50 Cent Trolls Diddy, Again

Plus: Ava Max new single, DMX and Blackpink docs, and Megan Thee Stallion accusations.

👋 Some feuds never die — just like 50 Cent's 25-year trolling campaign against Sean "Diddy" Combs, which began with a 1999 song about robbing celebrities and has now evolved into Netflix documentaries about federal sex trafficking trials.

Read time: 3 minutes | 639 words

FEATURE

🎵 50 Cent’s War on Diddy

50 Cent has made Sean "Diddy" Combs his favorite target for over two decades, creating one of hip-hop's most persistent feuds.

The feud began with 50 Cent's controversial 1999 debut single "How to Rob," where he threatened to kidnap Lil' Kim unless Diddy "dance your a– down to the nearest ATM." The track established 50's willingness to target hip-hop's biggest names during his desperate, financially struggling period.

The beef intensified during the "Vodka Wars" era (2007-2015) when both entered the spirits business - Diddy with Cîroc, 50 with Effen Vodka. 50 "routinely posted doctored photographs of Diddy on social media with humorous captions trashing his Cîroc beverage brand," turning business competition into social media warfare.

One of 50's most frequently referenced talking points stems from an alleged conversation at Chris Lighty's wedding, where Diddy supposedly offered to take him shopping. "He told me he'd take me shopping. I looked at him like, 'What'd you just say?'" 50 has recounted in multiple interviews, using the story to question Diddy's masculinity.

50 escalated attacks with the 2006 G-Unit track "The Bomb," making serious allegations about Diddy's knowledge of Biggie's murder. "Man Puffy know who hit that nigga," he rapped, moving beyond playful trolling into accusatory territory.

Despite years of attacks, Diddy maintained diplomatic responses. "I don't have no beef with Fif. He loves me," Diddy said during a 2018 Breakfast Club appearance, refusing to engage seriously.

50's trolling reached new heights after Cassie Ventura's 2023 lawsuit against Diddy. Following federal raids in March 2024, 50 posted: "Now it's not Diddy do it, it's Diddy done." He announced a Netflix documentary titled "Diddy Do It?" turning decades of trolling into a business venture.'

As Diddy's 2025 trial unfolds, 50 provides daily social media commentary. When testimony revealed Diddy allegedly told 50's manager "I like guns," 50 responded: "Wait a minute PUFFY's got a gun, I can't believe this I don't feel safe 😔LOL."

The latest chapter involves paid "Free Diddy" protesters outside court, prompting 50's characteristic response about potentially joining them for $20 an hour - proving that after 25 years, Curtis Jackson's commitment to Diddy-trolling remains unwavering.

SONG OF THE WEEK

📀 50 Cent’s “Many Men” | ⭐ 4.5/5

"Many Men (Wish Death)" stands as 50 Cent's most haunting meditation on mortality, transforming near-death trauma into one of hip-hop's most emotionally raw masterpieces.

  • 50 recorded vocals while recovering from shooting injuries

  • Original version was twice as long with cut verses naming suspects

  • Producer used broken MPC that randomly skipped = glitches intentional

  • Recorded in same studio booth where Biggie laid down "Ready to Die"

Two decades later, "Many Men" remains 50 Cent's most psychologically complex work - proof that beneath the trolling and business ventures lies an artist capable of transforming genuine trauma into timeless art.

MEME