Key Points
- 50 Cent says Diddy sent him flowers at a Miami club. He calls the move strange and hints at a warning.
- The playful jab comes days after his new Netflix Diddy documentary drops. The series digs into long running claims against the music boss.
- Diddy’s team fights back with legal letters and big lawsuits. The long feud with 50 Cent stays loud online.
Instagram post shows surprise bouquet
50 Cent (Curtis Jackson) claims Diddy (Sean Combs) tried to scare him. He points to a surprise bouquet at a busy Miami nightclub. He shared the photo on Instagram beside news of his Netflix series.

In the post, Jackson kept the tone joking and harsh. He mocked the gift as a strange move between rivals. He also pointed fans to his new 50 Cent Diddy Netflix documentary.
The image shows bright sunflowers and other fresh blooms on a table. A small card bears his stage name and the address of E11Even Miami. The scene looks more like a romantic gesture than a threat.
Under the picture, he fired off more sharp lines. At one point he wrote, “Diddy send me flowers at club 11.” He later added, “A warning, I’m 90’s grimy.”
New Netflix series keeps pressure on Combs
The jokes land just as Jackson’s latest Netflix project hits screens. Sean Combs: The Reckoning is a four part documentary series. It looks at serious claims about Combs’ past behaviour and power in music.
The show features fresh interviews with former workers and artists. Jurors from Combs’ federal case also share what they saw in court. The series mixes those talks with old footage from across his long career.
Some clips appear to show Combs speaking on how people see him. In one scene he talks about “losing” and needing tougher help. Viewers link that moment to his later arrest and trial.
Jackson has chased this story for years through his film arm. He says he wants clear stories about power and harm in the business. He also thanks the people who chose to appear on camera.
Lawyers push back as feud rolls on
Combs’ camp has not stayed quiet about the Netflix release. His lawyers sent a cease and desist letter to the streamer. They claim the series uses “stolen” footage shot for a private project.
The letter calls the show a “shameful hit piece” on Combs. His team says some scenes were never cleared for public use. Netflix has yet to pull the title from its service.
Away from Netflix, Combs is already fighting another major screen project. In February he filed a $100 million defamation case against NBCUniversal. The suit targets Peacock’s film Diddy: The Making of a Bad Boy.
He says that earlier film falsely ties him to rape and murder. Court papers claim the work leans on old, weak claims and guesswork. The case adds fresh fuel to debate around true crime style shows.
The clash with Jackson fits into a long pattern between the two stars. The rapper has used memes and harsh posts on Diddy for years. He recently mocked him in another viral post after a major court win.
ValidUpdates has tracked that online war from the start. Earlier pieces covered Jackson’s jokes during raids on Combs’ homes. Another story looked at his claim that he feared for his own life.
Now the flower stunt gives him a fresh punchline for fans. For Jackson, every twist in Combs’ legal troubles becomes content. For Combs, each joke lands while he fights to repair his name.




