Jaguar Wright just spoke out about 50 Cent's viral Diddy documentary and what she's saying about 50 Cent in Netflix is insane. According to Jaguar Wright, [music] what 50 Cent showed you is only a fraction of the truth. Tapes, testimonies, and real [music] crimes involving not just Diddy, but the entire industry were purposefully left out because Netflix wasn't willing to go that far.
>> The problem with it, it was done too well. It left out too many things. >> So, can you speak on Curtis Jackson?
50 Cent said that this is the first one. >> There's hundreds of hours of more footage. >> I'm sure there was hundreds of hours of [ __ ] that was confiscated from all of Diddy's homes in that HSI raid that never made it to the trap.
I wonder where he made it to. Jaguar Wright just gave an interview where she broke down everything that was removed from the documentary. After watching the documentary, Jaguar talked to Gene Deal, the only person who actually spent time with Diddy and whose opinion mattered.
He was Diddy's former bodyguard. He saw the violence, the intimidation, the cover-ups, and the people who were protected along the way. So, when Jaguar realized Jean was missing from a documentary that claimed to be The Reckoning, she knew something was off.
She talked to Gene and that's when she realized the truth. >> Would you call the documentary educational, informational, entertaining? Uh, like what would what would you say this documentary?
>> Gaslighting. >> Gaslighting. And it's sad because there's a lot of stuff in there that's true, but there's enough left out to create.
>> The timing of the release of the documentary and the way it only focused on old news seemed suspicious. It wasn't about exposing the truth. [music] It was about distracting everyone.
Jaguar [snorts] says that's why the documentary [music] leaned so heavily on old footage, recycled narratives, and incidents the industry had quietly acknowledged for years. It wasn't designed to expose hidden truths. It was designed to control the conversation.
>> The story isn't over. I agree. Like that's the thing.
The story's not The story is not even being told cuz in order to tell the actual whole story, you would have to include everyone that is involved. But no, this is about saving the industry and blaming it all on Diddy. Saving the industry and blaming it all on Diddy.
Okay, Diddy's going to jail. He's going to do his time. I don't know if he's I don't I don't know what that appeal is looking like right now.
Because see, the one thing that all of this documentary [ __ ] is doing is definitely [ __ ] up his possibility for an appeal to get out early, especially with the judge and him and the appeal board having to look at the footage of him sitting there with Mark Agnil um pretty much working on how to fix the trial >> and for him to be watching The [music] feds watching him. >> Yeah. Film me.
Film me. The feds. >> What?
>> Film me. Film me. >> Diddy was the scapegoat.
The industry needed someone to take the blame, and Diddy was the perfect person to pin it all on. Keep in mind that CNN had the footage of Diddy beating Cassie for well over a decade before they actually released it. Why did the FBI only start looking into it now after the statute of limitations had actually passed?
The documentary didn't discuss any of [music] this, and it never looked at the most important question of all. If Diddy was being investigated for Rico, where were his co-conspirators? I mean, they did what they needed to do in this documentary.
The whole objective of this documentary was to blame it all on Diddy. [music] The devil made me do it. Blame it all on Diddy.
And the rest of the industry is nothing like this. Like when Curtis Jackson sat there in his interview with Robin and sat there and said, "Uh, you know, I I did this because I don't want people thinking that the hip-hop community is okay with this kind of behavior. " [music] You know, I don't want them thinking that, you know, we're just going to be silent while all of this is going on.
Like, we're okay with this kind of behavior. My thing is, huh? So now you speaking for all of hip hop and all of hip hop is uncomfortable with this.
Meanwhile, you got people like Ju who on the low low key allegedly Jean Deal has exposed for having his own nude trrist freakoffs with Diddy >> in that courtroom. Do you think that hip-hop culture was on trial as much as Shan Combmes was? >> Not at all.
Look, if I didn't say anything, you would have you would interpret it as the hip-hop is fine with his behaviors. >> There's no one else being vocal. So, you would look at it and just say, cuz that that mind your business or let me not say nothing about nothing or those things.
it it would allow the entire culture to register as if they're for that behavior >> if um Sean Combmes watches this. What do [music] you think he's going to feel? >> Like, wow, this is amazing.
I think he's going to say this is the best documentary I've seen in a long time cuz he'll see people saying that. He may feel different way about [music] pieces and bits of it, but he knows the truth. I think he'll see the truth in it.
