Inside 50 Cent’s Conversations With Diddy’s Son After Netflix Doc Drops
50 Cent’s long-teased Diddy documentary has landed—and it’s huge. Sean Combs: The Reckoning premiered on Netflix on December 2, 2025, vaulting into the streamer’s most-watched list, and now 50 Cent is detailing his communications with Diddy’s son.
Remember when 50 Cent said he was making a Diddy doc and everyone assumed it was just trolling? Yeah, he actually made it. And it is not a blip — it has already blown up on Netflix.
So, the doc is real — and it is huge
50 Cent’s four-part docuseries, 'Sean Combs: The Reckoning,' hit Netflix on December 2, 2025, and it quickly turned into one of the streamer’s most-watched documentaries. If you thought this was a one-off stunt, the numbers say otherwise.
50 says he didn’t talk to Diddy — but he did talk to one of Diddy’s kids
In a recent US Weekly interview, 50 said he hasn’t had any real communication with Sean 'Diddy' Combs himself — and that hasn’t changed since Combs’ federal court case started. He did, however, interact with one of Combs’ sons about the project.
'I had communications with his son. There was a point when they were interested in being a part of the doc because they wanted to show their perspective. They were concerned about how things would be portrayed.'
He didn’t name which son, but for context, here’s Combs’ full roster of kids and their ages (and yes, it’s a big family):
- Quincy, 34
- Justin, 31 (with Misa Hylton)
- Christian, 27
- D'Lila and Jessie, 18 (twins with Kim Porter)
- Chance, 18 (with Sarah Chapman)
- Love Sean, 3 (with Dana Tran)
Combs himself hasn’t commented on that specific exchange. But he has very publicly pushed back on the series overall.
Diddy’s camp calls it a 'hit piece' — Netflix pushes back
Before the doc even premiered, Combs’ attorney blasted it, calling Netflix’s so-called documentary a 'shameful hit piece' and accusing the streamer of using footage that was 'stolen' and 'never authorized for release.' The statement also claimed Combs has been stockpiling footage since he was 19 to tell his own story on his own terms, and that Netflix was improperly using that material.
Netflix’s response: the footage in the series was legally obtained. The streamer also clarified that the material it used includes footage from before Combs was indicted and arrested.
Where to watch
'Sean Combs: The Reckoning' is streaming now on Netflix.