Netflix is defending its new four-part documentary about Sean “Diddy” Combs, produced by rapper Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson, after the jailed music mogul’s team accused the project of using private recordings without permission.
Combs’ spokesperson blasted the documentary, Sean Combs: The Reckoning, calling it “a shameful hit piece” that relies on “stolen footage,” including conversations between Combs and his lawyers filmed just days before his September 2024 arrest. The spokesperson said the recordings were part of Combs’ personal archive collected over decades and were “never authorised for release.”
Netflix rejected the accusations, saying all footage was “legally obtained” and that Jackson, despite being an executive producer, does not have creative control. “This is not a hit piece or

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