The biggest selling point about this documentary was the unreleased footage, which 50 Cent somehow managed to get his hands on. But here's the thing. When this documentary was first announced, 50 didn't even have access to [music] that footage.
He couldn't have. How did 50 know what was going to happen to Diddy before it actually happened? He announced he was going to be doing a documentary December 2023 with Netflix.
and the star footage that you use to get people to re-upload or reubscribe to Netflix to make this the number one in their TV shows division for almost two weeks straight beating out Stranger Things. How much Stranger is that? Damn, >> you this this footage didn't even exist [music] when you said you were going to be doing this documentary.
So, we've got a videographer, a rogue videographer that has this very, very, very explosive, you know, very explosive footage of him literally sitting on camera planning how to go after survivors, how to poison the jury pool, how how to fix his trial. in advance before he's even arrested. I mean, like, is anybody not forgetting when Mark Gar when when when Gar No, not Gary, when uh Mark Agnafillo was sitting there talking to the Suns in the hallway and they're sitting there filming and he's sitting up there.
Yeah. Well, see, what we got to do is is is we got to go and we got to put counter suits on all of these people. We have to create lawsuits ourselves.
He's sitting there talking about creating lawsuits to affect public perception. He's talking about that with Gan Deal actually refused to be part of this [music] documentary after he realized that 50 wasn't allowed to make any decisions. He's the one who had all the actual proof.
According to Gene himself, he sat down and spoke with 50 Cent for 45 minutes. What he realized was that 50 wasn't in control of what footage made the final cut, who was paid, or which stories could legally be included. Those decisions were being made at the Netflix and production level.
Once Gene understood that, he walked away. >> That they was going to spare no cost in doing this because he wanted to tell the story [music] and they wanted to he wanted to tell the story like it was supposed to be told and everything like that. I said, "Yeah, okay.
" So then um the director uh I got to get her name, man, cuz it don't even sound I want to put her on blast because uh she was telling me, you know, um she was saying to me that um what I was asking for was was crazy and they wasn't spending [music] money like that. I'm talking about you got footage. You got clothing.
You got [music] you got I was doing footage. I had uh pictures. All the stuff that I had, you know, you could figure out a way to pay them, brother, and stuff like that.
And then I was telling her about some prices that I have already received and I had the invoice to show it. And then she was calling me like she like I was lying. I was like, "Yo, who do you think you talking to?
" You know what I'm saying? And she was talking about, you know, there's no way nobody paid nobody. [music] What I say?
First of all, all you people come with these documentaries and stuff. The first thing you tell me, [music] y'all tell these people out here that y'all don't pay. And y'all pay you.
Yo, you give if you can make a picture uh uh uh look like 10 $15,000. You know what I'm saying? You can sit here and tell me that you going to pay me for my time sitting right down here with y'all.
You understand? So then, you know, one thing led to another and I was like, "Yeah, well then, you know, f you. " you know, uh, I spoke to 50.
Then she said 50 and this exact words that came out her mouth. 50 does not determine what goes in and go out of this documentary. And he definitely don't pay.
He don't he determine what somebody get paid. It's it's not his documentary like that. I was like, "Oh, so if it's not his documentary and I spoke to him like that, I don't need to be doing nothing with you cuz I'm doing this on the strength of him.
But you gonna pay me if if I the 50y didn't have the power to do anything. [music] But they using his name to like push the whole documentary and that's what it was about. So that's why you don't see a cameo other than the the the the pictures they used of me on the film in the documentary.
I got like three or four pictures in the documentary that I seen of [music] myself. You know, some people say they saw more, but I I know three three different times where I was certain places and you could actually see me in a documentary and that's the only thing you're going to get. [music] But the stories that they told in the documentary, bro, come on.
They could have went a whole lot deeper. They could have did a whole lot more. >> Gan agreed with everything that Jaguar said.
He [music] also said he had physical proof, not just stories. According to Gene, this included video footage, photographs, documents, and physical evidence he had collected over the years. He told this to the production team, but when he attempted to negotiate compensation for his time, materials, and evidence, he claims the production team dismissed his requests.
They weren't interested in proof. They just wanted someone to sit and waste the audience's time. >> Um, the behindthe-scenes footage, they got a diddy leading up to him getting arrested.
