac build up but in an authentic way so it feels like insider shit and not like something watered down we’ve heard a million times already
—breaks down all the record label finance shit which is really interesting

It’s fuccin dopest hiphop shit I’ve seen since NWA movie and Compton soundtrack 10 years later
 
The following users thanked this post: The Predator, hitsaw

The Predator

Re: 50 Cent made Diddy Documentary about to break the fuccin internet
« Reply #1 on: Yesterday at 11:15:41 AM »
Hottest show on Netflix, a good hip-hop doc, great seeing ol school NY and the rise and fall of of Bad-Boy records.

Puff Baddy  :grumpy:

Never liked that punk from day one or his music and wack jiggy coon minstrel show dancing and antics.

Lame, talentless, hyper, nerdy gofer intern whose ho mama used to dress him up as a mini-pimp...fluked his way in to fame through a tragedy and then snaked on to the hip-hop scene, leeched on to the real talent, wriggle his way to the top himself, ruined everyone else music, careers and lives...robbed them, fucked them and got 2 legends killed directly or indirectly coz of his bullshit and much more demonic fucked up shit which this doc only skims the surface at.

Couldnt hang out on the streets, was not built or had the heart for it so he became a fake music industry Nino Brown.

The dirty lil wack drugged out dancing worm was a very poor mans MC Hammer, ruining everyone and everything he touched.

He a real dumb muthafucka too, being filmed up close whilst under investigation and then having his own come-back propaganda used to bury him once and for all by his enemies (a fuckin lot) on display to the whole world.

Even dumber then that, he still stashing bare bottles of baby oil when the feds kick in his doors the 2nd time (even used to lace that shit!).

The sanitizer and comments about folks in the hood, no way back! and to keep it real, he the actual grubby one! Collecting another mans spunk in jars and fuck knows what else he got up to  :grumpy:

Got Biggie smoked (on some victory lap tour bullshit)...Puff saying he paying for the biggest  funeral ever seen held NY in honour of his man, but scammed Biggie momma for it.

50 Cent - ''Big got popped, and Diddy out dancing like this, this your mans!''



2pac, not sure about the set-up @ Quad studios, but Puff def sent the boys in ''My team in the marine-blue Six Coupé'' after Pac, Suge and the Death-Row chains.
Even the Crips used to laugh at Puff, for getting loved up by a cock-sucking ho when he was in town and then putting a million dollar hit out on Pac and Suge, when the South-siders would of done it for just 20 grand according to Keefe D himself.

Even Suge looked like a saint compared to Puff in this doc, haha.

50 having a blast and is in full troll and beef mode over this shit on the net.


https://x.com/vidsthatgohard/status/1997121832705470518

When Puff sent that sex pest text and then signed off -

''God Bless
Diddy
God is the Greatest''


 :D

-------

« Last Edit: Yesterday at 12:00:39 PM by The Predator »
 

Duck Duck Doggy

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Re: 50 Cent made Diddy Documentary about to break the fuccin internet
« Reply #2 on: Yesterday at 07:35:02 PM »
Definitely the hottest shit out and most this forum still posting about Daz and his 25 albums he’s dropped and how he’s mad at snoop again.

Sccit hasn’t even seen this yet because he’s busy watching new Tim Robinson shows

I kinda always knew puffy was this guy. I think mst of us who have been paying attention kinda already knew. But this is just confirming what we already knew. Puff is the ultimate villain. This is his origin story. The puffy autobiographical movie has potential to be epic. He wanted to be like Suge and Death Row. He wanted PAC but couldn’t have him. So what did he do? He took them down copied them and made his empire even bigger. Epic
 

The Predator

Re: 50 Cent made Diddy Documentary about to break the fuccin internet
« Reply #3 on: Yesterday at 10:58:05 PM »
Gloating cocky bitch and ruining a funky beat -



Dissed recently by Em -



''Do not test like an essay (why?)
'Cause like where my homies out West stay (yeah)
We can just say (what?)
I'm like a R-A-P-E-R (yeah)
Got so many S-As (S-As), S-As (huh)
Wait, he didn't just spell the word, "Rapper" and leave out a P, did he? (Yep)
R.I.P., rest in peace, Biggie
And Pac, both of y'all should be living (yep)
But I ain't tryna beef with him (nope)
'Cause he might put a hit on me like , "Keefe D, get him"


Dissed by Jeru 90s -



''If I recall correctly I last saw hip-hop down at Bad Boy
We'll see if Puff knows whassup
Cuz he's the one gettin' him drunk and fuckin' his mind up
We go to the office, he's nowhere to be found
So we snatch up Jay Black and beat his bitch ass down
Now where's Hip-Hop? A'ight, a'ight
He confessed Suge came and took him from Puff last night
He said he'd give him up if a real nigga came to retrieve 'em
So we went to L.A. later that evenin'
When we got there, everything was a'ight
And we brought Hip-Hop back home that night
One day''


Brother Love, haha -


Quote
Keefe D — the man long connected to 2Pac’s death and who Diddy allegedly hired — is now pleading for Diddy’s help. Referring to Diddy by his nickname “Brother Love,” he publicly asks, “Show me some love.”

