50 Cent says there’s more to the Diddy story—much more
*After the massive success of “Sean Combs: The Reckoning” on Netflix, executive producer Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson has revealed there’s still 140+ hours of unreleased footage that didn’t make the four-part docuseries.
During a December 10, 2025, appearance on “Sherri” (“The Sherri Shepherd Show”), 50 teased the release of raw clips directly to YouTube: “Or, I’ll just put it on YouTube,” he said with a smirk, when asked about a possible second season.
He explained that the original cut was limited by time: “Everything couldn’t make it. It was only four episodes, so you had to pick and choose things.” Now he’s suggesting the unfiltered material may hit the public soon—no gatekeepers, just clicks.
What’s in the 140 hours? Allegedly, a lot of Diddy drama
According to 50 Cent, the unseen footage includes intimate and damaging material, including claims Diddy fathered a child with Sarah Chapman—who also dated Tupac Shakur—and more uncut moments before his 2024 arrest.
He warned that the content will make supporters go “very quiet,” implying serious revelations were left on the editing room floor. Some of the footage shows Diddy in private, panicking just days before his indictment, including a now-viral clip of him saying: “We have to find somebody that will work with us, that has dealt in the dirtiest of dirty business… We’re losing.”

Backstory: How 50 Cent got Diddy’s private footage
The footage came from a videographer Diddy hired to document his life and legal woes—intended for a personal documentary. After Diddy’s arrest, a third-party freelancer allegedly leaked the content while the lead documentarian, Michael Oberlies, was out of town.
Oberlies told Rolling Stone on Dec. 11 that the leak wasn’t about a payment dispute. It was a betrayal, he says, by someone who “unethically” passed the footage to 50 Cent.
Diddy’s team calls footage ‘stolen,’ issues legal threats
Diddy’s attorneys sent Netflix a cease-and-desist just before the doc dropped, alleging the use of “private, pre-indictment footage” was unauthorized. They slammed the doc as a “shameful hit piece.” But Netflix aired it anyway, and 50 Cent has mocked the legal threat online.
On Instagram, he posted a clip with the caption: “I don’t understand why he filmed himself, but I’m glad he filmed himself.”
The feud fuels the fire—and the views
50 Cent’s feud with Diddy spans decades, rooted in the 1990s East Coast vs. West Coast rap wars. Since lawsuits against Diddy resurfaced in 2024, 50’s trolling has escalated, using memes, captions, and now documentaries as weapons.
He’s been clear about the personal nature of this project but insists it’s also about truth: “This is bigger than just me and him; it’s about the truth coming out,” he told GQ.

Social media erupts as fans beg for the drop
Posts on X praise 50 Cent for forcing uncomfortable conversations while dragging Diddy’s legacy through fresh scrutiny. One user wrote: “50 Cent refuses to reveal how he got unreleased footage… can we crown him the pettiest legend alive?”
Others speculate the unseen clips could reignite old controversies—like Tupac’s murder or the mysterious death of Kim Porter, which the doc largely skipped.
What happens if 50 Cent drops it on YouTube?
By bypassing Netflix and going direct-to-viewer, 50 Cent could create a viral storm—no network notes, no censors, just receipts. That move could also complicate Diddy’s ongoing legal battles, especially with new civil suits pending and his team working on appeals.
As of December 11, no release date has been announced, but 50 Cent is clearly holding the next card. And in his version of media mogul chess, he’s more than ready to make Diddy sweat.
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