And and how you feel about all that, man? >> Well, what I feel about the documentary, they left a whole lot of key [music] things out. If they was going to do something and they going to say in the reckoning of uh uh Sean Combmes, the reckoning or Diddy the Reckoning and stuff like [music] that, it should have been a lot of people that we lost because of him.
You know what I'm saying? It wasn't only Big. It wasn't only Tupac.
You understand? for the atmosphere that he put those kids in. You got a you got a guy named Anthony Wolf Jones who was from Bad Boy from [music] its conception is doing security and being one of the financ around before he got to Clyde Davis.
You know what I'm saying? they wasn't able to tell that story because they didn't have no intel on that story of what went down or they didn't do their uh investigations, right? Which he also led up to the reason why Wolf ain't here today.
You understand? They didn't tell that story. They didn't tell a story about Jessica Rosenbomb who was at the City College [music] situation.
You understand? At the same time, some of the footage that was in the documentary could have actually been used in the trial. For example, not even Diddy's lawyers knew that Diddy had been recording their conversations.
If the jurors had been shown video footage that Diddy was planning to poison the jury pool, it could have helped the FBI. What's even crazier is how it's obvious that Netflix is lying about how the footage was actually obtained. Can you imagine if they had have had any testimony from Little Rod and the footage that he had from that incident, that firearm incident where the guy G was damn near mortally wounded and and was losing his life and and the footage that he had from that.
Can you imagine if that had been shown to the jury? >> I could man. [music] >> Like, why not?
If it was available for them to get it from Little Rock to put it in a documentary and Little Rock hasn't gone to trial yet, then why in God's name hasn't any Why didn't any of this make it to to the feds? >> That's a great question. Why didn't they even subpoena 50?
Curtis Jackson announced in December of 2023 after Cassy's lawsuit came out that he was going to be doing his own documentary. Isn't it very clever that all of this, you know, alarming and stuff didn't come out of his documentary until almost 6 months after his verdict came in 2 months after he had been sentenced. It was almost as if they were holding the documentary to not get in the way of his trial.
Like that's the thing that's tripping me out when it's coming to all of this Curtis Jackson praise that's coming on and there's a lot of people if he didn't get paid usually it's like 90 days before you start you know you got to put in an invoice and all of that stuff like his business machine was still businessing you telling me nobody nobody around him that that sounds like that that sounds like a setup to me >> sounds like a setup It sounds like a setup to me. And when you think about the fact that, you know, another conversation that we've been having, a lot of people aren't paying attention to the money behind the machine. You know, Black Rockck Vanguard, owners of Dagio, the company that Diddy tried to go after and had to settle out of court for with sealed findings.
And nobody really knows how that turned out before his life got turned upside down. And HSI came in raiding, grabbing all kinds of evidence and all kinds of stuff. They they're part owners in Netflix.
Did you know that? >> That's information. The very company that has allegedly been going out of their way to work with the higherups to make Diddy's life a living hell have a stake in the platform that's now ruining what's left of his reputation worldwide.
But after his trial, >> the one thing that this documentary did do was destroy any chances of Diddy getting out on appeal. Exclusive, never-before-seen footage of Diddy scheming with his lawyers and allegedly even planning crimes was released. And Diddy's lawyers are mad.
Diddy secretly recorded phone calls between himself and his lawyers. And his lawyers are not happy about being exposed like that. >> Boy, Diddy really screwed over Mark.
I got to say, this is awful that Diddy owes his life to Mark Agnel. literally his life because [music] he could have gotten life in prison were it not for Mark Agnolo, his defense lawyer, who had a brilliant strategy. and Diddy screwed him over when he hired this videographer to chronicle his life [music] without telling Mark Agnel that when Diddy and Mark were on the phone, this videographer was recording [music] what Mark clearly expected to be an attorney client [music] privileged relationship.
Now it is true that the client holds that privilege. The lawyer doesn't. But Mark's clear expectation [music] was that this was a private conversation.
These were private conversations [music] and that he and Diddy could talk openly and Mark could talk to [music] Diddy not just as a client but as a person in tried to guide him [music] in a time leading up to his arrest. And unbeknownst to Mark Agnilo, [music] Diddy has got this guy recording the conversation as he's sitting there saying, [music] "You are screwing this up. You are messing up this case.
We're losing and knowing [music] that that's on tape and it's almost like he's performing for the camera and not telling Mark what's going on. " by showing that his lawyers were knowingly involved in trying to cover up information. Did he made them liable to be suspended?