----

Quote
Sean Combs: The Reckoning review – you can see why the musician is fighting to ban this horrific documentary




Netflix’s series feels like the point of no return for the rapper and mogul. It’s so thorough in its harrowing detail that it will surely block any chance he ever had of a return to stardom


*****

Sean Combs: The Reckoning might not be available on Netflix for long. On Monday, lawyers on behalf of Combs sent a cease and desist letter to the streamer, demanding that the series be withdrawn based on the inclusion of footage that they claim violates copyright, and involves discussions of “legal strategy that were not intended for public viewing”.

After watching the series, you can see why Combs might be rattled. This is a man whose fall from grace last year was sudden and comprehensive, and yet Sean Combs: The Reckoning feels like the moment of no return for him. It does such a thorough job of laying out and backing up so many horrific allegations that his way back to stardom is surely blocked for ever.

Combs – variously known throughout his career as Puffy, Puff Daddy, P Diddy, Diddy and Love AKA Brother Love – is serving a 50-month prison sentence for transportation to engage in prostitution. Additionally, he faces a tidal wave of civil cases from former girlfriends, employees and associates, hitting him with a laundry list of accusations that includes (but is not limited to) rape, sex trafficking, false imprisonment and physical abuse.

Many of these allegations are addressed in Sean Combs: The Reckoning. And while this means that the series isn’t a pleasant watch, it does feel like a grimly necessary one. Over the course of four episodes, the director, Alexandria Stapleton, paints a pattern of behaviour that starts to feel horribly inevitable.

We meet Combs as a hungry youngster, willing to work longer and push harder in his thirst for success. We see him grow into an all-powerful mogul, before making the leap to becoming a rapper himself; draped in furs, swigging champagne from the bottle, J-Lo on his arm. We see his uncanny sense of timing, watching him pivot to reality TV fame at precisely the moment his music career starts to wane. But, at the same time, the series paints a picture of a rise fuelled by darkness.

There’s his lacklustre planning and lack of insurance for the overattended basketball game in 1991 that resulted in nine people dying in a stampede. There’s talk of him demanding employees sign over their stake in his business, holding baseball bats over their heads. There was a shooting in 1995, in which Combs allegedly attempted to bribe a driver with $50,000 to claim ownership of the gun (he denies this).

And then there are the allegations of sexual assault from women. We meet Joi Dickerson-Neal, who says that Combs drugged and sexually assaulted her in 1991, taping the act in order to show it at parties. We meet the singer Aubrey O’Day, who only learns that she was allegedly drugged and raped by Combs after reading it in a witness statement several years after the fact. We meet Rodney Jones, a music producer who claims he was drugged and sexually assaulted in a home riddled with hidden cameras.

One figure we don’t meet is Cassie Ventura, who nevertheless forms the centre of gravity in The Reckoning. It was CCTV footage of Combs punching, kicking and dragging Ventura through a hotel corridor that first brought the walls crashing down on him, and the series is highly insistent that this was far from a one-off event. Ventura sued Combs for rape and domestic violence in 2023, and reportedly received a $20m settlement.

However, what caused Combs to demand Netflix remove the series is something even more eye-opening: footage filmed in the week before his arrest. Knowing that he was about to face the music, Combs apparently hired a videographer to follow him, in order to plead his innocence in the court of public opinion. At one point he talks to a lawyer on the phone, telling them that the narrative is slipping away from him on social media and demanding “somebody that’ll work with us that has dealt in the dirtiest of dirty business”.

Thankfully, the existence of The Reckoning seems to suggest that the arch manipulator has finally been outmanoeuvred. Although there are certainly elements of this story that have not been told – Combs’s infamous “freak-off” parties are presented as an afterthought, and none of their long line of celebrity attendees are mentioned – the series does what is most needed right now. If Combs is able to uncancel himself in the face of evidence this damning, it will be nothing less than a miracle.

Sean Combs: The Reckoning is on Netflix now

 :D -










« Last Edit: Yesterday at 11:21:50 PM by The Predator »
 

The Predator



Quote
#Camron and the crew get into a bunch of topics this week. They start off talking about #50Cent's new #Diddy documentary on #Netflix and some of the wild stories in it. Cam also shares a crazy story about running into Alpo at a restaurant during COVID. They discuss why Cam finally decided to get his teeth fixed after all these years. He even talks about his friendship with #MacMiller and how cool he was. The episode wraps up with a funny story about carrying cash through the airport.

This guy -



 

Soopafly DPGC

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All I can say is it's great to see Pac was right all along.  Going back and listening to his songs dissing Puffy, I thought some were a little harsh, but nope, Pac was on point about Puffy even back in 96.  While everyone else was dancing and loving the 'shiny suit man'... Pac saw right through the facade.