50 Cent Claims Diddy Sent Him Flowers to Club: ‘What Kinda Gay Sh*t Is This?’

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Another day, another troll moment from 50 Cent. The rapper and executive producer of the Diddy documentary Sean Combs: The Reckoning is claiming he received a surprising gift from Diddy himself. But did the jailed music mogul really send it?

On Friday morning, 50 hopped on social media and said, “What kinda gay sh*# is this Diddy send me flowers at club 11 LOL why all the four play [sic] get busy, you know I’m stupid.” 50 shared an image of the flowers on Instagram with the address being E11even Miami club . He added, “A warning, I’m 90s grimy. … you don’t warn me. LOL.”

While fans try to figure out whether Diddy really sent “funeral” flowers to 50 Cent or if the Power star is just promoting the doc in classic 50 fashion, a rep for Diddy has not yet confirmed or denied if the flowers came from him.

RELATED:Diddy’s Team Slams Netflix Before The Release Of New Documentary

As we previously reported, 50 Cent’s “Diddy doc” is the new four-part Netflix documentary series Sean Combs: The Reckoning, which he executive produced, exploring the rise and downfall of Diddy.

The Netflix doc features never-before-seen footage of Diddy before his arrest and unpacks allegations against the music mogul. It airs in December 2025.

The film, directed by Alexandria Stapleton, offers an in-depth look at Diddy’s empire, his legal troubles (including his conviction for sex-trafficking-related charges), and his public persona. According to 50 Cent, the project aims to question celebrity worship and expose the truth behind the headlines.

In a recent interview, 50 made it clear he has no personal beef with Diddy; he just wants to tell the “truth.”

“If I didn’t say anything, you would interpret it as hip-hop is fine with his behaviors,” 50 told ABC News’ Robin Roberts in an exclusive interview aired on Good Morning America. “There’s no one else being vocal. So, you would look at it and just say … ‘mind your business,’ or ‘lemme not say nothin’ about nothin’,’ or those things that would allow an entire culture to register as if they’re for that behavior.”

Meanwhile, in a statement to ABC News, Combs’ representative blasted the docuseries as a “shameful hit piece.”

“Netflix relied on stolen footage that was never authorized for release. As Netflix and its CEO Ted Sarandos well know, Mr. Combs has been amassing footage for decades, since he was 19 years old, to tell his own story, in his own way. It is fundamentally unfair, not to mention illegal, for Netflix to misappropriate that work,” the statement read in part.

“It is also shocking that Netflix gave creative control of this production to Curtis ‘50 Cent’ Jackson – a longtime public adversary who has a personal vendetta against Mr. Combs and has made a career of slandering and defaming him. … For Netflix to hand his story to someone who has publicly attacked him for decades feels, to Mr. Combs, like an unnecessary and deeply personal affront,” the rep added.

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