If you're a lawyer and the footage shows you knew about all this and didn't do the right thing, you could be looking at suspensions and [music] investigations. And Diddy just handed all of that straight to Netflix as [ __ ] right now. Why?
The truth is they should all be under review by the bar associations that they're registered to. All of their licenses should be up for termination. With the [ __ ] that we saw in that documentary, with the way Mark Agnilla was sitting there talking about filing lawsuits, filing fake lawsuits, creating all kinds of hoopla, that [ __ ] was on film.
>> Lawyers ain't supposed to be talking that [ __ ] >> Yeah, those are strategies that you're not supposed to actually see. >> Strategies. Hey, >> [ __ ] is against the law.
It's against the [ __ ] law. That's why that black lawyer that left said, "I cannot sit here and represent this. I can't represent this dude with the kind of [ __ ] that they doing.
" He wasn't interested in putting his [ __ ] license on the line. But but you get a weirdo uh one so-called survivor like Nicole West Morland who's willing to get on the stand and cry for Diddy after she' been ran through by what? Cash Money Records.
>> All of this is happening at the same time as Diddy is working on his appeal. I just know his lawyers hate him right now. >> Well, there's a new appeal from hip hop mogul Shaun Diddy Combmes.
His defense team is seeking his immediate release [music] from federal prison, calling his 50month sentence on charges of transportation for prostitution excessive. CB Cotton has the details live from our New York newsroom. Good to see [music] you, CB.
>> Hey, Lydia. Well, once one of the most powerful names in hip hop, Shawn Diddy Combmes is now behind bars at that federal facility in Fort Dicks, New Jersey. But his legal team says he should have never been sent there [music] for this long.
So on Tuesday, in an 84page filing, Combmes attorneys asked a New York federal appeals court [music] to immediately release Combmes and send the case back for a new sentencing or grant him an acquitt. In July, a jury found Combmes guilty on two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution and acquitted him of the most serious charges: racketeering conspiracy [music] and sex trafficking. In the fall, the judge then sentenced Combmes to a little more than four years behind bars, citing testimony from former girlfriends who said they felt pressured to participate in drugfueled sex parties with male escorts called hotel nights or freakoffs.
[music] But the rapper's lawyers argue this sentence was punishment for crimes that [music] the jury rejected. They wrote in the filing, quote, "He sits in prison today serving [music] a 50-month sentence because the district judge acted as a 13th juror. " The judge defied the jury's verdict and found Combmes quote coerced, exploited, and forced [music] his girlfriends to have sex and led a criminal conspiracy end quote.
>> And it's not just his appeal that's the issue. His lawyers are now personally involved in this case. This documentary just sealed Diddy's fate, [music] and even his lawyers might face serious consequences.
It's why they're fighting so hard to get the documentary taken down. Diddy's lawyers have already filed a cease and desist and are now threatening to sue both 50 Cent and Netflix for over $1 billion. Overnight, lawyers for Sha Diddy Combmes [music] trying to stop the release of a Netflix docu series due out today.
>> We have to find somebody that'll work with us that has dealt in the dirtiest of dirty business. The series contains never-before-seen footage of Combmes debating strategy with his lawyers in the days leading up to his arrest in New York last year. >> I am going to let you professionals look at the situation and come back to me with a solution.
>> It also includes video of Combmes greeting fans in Harlem. >> I'm your accept >> and then saying this about the interaction moments later. >> I need some hand sanitizer.
Hold on. I got I got to I've been down in the streets amongst the people. Yeah.
I got to take a bath. Like the [music] amount of people that's that actually I'm coming in contact with like that's the that's what I have to do. >> You know what I'm saying?
>> It's It's like a It's like 150 hugs. Now, Comb's lawyers are demanding Netflix pull the series, threatening legal action, claiming Netflix [music] is using stolen footage that was never authorized for release as part of what they call a [music] shameful hit piece. The series is executive produced by Comb's longtime rival Curtis 50 Cent Jackson and director [music] Alex Stapleton, who said, quote, "We obtained the footage legally and have the necessary rights.
" [music] End quote. Before the cease and desist demand was sent yesterday, Stapleton and Jackson sat down with our Robin Roberts to discuss the series. >> How do you respond to people who say that that it's more about the disdain that you have for Shawn Combmes than it is for giving [music] the victims a platform?
>> It's not personal. >> Jaguar even specified what Netflix removed from the documentary. >> Come out.
