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Curtis “ ” Jackson’s outsized beef with his rap game rival is leaping to streaming giant , who has won a bidding war, according to Jackson, for a docuseries his company produced on beleaguered rapper-mogul Sean “ ” Combs. Netflix’s apparent triumph in the battle for the series, which was produced by Jackson’s G-Unit Film and Production Studios, was in a Tuesday night post captioned by the “In Da Club” rapper. “ok guys we’re all making good television mines just happens to be the best!” he wrote, in part, alongside a split image of him and Diddy.

“NETFLIX wins the bidding war but if more victims keep coming out ...



I’m gonna need more episodes.” [sic] has reached out to Netflix to confirm the series, as well as reps for 50 Cent. was first to report that the docuseries will look into allegations leveled against Diddy, many of which stem from producer accusing Diddy in November of sexual abuse, rape and sex trafficking.

TMZ indicated that the multi-part docuseries will hit the streamer soon. The Lil Rod legal filing came just weeks after Diddy settled one case for an undisclosed sum with his ex-partner, the recording artist . The two parties just one day after she filed her lawsuit accusing Combs of rape and ongoing physical abuse — the latter of which was on clear display in a harrowing video from 2016 that CNN acquired and released Friday; in it, Combs attacks Cassie in a Los Angeles hotel hallway, kicking and shoving her, and dragging her by he.

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