50 Cent has continued to poke fun at Diddy by reminiscing about the time the Bad Boy boss made a public plea for them to be “friends.”
50 posted an old video on Instagram of the currently incarcerated mogul speaking to a radio station about their complicated relationship.
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Diddy said in the clip: “Me and him could be friends but he doesn’t want to be my friend. I wanna be his friend so I can teach him everything I know so he can become a better money-getter, since I’m the number one money-getter in the world.”
“Yo 50, please be my friend,” Puffy pleaded. “You’re breaking my heart. Curtis, please be my friend. Please.”
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The video then cut to 50 Cent looking at the camera unamused and asking: “What kind of fucked up shit is this?”
He further trolled Diddy in his caption, writing: “Nah something ain’t right, stay over there play boy. LOL.”
50 Cent has previously detailed how Diddy left him feeling “uncomfortable” by offering to take him shopping, an offer he declined.
Asked by The Hollywood Reporter last year why he has “made a point of not attending Diddy’s parties,” the G-Unit boss replied: “He asked to take me shopping. I thought that was the weirdest shit in the world because that might be something that a man says to a woman.
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“And I’m just like, ‘Naw, I’m not fucking with this weird energy or weird shit,’ coming off the way he was just moving. From that, I wasn’t comfortable around him.”
Fif also set the record straight on his past relationship with Diddy, with whom he collaborated on songs such as “Victory 2004” and the “I Get Money” remix.
“It was mostly work. I wouldn’t call it a friendship because there wouldn’t be disappointment between us if we didn’t speak to each other,” he clarified. “[Diddy’s ex] Jennifer Lopez actually told him he should work with me as songwriter in the beginning.
“[H]e’d call me to write. I remember Diddy would call, and my son’s mom would answer, and I didn’t want to get on the phone like, ‘No, no, no.’ And she was like, ‘What the fuck? We need money.’ She’s looking at me, like, ‘What? Why don’t you want to talk to him?’”
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He added: “I didn’t ever party or hang out with him. Puff is a businessperson; when [people call him] a producer, I see people that were taken advantage of, who produced things that he took from them. He got the credit. He’s not a producer.”