Like I'm just I'm like, "Okay, more footage is coming out. Great. Who who who y'all going to cut out?
Who y'all gonna edit out this time? Like, cuz that's what I'm going to be looking for. I'm going to be looking for all of the [ __ ] that they cut out.
If the complete and utter truth comes out, three things happen. The entertainment industry collapses completely. Millions, possibly billions of advertising dollars don't get made.
People go broke, companies go under. That's why they [ __ ] hate me. Not because I'm telling the truth on people.
because I'm telling the truth about the system and I'm showing people the reality that the only thing that matters is that dollar. These entities, these companies, they don't care about none of these people. They don't care about none of these victims.
They don't care about the perpetrators. They don't care about the prey. [ __ ] Half the time they're encouraging the predator.
They don't care. It's all about the money. See, >> Gan Deal said the same thing months ago.
Diddy was blackmailing other celebrities for leverage. The names of these elites were what Gan Deal and Jaguar Wright were expected [music] to be exposed. The people who were involved, benefited, or were being protected.
>> It's all about the money. They saw what he did to Cassie with the kicking, the punching. [music] They saw what they did to Cassie.
They know that nobody in America like that. So now these people are represented by a brand. Whether it's something about the music, clothing, movies, they not going to come out and speak on nothing that [music] has anything to do with them.
And they praying that they not on the tape doing crazy stuff, being oiled up in the whole nine yards. They praying. So until the feds say, "Hey yo, listen here.
" Uh, we got you on Hey, buddy. We got you on this tape and uh girl looked like she was pretty young. We're not going to we're not going to show it, but uh we need you to come and testify against Brother Love, P.
Diddy, Puff Daddy, you know, Sean Combmes. That's when they going to start talking and they not going to be talking in his favor. when the feds come to them and show them what they got on tape.
>> Jean has been naming these elites for years. He's been saying the same names, telling the same stories and warning people long before any cameras were rolling. That's why people take him seriously because his story hasn't changed.
50 Cent on the other hand did change his stance. >> And that's not my doing. That's not Cassie doing.
That's his doing and his learned behavior from the people that mentored him. You got to realize, man, you got to you he learned from Andre Herel. He learned from Russell Simmons.
He learned from Clyde Davis. You understand? When those people are are are are telling you that they were in heavy into the drugs, they was heavy into beating women and [music] doing things at that age at at that crazy stage that's going to make him think that he could get away with the same thing that they was getting away with back then.
You understand? The things that he was saying, you know, the touchy Philly [music] between two men and all that stuff like that, man. all that.
He learned that from them dudes. When I told y'all the story when me and my man went up to Russell Simmons and he had house and he had a um a man in bikini draws in his bedroom in his bed. You understand, bro?
This is that he learned. I'm I'm assuming he learned it from them. Let me put that.
And I I'm not going to say alleged cuz I saw that for my own self. My man was with me. Slick was with me.
And we saw that for our own self. >> The craziest part of this story is how Diddy is actually planning to release a documentary of his own. Justin and Christian Combmes are both going to be in the documentary, [music] and this is the first time since the start of the trial that either of them has taken a public stance on their father's crimes.
It is expected that this documentary will be released in March of 2026. A lot of people feel like this whole new documentary is just a PR narrative once again being pushed by Diddy and his sons to try to clean up his image. And after hearing certain things on 50 Cents Netflix documentary, we have to go back in time and remember what we were seeing during trial.
Even when it came to Diddy's sons, Christian and Justin Combmes. They both came on two separate occasions to trial wearing a free Shan Combmes shirt. The first one to do this was Christian Combmes during Jane's testimony.
And you're not supposed to wear this [music] stuff in front of a jury to try to sway their opinions. And the judge actually told him he had to leave and take it off. And then literally like a week later, Justin did the same exact thing and was taken [music] out of the courtroom by the judge.
And we already saw the videos in the Netflix doc of Diddy talking [music] to Justin saying he needed to push out certain content to control a narrative during the trial. There were a lot of things going on that I could see that to me felt like it was just straight PR. Do you remember all of these people that were wearing the free Diddy shirts and it was actually a meme coin?
>> So, what do [music] you think? Should these stories finally come to light? Drp your thoughts in the comments.
Hit that like button if you want more deep dives, and don't forget to subscribe so you don't miss the next episode where we break down the things Netflix and 50 Cent tried to keep hidden.