50 Cent Says He Didn’t Go to Diddy's Parties Because He’s 'Not With All That Freaky Sh*t'
"I’m a little more, maybe you could say, basic or normal," 50, a frequently vocal critic of Diddy, said in a new interview.
50 Cent is again speaking out on matters of Diddy, this time saying in a podcast interview that he’s “just not with all that freaky shit.”
This, of course, is a reference to the more salacious aspects of the allegations against the Bad Boy Records founder, who currently remains in custody following trafficking and racketeering charges. Diddy has pleaded not guilty to the charges against him, with his attorney stating he is “an innocent man.” 50, as has been well documented, disagrees.
“He did it,” 50 said when the Enthusiast Report's Lincoln Salazar mentioned the previously teased working title of 50’s Diddy documentary project, Diddy Do It. “And I'm the only one who’s been vocal about this long before.”
From there, 50 reiterated some of his past public speculation, namely his belief that some who haven’t been actively speaking out about the allegations against Diddy may be worried about their own possible implication.
“But I also didn’t participate,” 50 said. “I also didn’t go to those parties. So a lot of the celebrity culture that you don’t hear saying anything is because they participated to a degree.”
Asked why he never took part in such “parties,” 50 again spoke with his usual candor.
“I’m just not with all that freaky shit,” he said. “Like, all of the stuff he’s doing, I’m not into that type of stuff. I’m a little more, maybe you could say, basic or normal.”
While 50 said that he doesn’t yet have a release date he can share for his upcoming Diddy-focused doc, which was just this week confirmed to be headed for Netflix, he did make sure to distinguish it from a Tubi release from earlier this year, TMZ Presents: The Downfall of Diddy.
“It’s a bad situation but it hasn’t happened yet,” 50 said of that doc, which recently got a follow-up entry focused on the indictment. “So how could you document it when it hasn’t happened yet? That’s forecasting.”
What prosecutors have called "Freak Offs" were mentioned multiple times in the unsealed indictment against Diddy, available in full here. "Required Freak Off supplies" were also mentioned, with prosecutors alleging that “more than 1,000 bottles of baby oil and lubricant" were among the items seized from Diddy's properties earlier this year. A Costco-focused explanation for the volume of baby oil, specifically, was quickly refuted by a rep for the warehouse club company.
In a recent TMZ interview, Marc Agnifilo, an attorney for Diddy, said his client was “very eager to tell his story,” suggesting that he could end up testifying in an eventual trial.
“I don’t know that I could keep him off the stand,” Agnifilo told Harvey Levin.