50 Cent calls out The Breakfast Club and Dame Dash for claiming he was "capping" about producing a Diddy documentary

2024 Dreamville Music Festival - Source: Getty
50 Cent at the 2024 Dreamville Music Festival (Image via Getty)

50 Cent recently called out The Breakfast Club and Dame Dash after the latter claimed that the rapper was "capping" about producing a documentary about Sean "Diddy" Combs when he appeared on the radio show in September.

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For the uninitiated, Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson served as the executive producer of a documentary detailing the rise and fall of Diddy, titled Sean Combs: The Reckoning. The four-part docuseries, which premiered on Netflix on December 2, 2025, included never-before-seen footage of the now-convicted rapper in the days leading up to his arrest in September 2024.

Dame Dash reignited his long-standing rivalry with 50 Cent when he appeared on The Breakfast Club in September 2025, claiming that the rapper was allegedly lying about producing the Diddy documentary.

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"Do you remember when 50 Cent was supposedly putting a documentary about Puff on Netflix?... Where is it?... Yeah, right. He's capping," Dash said.

The Breakfast Club revisited Dash's claim during their episode on December 2, 2025, with Charlamagne Tha God saying, "Do you remember when Dame Dash came on The Breakfast Club and said 50 was capping about the Diddy documentary? That's the conversation."

The video also included the clip of Dame Dash's claim, followed by the famous meme of 50 Cent smiling and driving away. Following the release of his documentary, 50 Cent shared the clip on his social media, captioning it:

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"Don’t ever believe people like this."
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Meanwhile, Dame Dash previously criticized 50 Cent's involvement in producing a documentary about Diddy. On November 25, 2025, after the release of the trailer for Sean Combs: The Reckoning, Jackson reiterated that people should not believe Dame Dash, calling him "desperate looking for attention."

The following day, Dame Dash took to social media to respond to the slight, warning people not to trust "a black man that will make a documentary tearing down another black man for a white man."

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“Never trust a black man that will make a documentary tearing down another black man for a white man … that’s nasty work. I’m not playing these ghetto games, that’s played out," Dash wrote on Instagram.

Netflix backed 50 Cent's docuseries after Diddy characterized it as a "shameful hit piece"

Netflix's Sean Combs: The Reckoning is described as "a staggering examination of the media mogul, music legend, and convicted offender." The four-part docuseries featured interviews from many of Diddy's former colleagues and associates, including Aubrey O'Day, Kalenna Harper, Capricorn Clark, Eric Sermon, and jurors from Diddy's s*x trafficking trial.

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Moreover, the docuseries included exclusive footage capturing Diddy's last days in New York before his indictment and arrest in September 2024. While director Alexandria Stapleton said the footage was "obtained legally," a spokesperson for Diddy contradicted that claim via an official statement to Variety on December 1, 2025.

Calling the docuseries a "shameful hit piece," the spokesperson claimed that Netflix "relied on stolen footage" to create the project, adding:

"Netflix’s so-called ‘documentary’ is a shameful hit piece. Today’s GMA teaser confirms that Netflix relied on stolen footage that was never authorized for release. As Netflix and CEO Ted Sarandos know, Mr. Combs has been amassing footage since he was 19 to tell his own story, in his own way. It is fundamentally unfair, and illegal, for Netflix to misappropriate that work."
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Additionally, the rapper has reportedly also sent a cease-and-desist to Netflix for using the never-before-seen video footage. The spokesperson further criticized the streaming giant for allegedly handing over the docuseries' creative control to 50 Cent, describing him as "a longtime adversary with a personal vendetta who has spent too much time slandering Mr. Combs."

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Meanwhile, Netflix has hit back at these claims, telling Variety in a separate statement that the docuseries was not tied to any conversation the company previously had with Diddy. It further reiterated that the footage taken before the convicted rapper's arrest was "legally obtained" and denied the claim that 50 Cent had creative control over the project.

"The claims being made about ‘Sean Combs: The Reckoning’ are false. The project has no ties to any past conversations between Sean Combs and Netflix. The footage of Combs leading up to his indictment and arrest were legally obtained. This is not a hit piece or an act of retribution. Curtis Jackson is an executive producer but does not have creative control. No one was paid to participate,” the statement read.
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Meanwhile, 50 Cent denied having beef with Diddy during a recent interview with Variety, along with the docuseries' director, Alexandria Stapleton. This came after the interviewer asked him how he felt about people believing that he produced the docuseries due to his "ongoing beef with Diddy."

The rapper replied that fans interpreted him "being vocal about him [Diddy] saying things that were inappropriate around me as us having a beef," adding that he didn't have "anything against him [Diddy] or his family." Furthermore, when questioned what he would ask Diddy if he had the opportunity to interview him, the In da Club rapper replied, "Was it worth it, playboy?"

Edited by Juhi Marzia
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