
Joe Budden Says He Feels Diddy 'Didn't Get Enough Time' in Prison After Watching Netflix Doc
Joe Budden has expressed strong criticism of Sean “Diddy” Combs after watching the Netflix documentary Sean Combs: The Reckoning, stating that the hip-hop mogul deserved a harsher prison sentence.
Speaking on The Joe Budden Podcast, Budden admitted that he became “absolutely pissed” with Combs as early as the second episode of the Alexandria Stapleton–directed docuseries. According to Budden, the documentary significantly reshaped his perspective by presenting a narrative that places much of the blame for historic hip-hop tragedies at Combs’ feet. “It basically blames Puff for Biggie and Pac,” Budden said around the 2:05 mark of the episode. “This piece takes a lot of the reasonable doubt away. They do a good job of laying it at his feet.”
The second episode, titled What Goes Down Must Come Up, explores the possibility that Combs played a role in fueling the infamous East Coast–West Coast rap rivalry—an explosive conflict that ultimately led to the murders of The Notorious B.I.G. and 2Pac. The documentary raises questions about Combs’ influence behind the scenes, suggesting that his actions may have contributed to escalating tensions during one of hip-hop’s most volatile eras.
Budden praised the docuseries for carefully assembling a timeline of events that consistently portrays Combs in a negative light. By the end of the second episode, Budden said his feelings toward the Bad Boy Records founder had already hardened. “I was saying, ‘Fuck him,’ by episode two,” he admitted bluntly.
After finishing the entire series, Budden felt even more strongly that justice had fallen short. “It did make you feel like, at the end, he didn’t get enough time,” he said, reflecting on Combs’ legal outcome.
In October, Combs was sentenced to 50 months in prison, with time served, after being found guilty on two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution. However, he was acquitted of the more serious charges of sex trafficking and racketeering. For Budden, the documentary made those acquittals harder to reconcile with the broader pattern of behavior presented on screen.
Because Budden was the only person on the podcast who had watched the documentary at the time of recording, he was unable to engage in a deeper discussion with his co-hosts. Still, he emphasized that Sean Combs: The Reckoning presented numerous moments where Combs appeared culpable in various situations, even if they did not all result in convictions.
“They showed too much stuff,” Budden said. “It’s like, if you don’t believe this, or if this didn’t do it for you, or if that didn’t do it for you—there’s just too much consistency in the story they’re telling.” According to Budden, the sheer volume and repetition of allegations made it difficult to dismiss the documentary’s implications entirely.
News in the same category


The Woman Who Refused to Quit: How Jacklyn Bezos Changed Her Life—and Helped Shape the Future of the World

San Francisco Establishes Reparations Fund Framework to Address Historical Racial Inequities

From Prison Food to Fine Dining: How Lobster Became a Luxury in America

Michael B. Jordan Opens Up to David Letterman About His Future: ‘I Want Children’

Marlon Wayans Clarifies He Never Defended Diddy During His 50 Cent Rant

Snoop Dogg Becomes Team USA’s First Honorary Coach for 2026 Olympic Winter Games

Jason Collins announces he is battling stage 4 brain cancer: 'I'm going to fight it'

Kevin Hart Inks Licensing Deal for His Name

Michael B. Jordan Wanted to Change His Name Because of the Other Michael Jordan

Stranger Things fans have bizarre theory over final episode and everyone's saying the same thing

In Yakutsk, Winter Is So Cold People Never Turn Off Their Cars

Florida Officially Recognizes Gold and Silver as Legal Currency Starting July 2026

JFK's grandson Jack Schlossberg shares emotional tribute to sister Tatiana after her death from cancer aged 35

Someone asked ChatGPT what it would do if it became human for a day and it gave a shocking response

Love and Generosity: How a Turkish Couple Shared Their Wedding with Refugees

Love and Perseverance Beneath the Waves: The 14-Year Search for Yuko

Rare Amoeba Infection Highlights the Importance of Safe Nasal Rinsing

A Legacy of Service: Bretagne’s Role in 9/11 and Disaster Response

Fears of a Texas Serial Killer Intensify After Three More Bodies Are Recovered from Houston Bayous
News Post

The Most Affordable Food That Supports Bone Health and Helps Fight Osteoporosis

Onion Water for Hair Growth: What It Can Do, What It Can’t, and What Science Really Says

A Cardiac Surgeon’s Warning: Why Many Elderly Patients Should Be Cautious About This Common Medication

Canada Builds the Future in Wood: Inside Toronto’s Groundbreaking Timber Skyscraper

The Woman Who Refused to Quit: How Jacklyn Bezos Changed Her Life—and Helped Shape the Future of the World

San Francisco Establishes Reparations Fund Framework to Address Historical Racial Inequities

From Prison Food to Fine Dining: How Lobster Became a Luxury in America

No Reset: When a Clinical Mindset Takes Over Your Whole Life

India’s Olympic Ambition vs. Football’s Struggle ⚽🏟️🇮🇳

Brishti Gupta: Turning a Home Kitchen into Global Inspiration 👩🍳❤️🌍

Aakhri Sharma: Redefining Destiny Through Fencing 🗡️🥇

Preeti Rajak: A Rising Star and Pride of India 🇮🇳🥈

Dermatology Data Reinforce the Relative Safety of JAK Inhibitors

Can Cuffless Blood Pressure Devices Transform Cardiovascular Disease Prevention and Treatment?

Early-stage stomach cancer is often accompanied by these 6 symptoms

7 easiest ways to distinguish real milk from fake milk that consumers should know by heart

6 Things People Who Live to 100 Do Every Week to Stay Healthy

Michael B. Jordan Opens Up to David Letterman About His Future: ‘I Want Children’

Costco’s Bold Experiment: Housing Above the Warehouse 🏢🥤🌭
